Rii
Rear Admiral
I happened to see these films in close proximity to one another recently, and I was struck by how similarly they resonated with me.
Let's get the basics out of they way: they're both atypical entries (not least of all because they're actually good films
) in the 'teen' genre. Second, they both concern the lives of two teenage girls: Enid (Thora Birch) and Rebecca (Scarlett Johansson) in Ghost World, and Agnes (Rebecka Liljeberg) and Elin (Alexandra Dahlström) in Fucking Amal.
Fortunately, things run a little deeper. In Ghost World, best friends Enid and Rebecca are iconoclasts; and the strain on their relationship when it becomes evident that Enid's iconoclasm runs far deeper than Rebecca's is a core focus of the film. Fucking Amal, by way of contrast, depicts the development of a romantic relationship between the introverted and socially isolated Agnes and the extroverted, socially 'in' cheerleader-type Elin, who is perhaps not quite as comfortable with herself and her place in the world as she first appears. In short, both films are about the struggle for personal identity within the pressures and strictures of broader social and cultural frameworks.
So what? This is hardly an uncommon theme, particularly amongst 'teen' films. What is it about Ghost World and Fucking Amal which marks them apart from so many other, vaguely similar films? There's the execution, superlative in its humour, tenderness, and nuance, of course, but something else too; and I have to thank Ebert for this observation, at least insofar as it relates to Fucking Amal: all of these people are on the same moral plane. These are not tales of the mean cheerleaders and the plucky, bookish heroine who overcomes them to roar 'I am woman!' or whatever. There's callous cruelty as only teenagers are capable of, but it's apportioned equally. Most distressing for the Disney model is a scene in Fucking Amal wherein another socially isolated student joins in the mockery of Agnes in order to curry favour with the 'in' crowd, something which will undoubtedly stir uncomfortable memories amongst many of those who were themselves bullied at school.
And with Ghost World, whilst the viewer is encouraged to sympathise with Enid, and laugh at her searing observations of mainstream society as only an outsider like her could make; we are nonetheless aware - and made to be aware - that she is not a truth-bearer, that Rebecca is not a traitor, that all of the people Enid encounters - however much they might immediately function within the tale as hindrances or even opponents for our protagonists - are nonetheless people struggling through life as best they can according to their natures, as deserving of happiness as our protagonists are.
Further, neither film overreaches: by the end the characters are fundamentally the same people they were in the beginning. Changes have been wrought and steps taken; but for the most part their promise lies in the future; a future which will certainly never eventuate onscreen. So what, then, has been achieved? Windows into humanity, I'd suggest: we've learned to understand these characters.
I wrote this up mostly so as to structure my own thoughts on the films in the process, but I'd love to hear from others.
One question that's been itching at the back of my mind: Elin is a flighty character. Her vivacity makes for compelling viewing (that and the fact that she's smoking hot; and I'm not normally one for blondes
) but she'd be a hell of a person to live with. But here's the thing: one of most obvious examples of Elin's flightiness in the film, much to her sister's exasperation, is her attitude towards Johan, and we know what's behind that. So is it that Elin is intrinsically a restless person (at least at this stage in her life) or is it rather that she's chafing at the moulds she's forced (or forced herself) into, such that if she were, in fact, willing and able to be 'true to herself' in all respects, that she wouldn't resemble nothing so much as a sparrow constantly looking for the next branch to leap to? 
Let's get the basics out of they way: they're both atypical entries (not least of all because they're actually good films

Fortunately, things run a little deeper. In Ghost World, best friends Enid and Rebecca are iconoclasts; and the strain on their relationship when it becomes evident that Enid's iconoclasm runs far deeper than Rebecca's is a core focus of the film. Fucking Amal, by way of contrast, depicts the development of a romantic relationship between the introverted and socially isolated Agnes and the extroverted, socially 'in' cheerleader-type Elin, who is perhaps not quite as comfortable with herself and her place in the world as she first appears. In short, both films are about the struggle for personal identity within the pressures and strictures of broader social and cultural frameworks.
So what? This is hardly an uncommon theme, particularly amongst 'teen' films. What is it about Ghost World and Fucking Amal which marks them apart from so many other, vaguely similar films? There's the execution, superlative in its humour, tenderness, and nuance, of course, but something else too; and I have to thank Ebert for this observation, at least insofar as it relates to Fucking Amal: all of these people are on the same moral plane. These are not tales of the mean cheerleaders and the plucky, bookish heroine who overcomes them to roar 'I am woman!' or whatever. There's callous cruelty as only teenagers are capable of, but it's apportioned equally. Most distressing for the Disney model is a scene in Fucking Amal wherein another socially isolated student joins in the mockery of Agnes in order to curry favour with the 'in' crowd, something which will undoubtedly stir uncomfortable memories amongst many of those who were themselves bullied at school.
And with Ghost World, whilst the viewer is encouraged to sympathise with Enid, and laugh at her searing observations of mainstream society as only an outsider like her could make; we are nonetheless aware - and made to be aware - that she is not a truth-bearer, that Rebecca is not a traitor, that all of the people Enid encounters - however much they might immediately function within the tale as hindrances or even opponents for our protagonists - are nonetheless people struggling through life as best they can according to their natures, as deserving of happiness as our protagonists are.
Further, neither film overreaches: by the end the characters are fundamentally the same people they were in the beginning. Changes have been wrought and steps taken; but for the most part their promise lies in the future; a future which will certainly never eventuate onscreen. So what, then, has been achieved? Windows into humanity, I'd suggest: we've learned to understand these characters.
I wrote this up mostly so as to structure my own thoughts on the films in the process, but I'd love to hear from others.
One question that's been itching at the back of my mind: Elin is a flighty character. Her vivacity makes for compelling viewing (that and the fact that she's smoking hot; and I'm not normally one for blondes

