Appropriate Behaviour | reviews, news & interviews
Appropriate Behaviour
Appropriate Behaviour
Gay Brooklyn dramedy memorably mixes great humour with uneasy search for identity
There’s an engaging, indie sense of emotional flux in writer-director Desiree Akhavan’s feature debut Appropriate Behaviour, and a very funny script indeed behind it.
Appropriate Behaviour loops loosely, and without signage, between past scenes from that relationship, from first meeting (very nicely observed, New Year, on the steps of a Brooklyn brownstone), then on through love (real moments of, pictured below right) and conflict, and Shirin’s attempts to bring it back together again, as well as just get along in the moment.
There’s a nicely satirical sense of milieu in its depiction of Brooklyn artistic lifestyles
There are also the frequently awkward situations that she gets into along the way: Akhavan has a physical presence that simultaneously seems assertive and yet wondering how comfortably it’s really fitting into its space. So is the film’s title ironic, or does it raise the question of just what is “appropriate” when you’re trying to resuscitate a relationship? Best friend Crystal (Halley Feiffer) is alongside much of the time as sidekick-stroke-shrink, and there’s a nicely satirical sense of milieu in its depiction of Brooklyn artistic lifestyles that certainly diverts. (Before this feature debut Akhavan was best known as co-creator and star of web-series The Slope, which she's described as being about “a pair of superficial, homophobic lesbians living in Park Slope, Brooklyn” – so the neighbourhood is certainly familiar.)
The contrast of Brooklyn with Shirin’s family and background could hardly be more pronounced: she makes rare excursions out to see her parents in prosperous New Jersey, most often for Persian New Year parties, which involve huge, formal gatherings of family and friends with whom Shirin feels nothing in common. But the main gap between these two worlds lies in the fact that she hasn’t spoken to her parents about her sexuality, or that she’s in a relationship with Maxine, making a return parental visit to see the two women in their obviously one-bedroom apartment another evidence of clash of cultures. That’s a plot strand we may wonder about, however, given that Shirin’s parents are so clearly intelligent and sophisticated people. But perhaps that’s the point, emphasizing how far she has moved into unknown, and so far unspoken, territory for them, particularly in comparison with a high-flying doctor brother who’s doing all the right things by the world he grew up in.
When Shirin’s not trying to win back Maxine, she attempts to shore up her independence through emotional, meaning sexual encounters – one awkward date leads straight into a painful threesome which only emphasizes her underlying loneliness. And there's token work: thanks to a stoner friend of Crystal, a cameo that catches beautifully the world Shirin moves in, she’s found a role teaching an after-school film-making programme to five-year-olds. Hard to explain just what that involves, and the results are simultaneously humorous and painful, with some nice satire on film education into the bargain.
There’s a sense of subject here that certainly recalls Lena Dunham (Girls), as well as the wit of the best Woody Allen. Appropriate Behaviour has some very sharp writing indeed, and it’s nicely shot in low-key style by Chris Teague, and particularly well scored, mixing pop and Persian, by Josephine Wiggs. We may laugh both with and at Akhavan’s “sexually confused narcissist” Shirin, as she’s described at the end, but beneath that humour there’s something more affecting, too. Akhavan’s definitely a director to watch.
Overleaf, watch the trailer for Appropriate Behaviour
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