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January 16, 2008

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Excellent. Thank you.

Oh my goodness, reading this review makes me feel like you have been listening in on my phone rants to friends and relatives about this movie. ;) Seriously, all I could do while reading this post is say yes! yes! yes! to the points you made. And one (well two actually) of the most fucked up moments in the movie for me were at the end: Juno's father telling her after giving birth that..."she would be here [l&d] again when it was her turn." WTF?!?!?! This was her turn...why would anyone say dumbshit like that? This moment might have been able to be overlooked if we weren't then subjected to the most infuriating voice over when watching the a-mom see the baby for the first time..."Neither I or Bleeker (bdad) wanted to see the baby, because really - the baby was always really [meant to be] Vanessa's (amom)". Are we really still dealing with the 'wrong womb' kind of bullshit????
I won't even get into the lame and superficial relationship shown between the adoptive parents marriage - but I did leave the movie wondering if the screenwrite would try to write about things she knew something about in her next film...because she showed not a clue about marriage or adoption.
Ok, sorry for the rant, but the movie was really upsetting to me.

I've seen numerous incidents of this movie being trashed in an idiotic manner. Refreshing to see someone do it from an intelligent perspective as the blogger here did. I still like the movie myself, but unto each their own.

@chicagomama:

the line in the movie is 'someday you'll be back on your terms'...not turn

take care

I would like to see both of these movies but not in the theater. I am sure I will need to be in my own home so I can rant out loud when necessary.

Thank you for the great reviews.

When the movie began I was turned-off by the cavalier treatment of the subject of sex and pregnancy. As the story unfolded, I realized that is the story. Juno is unable to have an emotional repsonse to motherhood because of the shaping events in her own life. She had developed the coping system represented by her interactions, and as such was the wise-cracking teen male of earlier generations. She didn't seem to express any emotion until the very end when she cried. I was dismayed to think that with this generation of teens the act of sex, pregnancy, and a child's life have so little meaning. Dr. Bruce Perry's research of modern children being raised without the necessary brain development experiences to have meaningful socio-emtional relationships with family and community. I found this film to epitomize this exact situation. It is frightening.
As for the adoption theme of the story, you have described that far beter than I could. As for the racial flaws, I was open-mouthed.

I am glad you saw this and have pointed out the unrealistic points in this film.

It also seems to insult everyone who isn't white.

BTW, denying Juno an independent lawyer? That's what they did to mothers years ago to get their children off them. What a shame that the movie seems to make that acceptable to the public.
You wouldn't be allowed to sign away your house like that, would you? The papers I signed, drugged up in hosptial, didn't even have the word "adoption" in it, no witnesses, nothing.
The social worker said "Sign or you will never see you son again" (they were able to do that in Canada back then - they didn't need a reason or consent). The social worker in my case refused outright to contact any lawyer ("no lawyer has the time to get to the hospital for you and if you leave to find one, your medical insurance will be cancelled" - no mobile phones or computers in those days and the nurses had the power to shut down the phones on the ward - nightmare)

Thank you for confirming my worst fears about this film which my reunited son and I will not be seeing - we would have given anything for an open adoption. What about her son's needs in future, especially up to date medical info? My son almost died from not having his medical info and he adores his siblings who mean the world to him.

Closed adoptions are the worst things in the world. Just ask my son.

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Harlow's Monkey

  • I am a social worker who doesn’t believe that social work is just about "saving" people or "helping" people. Social work is about reform and empowerment, not about social control. I am attempting to be an agent of change from within the institutional structures that historically have been used to discriminate against those our society does not value. This blog was born in March of 2006 as a way to put down my thoughts about international and transracial adoption, foster care, race and social work from a point of view that is often missing - the adoptee themselves.

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