ZingDash

Try Harder! movie review & film summary (2021)

The school that Lum focuses on has many significances in world of college admissions—the students of Lowell are famously known as “AP machines,” so much that Stanford is rumored to specifically not favor their applications. Lum and her crew follow these students around as if they too are trying to survive the bustle, gossiping about who got into where or who said what. When they’re given a tour of Lowell life by Ian, one of many charismatic characters in the documentary, it’s not of different social groups or cliques but the library, which is always packed after school. The same goes with the computer room, with numerous teenagers hunched over desktops. Ian has a smile on his face when he’s giving us this tour, because he does care about his studies; so too does the population of this school. This smart, savvy documentary does a great job in putting faces and stories behind students who are seen as computers, or seen as being just like the other. 

That unofficial criticism of sameness is especially offensive given that a lot of the students come from similar backgrounds—the majority of the students are Asian American, with many students coming from cultures that emphasize academics as a means to success. (One student remarks that it is "Tiger mom central.") Alvan, who is incredibly smart and lovably goofy, receives a lot of pressure from his Taiwanese-American mother, who has her own history of working hard that she is eager for him to carry on. But this emphasis on race from college admissions also creates a quandary about how students want to present themselves as they build resumes, engage with their classmates, and share their perspectives in application. Lum's film handles on these elements with care, and they further add to what makes this profiled generation so significant in the bigger picture.  

So many impressive students here, who have jobs outside of work, like Sophia at the ice cream stand, and are on top of their homework, like Shea who talks about barely sleeping in order to do his homework. They apply to numerous places, and get rejected; suddenly dreams of UC Berkeley are met with having to settle for UC Santa Cruz, as we hear from one student in passing in between a poignant montage based all around rejection. These students dream of getting into universities with increasingly low acceptance rates, wanting to be a part of a success narrative that involves giving up much of their teenagerdom to maybe a secure a spot in a college that may choose to not love them back. 

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Larita Shotwell

Update: 2024-06-08