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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesLena soon sticks her hand in the fire, openly tempting Victor in an attempt to get this subway playboy away from her fragile mother. Passive-aggressive flirting results in Victor making a bald-faced play -- he'll leave Lena's mother if it means he can date her. Without thinking it over, Lena says yes. Lena seems driven both by her desire to protect Mommy as much as by her fickle, hormonal cravings. After all, Victor is somewhat handsome, pushy but not impolite. Now, however, Lena has a secret, a suitor, and a genuine insecurity that comes from the rush of new sensations as a teenage girl.
The mismatch between these two is an intellectual tete-a-tete, though Victor, who has done this dance a few times before, remains dense, acting out of desperation when Lena shows the slightest inclination to flake. And Lena, who thinks she holds all the cards with this dummy, still can't help but string him around, completely insecure in her ability to rebuff a handsome suitor and to simply tell the truth. "Babygirl" spends perhaps a bit too much time on that TV-ish contrivance, weakening the story's conclusion considerably, though the film still showcases the humanity that results in such emotional Hail Marys, such sightless leaps and bald-faced stunts. [B-]
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