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'Flipped' An insightful, warm triumph from Rob Reiner

By Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times

Thursday, August 12, 2010

As he proved so winningly in "Stand by Me," Rob Reiner is a filmmaker who has a way of telling stories about kids, suffusing them with ambivalence and insecurity about their still-evolving selves that feels both heartfelt and authentic.

So it is, once again many years later, with "Flipped," a tale of very young love and loss also set in the '60s. And though our two lovebirds, Juli and Bryce, live in white, middle-class suburbia, the experience feels universal and the oft-trod coming-of-age terrain feels newly turned.

It begins in typical grade school fashion. Juli is all dreamy and swoony over the blue-eyed Bryce. He can barely talk, because, yuck, she's a girl. She is undeterred. He's convinced his life is over. We've seen it before: What more can you expect?

Thankfully a lot, starting with the freshness of the fine blueprint from Wendelin Van Draanen's popular contemporary young teen romance.

Though Reiner opted to set it back in time by a few decades, he and co-screenwriter Andrew Scheinman have remained true to the spirit, style and a lot of the dialogue she created. But then from "Stand by Me," that 1986 classic ode to boyhood based on the Stephen King novel, Reiner has become something of a savant when it comes to turning books into movies, with "The Princess Bride" and "Misery" among his standouts and "Flipped" about to join them.

When Juli and Bryce meet (played by Madeline Carroll and Callan McAuliffe for most of the film), it's because his family has just moved to her tree-lined street, a place where kids ride bikes, play pickup football in the front yard and go trick-or-treating without fear.

Director of photography Thomas Del Ruth has given it all a Norman Rockwell glow that echoes his collaboration with the filmmaker on "Stand by Me."

movie review

xxxx (of 5)

Director: Rob Reiner.

Starring: Madeline Carroll, Rebecca De Mornay, Anthony Edwards, John Mahoney, Penelope Ann Miller.

Rated: PG for language and some thematic material.

Run Time: 1 hour, 28 minutes.

What did you think?: Offer your opinion of the film.

We are drawn into their world from two distinct points of view: his and hers. That "he said, she said" push and pull is one of the cleverest conceits of the book and the film. We see a moment through Juli's eyes, then rewind and see it through Bryce's with Reiner capturing all the fun, irony and heartbreak possible out of those different points of view.

With that as the starting point, we follow the kids through the ups and downs of grade school, family life and their growing (or not) attraction. Both young actors find that ideal balance of charm and intelligence without veering into too precocious and too pretty (which Ashley Taylor takes care of for everyone else, but as Juli's popular, perky, pony-tailed nemesis, she's supposed to).

Helping to set the tone for the hard lessons here is the kind of great classic rock that a '60s era film makes possible. In this the filmmakers have sampled widely, including Carole King and Smokey Robinson, creating a soundtrack so rich you'll be tempted to close your eyes and just listen.

But don't. Because "Flipped" is the kind of small, special movie that wraps you up in so much warmth, humor and humanity that it will leave you wishing that stories like this weren't so rare.

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