Directed by Ivan Reitman
Expectations: Low, but I’m excited to revisit.
Certain films require an audience to suspend their disbelief in order for them to work, and this is probably the biggest hurdle that any viewer of Junior is going to face. The idea of a pregnant man is simply preposterous; there’s no way that the film can logically make you believe it’s possible. The explanations given in the film don’t help either, as even the simplest passing thought can deconstruct the film’s basic premise. So any viewer of Junior is asked to choose whether they will buy into the concept and just roll with it, or if they will reject it as patently absurd.
There was a time when I refused to watch Junior. It took five or six years after it came out before I was willing to see my #1 movie hero emotional and knocked up. Even then I went in with a furrowed brow and crossed arms, basically ensuring that I was going to hate it. And I did. In the intervening 15 or so years those hard edges of my film-loving personality have naturally worn down a bit, and now I realize movies are ultimately trivial, no matter how passionate I am about them (then or now). So going into Junior this time, I was actually excited.
Arnold’s acting is worth special mention, as he carries the whole movie on his ability to take his character through the arc necessary for the film to work. He begins the film as the stoic Austrian doctor who is basically a blank slate of a character. He’s reserved and protected with his emotions, everything is all bottled up and controlled. As the pregnancy and the hormone therapy progress, Arnold slowly and subtly adds in more and more emotions to his character portrayal. It’s a very gradual change, and the Arnold that closes the film is remarkably different from the Arnold that opens it.
I don’t know that my review will convince anyone to sit down with Junior, but it is definitely a film that doesn’t deserve the bad rap it has. If you push aside that it’s physically impossible and ridiculously absurd, and that it’s a much more serious film than the premise would initially suggest, Junior is a very charming, well-made film.
Next up in this chronological journey through the films of Arnold Schwarzenegger is Chuck Russell’s Eraser! See ya then!