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Comedy deftly handles tough topic

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A24 FILMS / NEW YORK TIMES
Jenny Slate and Jake Lacy in “Obvious Child,” a cautious yet funny romantic comedy that follows a Brooklyn woman who faces an unexpected pregnancy.

In a breezy and seemingly effortless way "Obvious Child" accomplishes something difficult. It’s a comedy with abortion at its center that doesn’t fall into about a dozen traps that might have swallowed it up. For starters, it’s not crass. It takes into account the seriousness of the matter, but doesn’t make abortion into a tragedy, either.

Nor does it go the other way and pretend this is something to be happy about. Its feminism is implicit, but the movie doesn’t present itself as some kind of secular equivalent of a moral lesson. It’s not callous or weepy or preachy — or self-consciously not those things. It’s a naturally told story.

It’s also a movie that’s been sitting on the table waiting for somebody to make it, a reflection of something experienced by millions of women. Yet until someone made "Obvious Child," who knew it could be done? Apparently writer-director Gillian Robespierre knew, and she did it by remembering something incredibly, ridiculously obvious: If you’re going to make a movie about a woman having an abortion, the movie’s not about the abortion — it’s about the woman.

As Donna, a 28-year-old aspiring comedienne who finds out she’s pregnant, Jenny Slate has one of the best roles any American actress is going to find this year and she responds with a performance of such charm and immediacy that it feels as though we’ve always known her.

‘OBVIOUS CHILD’
Rated: R
* * *
Opens Friday at Kahala 8

We first meet Donna through her stand-up act at a comedy dive in New York. She talks about her flatulence, what the inside of her underwear looks like after a long day, and her sex life with her boyfriend. Immediately we understand that Donna has no filter, which we like, and we understand why her boyfriend breaks up with her that night.

By the time the pregnancy arrives, it’s just one more thing added to Donna’s romantic problems, her financial worries and her strained relationship with her exacting and accomplished mother (Polly Draper). It’s clear that Donna isn’t ready for adulthood, much less parenthood, and there really is no way that such a woman, in real life at least, wouldn’t get an abortion. But dozens of previous Hollywood movies make us brace for the moment where the movie shifts from reality to fantasy, from honesty to phoniness.

Wisely, Robespierre doesn’t locate the climax of "Obvious Child" in the abortion itself or any decision surrounding it. The movie remains focused on Donna, her relationship with herself and her interaction with her circle of friends and family.

If the movie has a political statement, it’s a subtle one, located in the movie’s structure.

There is a small weakness in the film. In the three stand-up interludes, only the first — when we meet Donna — fully succeeds. In the second, she supposedly bombs, talking about her recent breakup; and in the third, she supposedly hits it out of the park, talking about her pregnancy. But in fact, the breakup monologue is riveting and the pregnancy monologue isn’t funny at all.

It’s a small false note in a movie that’s otherwise as honest as they come.

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