Imdb Mona Lisa Smile Online

Lena almost snorted. A Julia Roberts vehicle about feminism? How quaint. How simplistic. She expected a montage of inspirational speeches and a tidy, weepy ending.

“Trite, anachronistic, and historically illiterate. The 1950s were complex. Not every woman was a proto-feminist waiting for a savior from California. The film demonizes the girls who choose marriage and family, just as much as it claims to liberate them. Hypocrisy dressed in a twinset. 2/10.” Imdb Mona Lisa Smile

It was 2:00 AM. Her own midterm paper on the actual Mona Lisa was due in eight hours, and she was hopelessly stuck. She’d written 1,200 words on da Vinci’s sfumato, on the ambiguous curvature of that famous mouth, but her thesis— that the smile is a performance of patriarchal expectation —felt hollow. Fake. Like she was just parroting her professor, a man who’d once called Georgia O’Keeffe “a talented hobbyist.” Lena almost snorted

Lena paused. Her own mother had given up a PhD program to raise her. She’d never called it a sacrifice. She’d called it a choice. Lena had always mentally filed that under internalized misogyny . How simplistic

Lena felt a flash of agreement. Yes. The movie was simplistic. But then she saw a reply to Dave’s review, from :

“I saw this in theaters in 2003. I was 41, a divorced mother of two, working as a secretary. My own mother, a Wellesley graduate of 1956, had just passed. I took her pearl necklace to the showing. When Julia Roberts’ character, Katherine Watson, says, ‘I thought I was headed to a place where I could make a difference,’ I sobbed. My mother never became a lawyer. She became a hostess. She told me the happiest day of her life was her wedding. I never believed her. But after the movie, I held her pearls and wondered: what if her smile, like the Mona Lisa’s, wasn’t a performance? What if it was real, and I just refused to see it?”