
  Review by
        Benjamin Poole
  Directed by: Alli Haapasalo
  Starring: Aamu Milonoff, Linnea Leino, Eleonoora Kauhanen
    
      I don’t mean to generalise, but female friendships, the bonds forged
      between girls and women (or, indeed, men and women), are far more powerful
      than the rough and tumble nonchalance of platonic male companionships. I
      mean, I do have male friends who I love dearly, but the true support, the
      conversations late late late into the night, the emotional interchanges;
      that’s girl stuff. Along with, yes, the constant drama, petty jealousies,
      and the all-conquering intensity of the connection that are characteristic
      aspects of having female best friends, and which I wouldn’t have any other
      way (being addicted to the above myself, of course). The affinity shared
      by girls is the bedrock of Alli Haapasalo (director) and
      Ilona Ahti and Daniela Hakulinen’s (writers) superlative
      Girls Girls Girls, an utterly delightful and insightful representation of the phenomena of
      close female friendships and another powerful entry into the teen girl
      bildungsroman recently reaffirmed by the likes of
      Booksmart
      and Waffler fave
      Eighth Grade.
    
    
      
      The set up of Girls Girls Girls is simple, but, like the
      best friendships, the ostensibly straightforward narrative retains a deep
      and complex series of emotional truths and discovery. Over the course of
      three Fridays (the mystical, adolescent promise of the weekend is a
      prospect which, along with other aspects of teen existence, Ahti and
      Hakulinen’s script intuitively understands), we follow three late teen
      kids: Mimmi (Aamu Milonoff), a punkier, strident girl; Rönkkö (Eleonoora Kauhanen), who is shy but experiencing a burgeoning sexual awakening; and Emma
      (Lineea Leino), who is a dedicated figure skater undergoing her own
      crisis of faith.
    
    
      Although on paper the representations sound stereotypical, you get the
      sense with Girls Girls Girls that the girls are just trying
      on these roles as a necessary part of growing up, as a way of footholding
      their own identity, and to make some sort of mark on their contexts. In
      other words, the archetypes do not define them. This is especially true of
      Emma (probably the film’s most interesting, and liminal, character) who is
      facing a push/pull between a lifetime of training, expectations of success
      and a need to forge her own path.
    
    
      
      Emma and Mimmi tentatively hook up, are in love by the next Friday and
      it’s all over by final weekend (hardly a spoiler:
      Girls Girls Girls authentically respects the amplified microcosms of teen
      relationships and their doomed inevitabilities), while Rönkkö enters into
      a few awkward (heterosexual) hook ups of her own. This is essentially
      Girls Girls Girls’ lot r.e. plot, but the emotional charge is all in the beautifully
      observed storytelling. Everyone is well aware of the awkwardness of early
      sexual encounters, but do you remember the ineptitude of the first time
      you went on a date to a restaurant? It was probably the only time you’d
      been to one without your parents, and you didn’t have the first clue how
      it worked, did you? Girls Girls Girls acutely recalls these minor, epochal moments, along with
      sympathetically essaying the teen urge to self-sabotage, the deep
      loneliness of being a kid (there is a moment of dancefloor abandonment
      which just ended me), and the salvation found in friendship (again, it is
      difficult to imagine a film as keenly intense being made about boys).
    
    
      
      Haapasalo frames scenes imaginatively, with an eye for interesting
      compositions throughout (Emma enacting a triple Lutz in the red-light
      roadside of car lights elegantly spins to mind). It’s a canny visual style
      that compliments the thoughtful subtlety of the script and performances.
      All too often female friendships are done dirty by the teen film: the
      binary oppositions of plastics, of mean and good girls. But what is most
      refreshing about Girls Girls Girls is its generosity of
      spirit for its denizens, the portrayal of love and forgiveness between
      friends, its breezy refusal of cliché.
    
    
    
      Girls Girls Girls is on Curzon Home Cinema now.
    
    
