The Exploding Girl confines itself to a single week spring break when Ivy (Kazan) returns home from college to stay at her mothers place in the city. Its a mostly uneventful week. Ivy goes to doctor appointments, tries to get her absent boyfriend on the phone, and plays canasta in the park with a floppy-haired childhood friend named Al (Rendall), an unsure but unfailingly decent young man who broadcasts from his first quickly swallowed smile that he would like very much to be more than friends. The Exploding Girls chief concern, and occasional source of tension, is in its delicate detailing of Al and Ivys special dynamic, one that is defined by kindness, attentiveness, and familiarity; its that very specialness that discourages rather than encourages them to explore a romance. Ivy never explodes like youd expect a 20-year-old girl in relationship distress would shes too contained, too self-possessed for that. Instead, the titles promised volatility refers to Ivys epilepsy, which tends to strike when shes under stress, and Grays film (his second feature, following 2003s well-received Salt) is a clear-eyed and eloquent evocation of the cumulative stresses of a young woman troubled by both mind and body. Kazan appears in every scene of The Exploding Girls perfectly paced 80 minutes, and youd miss her if she ducked out for even a moment. A less interesting actress would wilt under such scrutiny, but Kazan has extraordinary features saucer-cup eyes, a commanding nose, an ovaled face and an ability to communicate with her worn-out body what Ivy wont put to words. (Gray uses the hypersensitive Red One camera, which ably captures every nuance, not to mention some gorgeous magic-hour silhouetting.) And Rendall, a Canadian actor, does a fine job with a very fine line indeed, where smitten can cross over into something pitiable. Restless audiences may itch for more plot, for the kind of fiery dramatics that typify young love in the movies, but hold the explosives: Theres tender drama, too, in the possibilities of a hand-hold.
This article appears in May 14 • 2010.
