Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA teenage girl convinces a love-struck young ex-con that the only way they can be together is to do away with her domineering parents. Based on actual events.A teenage girl convinces a love-struck young ex-con that the only way they can be together is to do away with her domineering parents. Based on actual events.A teenage girl convinces a love-struck young ex-con that the only way they can be together is to do away with her domineering parents. Based on actual events.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
- Rose Stanton
- (as Collin Wilcox-Paxton)
- Bobbi
- (as Rasool J'Han)
Avis en vedette
Incidentally, I understand she auditioned for the title role in Adrian Lyne's "Lolita," losing out to Dominique Swain. Funny thing about that: Hart really is the Lolita type, so much so that at the age she started playing Clarissa (perhaps 14), she would have been perfect for Nabokov's enchanter. However, by the time Lyne got around to casting for his film, she was way past sweet sixteen, and much more a young woman than a nymphet.
Had they shown her smashing that car window with a baseball bat, I might have believed this movie a little. And they could have made her a tiny bit slutty, which would have been consistent with her character. I had the sense that her mother was watching every detail of the production and didn't want Melissa to look bad, even though the character she was portraying was very bad indeed.
(Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon!)
Back to the movie itself, apart from the fact that the plot twists tended to stand on the not-to-distant horizon wearing flashing signs that read "I AM A PLOT TWIST", the course of events at least made sense and actually turned out to be rather credible. To his credit, the bloke playing her father almost made me want to murder him myself, especially when he showed up to the party and dragged her off before she could make it with that guy. He was annoying, over-bearing and probably the father from hell (for an American teenage girl).
I won't give away any more of the plot in case Melissa-Joan's many adoring fans want to watch this film without knowing what's going to happen; though I challenge anyone not to work the whole thing out by about 15 minutes into the movie!
Overall, I saw the beginning, kept watching and didn't switch it off. That's the main reason why I'm recommending it. My attention span is short, but for some reason it stayed with this film. I can't quite explain why (maybe Sabrina put a spell on me), but if you ever see it on TV and there's nothing else to do, you might as well give it a go.
The acting is pretty bad. Melissa Joan Hart (who I really liked in "Clarissa Explains It All" and "Sabrina the Teenage Witch") was insanely horrible in this. Turns out, she can't do drama. Or acting, for that matter.
The plot holes were numerous. Watch (if you dare) and you'll see. It was corny. Besides MJH, the rest of the acting was pretty atrocious also (especially by the kid who pulled the trigger, the guy who played Nick). The writing was weak.
The end sequence went from pretty cool to bad and then back to pretty cool again with the last scene. But even the titles explaining what happens to the characters at the end leave you angry.
3/10.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMelissa Joan Hart and David Lascher later co-starred in "Sabrina The Teenage Witch".
- Citations
Jennifer Stanton: You should have herd them last night, I've got to get out of here.
Karen Winkler: Jen, what is this, "Escape from Alcatraz"? Will you please stop stressing?
Jennifer Stanton: They want to throw him back in jail!
Karen Winkler: Well, your dad's car is pretty trashed.
Jennifer Stanton: We don't know he did that. Karen, I gotta get out of here, I gotta talk to him.
Karen Winkler: No, no way. Aren't you in enough trouble already?
Jennifer Stanton: I won't be gone long.
Karen Winkler: Are you nuts? You're mom's downstairs, what if your father comes home?
Jennifer Stanton: Well, I thought we could always count on each other?
Karen Winkler: Why am I listening to you?
Jennifer Stanton: Because you're my best friend.
- ConnexionsReferences L'évadé d'Alcatraz (1979)
- Bandes originalesOther Side Of The River
Written by Alan Robert
Performed by Life of Agony
Courtesy of Roadrunner Records