Hollywood
loves to recycle the same old same old, lest we forget some stories are
universal to every generation. “Perks of a Wall Flower” director Stephen
Chbosky’s family-friendly feature “Wonder” (*** OUT OF ****), about a ten-year
old lad with facial deformities, reminds us that physical looks aren’t
everything. Movies about people with malformed faces have been around
since the days of silent movies. Mind you, this genre of films can be
divided into two kinds: those where the disfigured folks have their looks
surgically reconstructed and those who endure their abnormality without the
benefit of change. Twenty-nine versions of “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,”
about an ugly soul lurking in a church, have been released harkening as far as
1909. At least ten versions of the venerable “Phantom of the Opera” have
been produced, as early as 1916. Joan Crawford made “A Woman’s Face”
(1941) where she regained her good looks through surgery, and Mickey Rourke
recovered his looks in the crime thriller “Johnny Handsome” (1989).
Director David Lynch’s celebrated saga “The Elephant Man” (1980), a plea for
tolerance for the less fortunate, ranks as probably most distinguished.
This biographical, 19th century London, England,
epic depicted the travails of a horrifically disfigured adult male, John
Merrick, who was an otherwise wonderful person. Reconstructive surgery
wasn’t an option for Merrick. Later, director Peter Bogdanovich’s “Mask”
(1985) dealt with real-life, twentieth-century teen Rocky Dennis afflicted with
craniodiaphyseal dysplasia from birth that made his face appear misshapen and
bloated like a caricature. “The Elephant Man” and “Mask” were far more
graphic than “Wonder,” but each reflected the shock that occurred when normal
people reacted to abnormal people. Typically, when we see somebody who
doesn’t blend in with the rest of us, we tend to alienate and ridicule
them. We treat them like circus freaks. Although it boasts a happy
ending, “Wonder” doesn’t conclude with our protagonist emerging from surgery
with a new face. He had to endure twenty-seven surgeries to look the way
he does.
The
charismatic hero of “Wonder” suffers from a rare hereditary genetic disorder
known as Treacher Collins syndrome. The ears, eyes, cheekbones, and chin
are deformed, and it ranges from mild to severe. Indeed, August Pullman (Jacob
Tremblay of “Room”) wears a plastic astronaut’s helmet in public to conceal his
countenance as his parents. Auggie’s doting mom Isabel (Julia Roberts of
“Erin Brockovich”) has been schooling him at home. Now, she can no longer
adequately tutor him, because she lacks the experience to teach him about his
favorite subject—science. Reluctantly, Nate Pullman (Owen Wilson of “No
Escape”) and she enroll him at Beecher Prep School, but they do so with great
trepidation. Isobel fears what lies ahead for her son as she watches him
enter the school. “Dear God,” she pleads to herself, “please let them be
nice to him.” Auggie has a face that resembles something a demented plastic surgeon
assembled from spare parts that didn’t match. Nevertheless, despite his
horrific appearance, Auggie is just another pre-teen who shares the same dreams
and joys of any normal youngster. “Wonder” reminds us that just because
all of us aren’t stamped from the same mould is no reason to estrange those
with differences. Initially, when Auggie’s parents brought him to Beecher, the
compassionate headmaster, Mr. Tushman (Mandy Patinkin of “The Princess Bride”),
recruited three students of Auggie’s age to give him a tour.
No sooner
has Auggie settled into his fifth-grade class than he becomes the object of derision.
“What’s the deal with your face?” one cruel student inquires. “Darth HIDEOUS,”
sneers another classmate, while one more compares Auggie with Freddy
Krueger. Things reach crisis proportions when Auggie’s teacher discovers
a classroom photo that Auggie has been digitally deleted from the picture.
A note on the back of the photograph reads ugly people aren’t allowed in the
picture. Gradually, Auggie makes friends, but his first and closest pal
Jack Will (Noah Jupe of “Suburbicon”) unwittingly betrays him during a
Halloween carnival. Jack confides in his obnoxious classmates that were
he Auggie he would hang himself. Auggie overhears Jack because our young
hero isn’t wearing his astronaut outfit as he had planned but came instead as a
“Scream” demon. Jack regrets his treachery. Courageously, Auggie
perseveres despite Jack’s duplicity. The gauntlet of insults that Auggie
runs strengthens his resolve. After Mr. Tushman discovers the culprits
who made the youngster’s life an ordeal, things turn one-hundred-eighty degrees
for Auggie. Predictably, Auggie triumphs over his worst adversaries and
emerges as the most popular student.
Director
Stephen Chbosky and scenarists Steve Conrad of “The Pursuit of Happyness” and
Jack Thorne of “A Long Way Down” adapted R.J. Palacio’s bestselling
novel. According to Palacio’s website, she served as “an art director and
book jacket designer, designing covers for countless well-known and not so
well-known writers in every genre of fiction and nonfiction.” She had
spent twenty years putting off writing her first novel until she realized she
could dawdle no more. Ironically, she didn’t create the cover for her own
novel as she had for some many other authors! The filmmakers have adhered
faithfully to Palacio’s basic premise. We shouldn’t isolate others simply
because they don’t mirror our own image. “Wonder” scrutinizes the
dreadful consequences of bullying. Ultimately, Chbosby and company pull
their punches with their saccharine treatment of the subject matter.
Fortunately, “Wonder” doesn’t degenerate entirely into a sermonizing
after-school special because Auggie has a self-depreciating sense of
humor. The sticks and stones our young hero endures during his anguish
transforms him into a resilient person instead of a hopeless cry-baby who
capitulates in the face of a crisis. Jacob Tremblay delivers a sensitive,
low-key performance beneath the layers of prosthetic make-up that he sports
throughout this 113-minute, PG-rated, feel-good feature. Happily, Julia
Roberts and Owen Wilson restrain themselves, too. Sure, “Wonder” will tug
at your heart-strings, but only those with glacial indifference to this little
fellow’s labors will leave the theater with a dry eye.
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