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TROOP 1500
Variety
March, 2005
Ronnie Scheib
Ellen
Spiro's surprisingly sprightly documentary concerns a Texas Girl Scout
troop whose mandate is "to strengthen the bond between girls and their
incarcerated mothers in order to break the cycle of crime." While empathetic
to their subjects' plight (pic follows five women and seven girls), and
in tune with the social experiment the troop represents (the girls are
regularly brought to prison in structured encounters), filmmakers remain
aware of the ironies of juxtaposing jail time and brownie points. Pic's
calm evenhandedness incorporates video-within-video experimentation and
deliciously campy interpolated snippets of vintage Girl Scout newsreels.
Helmer Spiro alternates footage of mothers and daughters reciting the
Girl Scout oath, fingers upraised, with women reciting the reasons they
are in jail -- armed robbery, drug dealing, aggravated assault, euthanasia.
Thus the director establishes a tension between hope and disillusionment
that runs all through the film. Is deepening the bond between daughter
and jailbird mother simply setting up the kids for disappointment? Does
it arouse unrealistic expectations for the mothers that will only add
to the pressures of staying straight?
Both the filmmakers and the program use confrontation as a means of working
out the negativity and emotional confusion between parent and child --
the girls are given "girlcams" with which to "interview" their mothers,
the cameras forcing a level of raw honesty that makes evasion impossible.
With a social worker and a psychiatrist as troop leaders, forays into
the woods become "trust hikes" with the unblindfolded leading the blindfolded,
and in-prison visits include the shared activity of making masks to uncover
uncomfortable truths.
Spiro resists the prevalent docu tendency to turn the image over to her
subjects -- sometimes the video frame of the "girlcam" forms just a small
detail within the larger picture. At other moments, startling fisheye
close-ups of mothers are followed by genetically similar mug-shots of
their kids. Chryons superimposed under the shots of inmates, spelling
out the number of months left until possible parole, reveal that most
of the repeat offenders will soon go home. Meanwhile, an empathetic young
nurse who practiced euthanasia on two of her suffering nursing home patients
will languish in jail for at least 229 more months of her 50-year sentence.
Though Spiro never criticizes the scouting institution and tacitly supports
its attempts to respond to a changing world, excerpts from archival Girl
Scout promos such as "Our Date With the Future" featuring Celeste Holm
showcase a peculiarly Aryan idealism that still partly resonates as a
vision of what is normal.
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