La vida perfecta de una escritora en Nueva York comienza a desmoronarse cuando un documental sobre crímenes reales la obliga a enfrentarse a su desgarradora historia escolar.La vida perfecta de una escritora en Nueva York comienza a desmoronarse cuando un documental sobre crímenes reales la obliga a enfrentarse a su desgarradora historia escolar.La vida perfecta de una escritora en Nueva York comienza a desmoronarse cuando un documental sobre crímenes reales la obliga a enfrentarse a su desgarradora historia escolar.
- Premios
- 2 premios ganados y 3 nominaciones en total
Gage Munroe
- Peyton Powell
- (as Gage Alexander McIver Munroe)
Opiniones destacadas
I cannot put my finger on what was wrong with this movie. The story was good. I am not sure where it went wrong. It could have been Mila's performance, the perfect rich unicorn boyfriend, the one dimensional characters or the editing. First of all, the movie could have been much shorter. Second of all, it failed to make me care much about Mila's character. I don't know why. She had a good story and I understood what she went through. I think it's how she acted, it was a bit off, one dimensional. Actually all the characters were one dimensional. It was annoying in a sense, same stereotypes and say exactly what you expect them to say. And the boyfriend was just so patient and perfect it makes one nauseous. It felt unrealistic. It's one of those movies, that I am not sure if I am happy I watched or not.
My advice is to go into this movie with no expectation... in other words, stop reading the reviews! Lol! I think the lack of expectations makes this movie the masterpiece that it is. -- Luckiest Girl Alive, what a great movie!!! The third person dialogue really nudges this movie beyond great in my opinion. Couldn't have chosen a better actress for this role. Mila is amazing as always! The mystery of "what happened" is executed so well. Revealing small pieces of the puzzle without revealing the full plot was executed wonderfully. I truly wasn't sure what direction the movie was going to go in. The direction it did end up going was unexpected and dark, and it was done so well. Sadly it's very relatable being a young woman. The trauma she lives with and the person she turns herself into is exactly what survivors go through every day. And the "villain" in this movie, is so typical... I highly recommend this movie, and if you're able to watch it with a boyfriend or a brother, even better!
The movie starts slowly as we get to know Ani, through her actions, inner monologue, and a series of flashbacks.
We get hints that she has suffered a terrible trauma while at an expensive high school, but has done her best to push all of the trauma down.
Her resulting life is hollow, obsessed with status, and her writing focused on sexualizing every topic.
That Ani is finally forced to confront her trauma, to let it ooze out of the dark corners where she's repressed it, is predictable. The story, however, is not nor is her reaction.
Not to give anything away, but the movie confronts a serious, important subject and gets better as it moves along.
Acting and editing are highlights. Visuals, however, are rather dull.
(This, however, may be on point as well given how the character lives life at a distance every day since high school.)
I'm glad I didn't go to see this in a theater, but it's a solid enough movie to screen on Netflix, with a follow up conversation in your friend-group almost mandatory.
We get hints that she has suffered a terrible trauma while at an expensive high school, but has done her best to push all of the trauma down.
Her resulting life is hollow, obsessed with status, and her writing focused on sexualizing every topic.
That Ani is finally forced to confront her trauma, to let it ooze out of the dark corners where she's repressed it, is predictable. The story, however, is not nor is her reaction.
Not to give anything away, but the movie confronts a serious, important subject and gets better as it moves along.
Acting and editing are highlights. Visuals, however, are rather dull.
(This, however, may be on point as well given how the character lives life at a distance every day since high school.)
I'm glad I didn't go to see this in a theater, but it's a solid enough movie to screen on Netflix, with a follow up conversation in your friend-group almost mandatory.
Knoll should stick to writing books, not screenplays. In the convoluted, incohesive and dragged out 113 minute runtime, the story is all over the place, with poorly placed timeline tidbits, and ridiculous and mostly unnecessary scenes and dialogue.
The entire film felt one hour too long and failed to maintain any fluidity to the sensitive nature of its content. It lacked the consistency, depth and tone to be a suspenseful narrative, and instead, chose pretentious shock value trauma in a misguided self-serving fantasy theme.
And that's too bad, because the casting and performances were spot-on, especially Kunis who shined. Had any seasoned filmmaker made some much needed edits, they would've have gone a long way to make this a great watch, instead of getting impatient, frustrated and uninterested in what was going to happen next in the bender-mixed writing and directing. It's a generous 6/10 mainly for the performances.
The entire film felt one hour too long and failed to maintain any fluidity to the sensitive nature of its content. It lacked the consistency, depth and tone to be a suspenseful narrative, and instead, chose pretentious shock value trauma in a misguided self-serving fantasy theme.
And that's too bad, because the casting and performances were spot-on, especially Kunis who shined. Had any seasoned filmmaker made some much needed edits, they would've have gone a long way to make this a great watch, instead of getting impatient, frustrated and uninterested in what was going to happen next in the bender-mixed writing and directing. It's a generous 6/10 mainly for the performances.
The book was a million times more (not better; apples and oranges) than the movie. I don't think it's fair to expect 1.5 hours to do it justice. I can't give an unbiased review if the movie after reading the book so the movie was decent but the depth and development in the book deserves a mini series. Without the buildup, background, and character development some of the story seems incomplete and really paints a better picture of surviving/victimhood. I worry that it became more of a message than a quality story. That being said, the casting for Ani and Luke (especially) was great! I think it's a movie worth watching if you haven't read the book.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaLionsgate and Pacific Standard - actress Reese Witherspoon and producer Bruna Papandrea's production company - bought the film rights to Jessica Knoll's debut novel before it had even been published. The rights were secured in April 2015, over a month before the book hit stores.
- ErroresOnscreen headlines show that Ani was in high school in the late 90s. During the flashback to Ani's high school field trip, she makes a note of witnessing a commanding woman walking on the sidewalk talking into her cell phone. This woman is speaking into a flat, rectangular smartphone that wasn't introduced until the first iPhone was released in 2007.
- Citas
Ani Fanelli: I've managed to not eat lunch for six years, just to have this joker call me petite.
- Créditos curiososThe title of the movie appears at the very last second of the movie.
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- How long is Luckiest Girl Alive?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Luckiest Girl Alive
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 53 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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