One of the pleasures of children’s
literature is its tendency to put kids in adult situations and allow
them to maneuver on their own. “Harry Potter” is the most recent and
notable example of this, but the “Nancy Drew” series has been doing it
since the 1930s with tremendous success.
Fittingly, loyalty to this concept
serves the “Nancy Drew” movie as well; it works because it has no
aspirations to be anything more than a children’s movie. Whereas most
animated tales try to slip in adult jokes to appeal to parents who’ve
been dragged along with their screaming offspring, this film doesn’t
even bother with grown-up appeal. It’s a movie starring kids and for
kids, and is charming enough to be enjoyed by the kid in all of us.
Based on the more than 175 books bearing
her name, “Nancy Drew” follows the titular amateur detective as she
travels to Hollywood with her father, Carson (Tate Donovan), who has
asked her to stop sleuthing for a few months so she can “be more
normal.” One look at Nancy (Emma Roberts, niece of Julia) and we know
“normal” isn’t her thing: colorful yet staidly perky matching outfits
suggest that although the character has survived past the 1940s, her
fashion sense has not. She is who she is, and makes no apologies — a
wonderful role model for insecure early teens who dare to live outside
the mainstream.
Nancy chose the house they’re renting in
Hollywood for one reason: it is where former movie star Dehlia Draycott
(Laura Elena Harring) was last seen before disappearing more than 20
years earlier. Nancy’s investigation into the disappearance leads to
many things, including a woman who may be Dehlia’s daughter (Rachael
Leigh Cook) and an unexpected/unnecessary cameo from Bruce Willis.
Nancy gets both wanted and unwanted help
from her loyal boyfriend Ned (Max Thieriot), two bratty schoolmates
named Inga (Daniella Monet) and Trish (Kelly Vitz) and Inga’s younger
brother Corky (Josh Flitter). Fans of the books will wonder about
Nancy’s friends George and Bess; they’re here, but left behind as she
travels to Hollywood.
“It’s one of the greatest unsolved
mysteries of all time,” Nancy says about the case with earnestness and
zero self-doubt, completely dismissive of the fact that trained
detectives have deemed it unsolvable. Herein lays the appeal of the
story: 16 year-old Nancy is operating in an adult’s world, and has her
life threatened in the same way that an adult would in a similar
situation. By seeing one of their own in peril, kids are able to relate
to storylines that would ordinarily be for mature eyes only.
If your kids aren’t familiar with the
“Nancy Drew” books, don’t worry: director Andrew Fleming’s film is very
accessible, and Nancy has a number of cutesy trinkets —pink slippers
and matching pajamas, a self-designed “sleuthing kit” and a classic
blue roadster car — that make her immediately endearing to kids of all
ages.
Now for perhaps Nancy’s greatest
challenge: figuring out how to make a sequel that doesn’t suck.