THE BEARDED GIRL
Jody Wilson delivers a special film to Fantasia 2025 audiences with THE BEARDED GIRL. Cleo is the heir to a sideshow as the next Bearded Woman. Feeling conflicted about her future, Cleo rejects familial expectations to find herself.
Inheriting a legacy from an overbearing and proud mother, Cleo wants to choose her path. After discovering a secret about her past, Cleo abandons her assigned responsibilities and heads out into the world, much to the chagrin of her bitter mother.
After a bus ride on her way out of town gets cut short by a sighting of her local crush, Cleo’s infatuation becomes a way of life that maybe isn’t what she intended. Her mother, Lady Andre, comes looking for her and mistakes a passing moment for the end of her legacy.
There’s a subplot involving the sale of sideshow land to a greedy developer. If the heir apparent does not sign papers, Andrea loses the land. Cleo begins to understand cyclical trauma, and it doesn’t feel good.
Jessica Paré delivers a vivacious performance as Lady Andre. She is eccentric and demanding, but is undoubtedly battling unresolved wounds. Skylar Radzion is Josephine, the hairless sibling in the bearded family. She is a spitfire and a slick foil for Cleo.
Anwen O’Driscoll is magnificent. She owns her sass, nails the angsty comedy, and commands your attention in every scene. It helps that she is surrounded by a fantastic ensemble of fully fleshed-out characters. O’Driscoll attacks the role with a beautiful balance between quirk, awkwardness, and authentic innocence.
The production design, from Danny Vermette, deserves all the accolades. The circus tents, trailers, and stages all boast vintage jewel-toned draperies and props. In the outside world, the repeated pops of yellow are striking.
The dialogue is hilarious, particularly set against the nostalgic sweetness of the score. It reminds me of Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure. There is a timeless feeling about the entire film. You can’t pin down a year, and that somehow makes everything more satisfying.
THE BEARDED GIRL is a one-of-a-kind coming-of-age tale. The story is a fantastic metaphor for superficiality and a fierce feminist anthem for self-love.
The Bearded Girl Teaser Trailer:
Director
Jody Wilson
Producer
Amber Ripley
Writer
Jody Wilson
Cast
Anwen O’Driscoll, Jessica Paré
Cinematographer
François Dagenais
Composer
Cayne McKenzie
Editor
Fredrik Thorsen
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