The Runaways: movie review
Kristen Stewart and Dakota Fanning step into harder-edged roles in this teen-band biopic, 鈥楾he Runaways.鈥
In this publicity image, Dakota Fanning, left, and Riley Keough are shown in a scene from 'The Runaways.'
David Moir/Apparition Films/AP
The all-girl 1970s teenage rock band The Runaways is the subject of a new film called 鈥 what else? 鈥 鈥The Runaways.鈥 It stars Kristen Stewart as Joan Jett and Dakota Fanning as Cherie Currie, the group鈥檚 two most charismatic 鈥 i.e., screwed up 鈥 members.
If, like me, you didn鈥檛 follow this cult band, the film, based on Currie鈥檚 autobiography and written and directed by rock video artist Floria Sigismondi, will probably seem fresher than it would to people who already know the lyrics to, say, 鈥淐herry Bomb.鈥
Sigismondi was clearly attempting to avoid the usual rock-movie glitz-and-glory tropes, and she perhaps does too good a job. Much of 鈥淭he Runaways鈥 plays out in the key of dreary. But there鈥檚 a flinty integrity in this movie鈥檚 look at the rock grind, and Stewart and Fanning are intensely watchable. Grade: B (Rated R for language, drug use, and sexual content 鈥 all involving teens.)
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