Rating: NR
Genre:
Comedy
Release Date: 01/15/2002
SubTitles: English
Dubbed: English
Sound: DDS
Run Time: 75 min
Flags: Questionable for Children, Suitable for Teens
Distributor/Studio: Paramount
MTV's favorite disaffected teen stumbles through her first romance, suffers through an awful summer job, and pines away for witty banter with her absent and estranged best friend in this feature-length entry in the animated series
Daria. It's the summer before
Daria Morgendorffer's senior year at Lawndale High, and her best friend,
Jane Lane, is heading off to the Ashfield Artists' Colony for the summer.
Jane withholds this piece of information until the last possible moment, presumably in retaliation for the relationship that has developed between her ex-boyfriend,
Tom, and
Daria. Unable to deal with her feelings for
Tom and the rift they've caused between her and
Jane,
Daria blows the boy off, nearly sabotaging her nascent dating career.
Daria's mother, however, refuses to let the girl spend the summer moping.
Daria soon finds herself manning the OK to Cry Corral, a day camp where one of her teachers,
Mr. O'Neill, bores and oppresses the children with his sensitive new age ways. Meanwhile, supporting players
Kevin,
Brittany,
Jodie, and
Mack suffer through employment horrors of their own. As for
Daria's shallow younger sister,
Quinn, she ignores the dictates of the Fashion Club and enlists the help of a tutor to get her test scores up and prove she's not stupid; along the way, she learns a little bit about depth and maturity.
Jane, too, decides to act her age after
Daria arrives for a weekend visit at Ashfield -- just in time to save
Jane from the manipulative poseurs who surround her.
Is It Fall Yet? premiered nearly commercial-free on
MTV on August 27, 2000, serving as a bridge between the show's fourth and fifth seasons.
MTV host
Carson Daly and musicians
Dave Grohl and
Bif Naked provided guest voices,
Daly in the role of
Quinn's tutor. A second movie,
Is It College Yet? followed in January 2002, putting an end to
Daria's five-year run.
~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
Witty, touching, and full of telling insights into the hyper-scheduled, go-go adolescence of many turn-of-the-millennium youths, this feature-length
Daria outing suffers only when it tries to cram too many supporting characters and subplots into its running time. In other words, most of the scenes involving
Brittany,
Kevin, and
Mr. DeMartino could have been left undrawn -- or at least been severely edited. Such quibbles aside, however,
Is It Fall Yet? manages the twin tasks of driving home the show's overall plot arcs and introducing new thematic concerns, all the while hanging together as a stand-alone experience. Programs such as
The Simpsons are content to treat their animated characters as eternally unchanging archetypes; heck, most live-action sitcoms do the same thing. But
Daria and her cohorts have slowly developed over the course of the show's run, and
Is It Fall Yet? gives these three-dimensional, two-dimensional adolescents even more weighty issues to chew on. Milestones abound, from first boyfriends to first inklings of maturity to first blatant seduction attempts by bisexual acquaintances.
Daria's protective shell shows signs of cracking,
Quinn displays heretofore unglimpsed signs of humanity, and
Jane gets a rare chance to stand on her own as a character instead of serving as
Daria's perpetual foil. Along the way, we also get jabs at inner children, art-school twaddle, inane Buzz Bin bands, and shifty legislators -- plus more Fashion Club venom and a hilarious new song from top Lawndale rockers Mystik Spiral. If the countless live-action
dramas on the
WB and
UPN nailed even half as many adolescent details as
Daria, maybe the
Beverly Hills 90210 style of American entertainment would finally give way to something richer.
~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide