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Teeth
Reviewed by Rich Drees
Dawn (Jess Wiexler) is a pretty high school girl, though not very
popular with most of her classmates due to her leadership role in
the local teen celibacy group. So committed to the cause, Dawn won’t
even go to a movie that may feature kissing, lest it lead her and
the others on a group outing to the cinemas into temptation.
Temptation soon finds Dawn in the form of Toby (Hale Appleman), and
even though he is also a member of Dawn’s abstinence group, he tries
to force himself on Dawn when the two are alone together in the
woods. It is at this moment that Dawn discovers, much to her own
shock and Toby’s detriment, that she is a possessor of the mythical
condition known as vagina dentata or “toothed vagina.”
More so than
many films, how one responds to Teeth will depend on one’s
gender. While both sexes can laugh with the film, women will be
chuckling appreciatively as predatory males the type of which they
probably have had to deal with repeatedly through their lives are
dispatched while men will have an undercurrent of unease in their
laughter, often punctuated by a groan of sympathy for the brutality
of the fate of Dawn’s victims. Both sexes will leave the movie
contemplating their own past interactions with one another. Nearly
all of the men Dawn encounters, with the notable exception of her
step-father, behave in a predatory manner towards her. While some
may dismiss this as a broad characterization of men, it seems like a
legitimate point of view for an adolescent girl who has to contend
with the changes in her own body as well as the new and different
reactions these changes provoke in others.
Mixing horror and dark comedy in an attempt to explore the changes
of adolescence and awakening sexuality is nothing new, having been
explored in the film Ginger Snaps and the television series
Buffy, The Vampire Slayer. But here,
actor-turned-writer/director Mitchell Lichtenstein manages to ground
things much more realistically, so you don’t have to contend with
the suspension of disbelief required for Ginger Snap’s
werewolves or the stylized dialogue of Buffy-creator Joss
Whedon. Though much like Whedon’s Buffy, Lichtenstein has
subverted the standard horror film trope that the young women are
the helpless victims by making them the aggressors against the more
traditional aggressive males. Though playing its conceit fairly
straight, there is comedy to be found in Teeth’s horror, such
as the uneasy laughter that builds to a horrific slapstick moment
during Dawn’s visit with a gynecologist.
Teeth is
many things- an allegory about adolescence, a story of female
empowerment, a cautionary fable for certain men, a satire on
abstinence-only education. But the film manages to be more than just
the sum of its parts, severed, teethed and otherwise. Teeth
manages to address a serious topic in a fun way, never becoming
preaching, but still having something smart to say to its audience. |