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En détresse

Titre original : Odd Girl Out
  • Téléfilm
  • 2005
  • PG-13
  • 1h 24min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
3,7 k
MA NOTE
En détresse (2005)
Drame

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA teenager is bullied by her former friends when they discover that she has a crush on the same boy as the most popular girl in school does.A teenager is bullied by her former friends when they discover that she has a crush on the same boy as the most popular girl in school does.A teenager is bullied by her former friends when they discover that she has a crush on the same boy as the most popular girl in school does.

  • Réalisation
    • Tom McLoughlin
  • Scénario
    • Rachel Simmons
    • Matthew McDuffie
    • Richard Kletter
  • Casting principal
    • Alexa PenaVega
    • Lisa Vidal
    • Leah Pipes
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    3,7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Tom McLoughlin
    • Scénario
      • Rachel Simmons
      • Matthew McDuffie
      • Richard Kletter
    • Casting principal
      • Alexa PenaVega
      • Lisa Vidal
      • Leah Pipes
    • 61avis d'utilisateurs
    • 3avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total

    Photos2

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux33

    Modifier
    Alexa PenaVega
    Alexa PenaVega
    • Vanessa
    • (as Alexa Vega)
    Lisa Vidal
    Lisa Vidal
    • Barbara
    Leah Pipes
    Leah Pipes
    • Stacey
    Elizabeth Rice
    Elizabeth Rice
    • Nikki
    Alicia Morton
    • Tiffany
    Shari Dyon Perry
    Shari Dyon Perry
    • Emily
    • (as Shari Perry)
    Rhoda Griffis
    Rhoda Griffis
    • Denise Larson
    Nancy McLoughlin
    • Ms. Donnely
    Margo Moorer
    Margo Moorer
    • Principal Jessup
    Chad Biagini
    Chad Biagini
    • Tony
    Joey Nappo
    • Ezra
    Maureen Brennan
    Maureen Brennan
    • Soccer Coach
    Michael Arata
    Michael Arata
    • Dave Larson
    Asia Larkin
    • Wannabe #1
    Krizia Vega
    Krizia Vega
    • Wannabe #2
    Hannah McLoughlin
    • Wannabe #3
    Anne Ewen
    Anne Ewen
    • Lydia
    Brandi Gerard
    Brandi Gerard
    • Boutique Salesgirl
    • (as Brandi Coleman)
    • Réalisation
      • Tom McLoughlin
    • Scénario
      • Rachel Simmons
      • Matthew McDuffie
      • Richard Kletter
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs61

    6,53.7K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    monkey4250

    If you have been through it....you understand it

    I watched this movie the first night it was shown on lifetime....and I cried....I am Vanessa....I am an odd girl out....I have been made fun of...humiliated....teased.....and every single thing that Vanessa went through/ did I have went through and I have done....I think everything in this movie was done perfectly. It shows girls that high school is hell and you have to know how to deal with it. Girls are mean and they will be mean no matter what...I am a senior in high school with less than 3 months left and people still start with me for no reason and try to bring me down. I was amazed at this movie and I think every teenage girl should watch this. Especially those that bully/tease....they need to realize that they are NOT perfect what so ever...and that all of the teasing they do can have horrible effects. It wont stop any of them...but maybe they would be a little less harsh or at least have some sympathy.
    lauraeileen894

    Terrifying, tragic tale of adolescent cruelty

    The very overrated 2004 flick "Mean Girls" was praised by critics for its "biting" and "accurate" portrayal of clique-y high school girls. Please, "Mean Girls" is so tame, so glossy it should have been called "'Valley Girl' with PMS". Just a year after "Mean Girls"'s release, Lifetime released "Odd Girl Out", a terrifying tragic tale of adolescent cruelty. Based on Rachel Simmons's nonfiction book of the same name, "Odd Girl Out" is a stylized but painfully realistic look at how teenage girls will attack each other not with four-letter words or fists, but with rumors, dirty looks, and any form of underhanded bullying. "Odd Girl Out" reveals the 21st century's newest form of torment: cyber-bullying.

    Our protagonist Vanessa (Alexa Vega, "Spy Kids") is an A-student comfortably situated in her popular clique of friends. When fair weather friend Niki (played by appropriately unattractive Elizabeth Rice) becomes jealous of Vanessa's social standing, she decides to take her down a peg by turning Vanessa's shallow best friend Stacy (Leah Pipes) against her and spreading hateful rumors and gossip. Gossip turns into thinly veiled insults ("That tray looks really heavy," one girl sneers at Vanessa during lunch), which in turn become relentless abuse (a web site dedicated to insulting Vanessa is put up). Vanessa tries her best to ignore this undeserved mistreatment, but the emotional pain becomes too much for her to bear. Vanessa's self-esteem and life begin to crumble, and her mother (Lisa Vidal) desperately struggles to help her anguished daughter.

    As someone who was picked on (albeit not as badly) in middle school, I must say this movie is right on the mark. This is really how middle school girls behave: they'll simply choose their victim and attack at random. No rhyme, no reason, they are driven by their own self-absorption and insecurities. I'll admit it, "Odd Girl Out" made me cry for myself, for poor Vanessa, and anyone else who was victimized at that age. Vega is astonishingly good as Vanessa, who is forced to go through pure hell scene after scene. You really see the desperation and loneliness reflected in her sad brown eyes. Vidal is also in fine form as Vanessa's loving but somewhat clueless mom. Rice, Pipes, and Alecia Moore are realistic as the pack of former friends who torture Vanessa.

    Some people complain that "Odd Girl Out" plays too much like a horror movie. Anyone who agrees with that sentiment obviously never attended public middle school.
    9brycecox1

    Dead on. And a sizable minority of boys are like this, too.

    I'm a man. Previously a boy.

    Except for certain advances in communications technology made since 1982, I had basically the exact same experience as the girl in the movie (with all the genders reversed, of course).

    For people who have been through an experience as vindictive, drawn-out, thorough, and unrelenting as the experience suffered by the girl in the movie, this will be a movie-watching experience both very painful and very valuable.

    Perhaps even more so for those of us who didn't have a parent as ideal and understanding as the one in the film. But, for the purposes of the film and its messages, that character is well-designed and serves many useful purposes.

    This film covers a lot of bases in a lot of ways. It's an impressive accomplishment, seeing as it's impossible to really do justice to the subject matter in the space of a standard film. Very, very impressive.

    I like hard-hitting, gritty dramas like Requiem For A Dream, Bad Lieutenant, and that sort of thing (also, harsh black comedies like Shallow Grave, Bitter Moon, etc.). This film hit me harder than any of those.

    Girls can be as visibly and simply and physically violent as the stereotypical boys (e.g., the tormentors and killers of Reena Virk in British Columbia, Canada). And boys can be as invisibly and complexly and non-physically violent as the stereotypical girls.

    It's not a simple world out there. And it has a lot of barbarians in it. Male and female. And they don't all fit within the usual gender roles.

    There are plenty of masculine, heterosexual evil boys who behave like evil girls -- because they know it's tougher to get caught that way and that the damage done is deeper; in other words, the smarter ones use more complex and indirect methods. And everyone is far less aware of them than the big, dumb, loud, physically-violent ones -- indeed they likely never get caught because their male victims wouldn't be manly/masculine/tough/cool/honourable/etc. if they were to complain about it or admit to being bothered by it or to cry about it, would they? Just show me all the girls who lust after and fall in love with men who cry about getting bullied. Oh, that's right, there aren't any -- they're too busy fawning over the thoughtful, intelligent, emotionally-literate, understanding Alpha-male goons who are beating those other guys up. Sorry, I forgot.

    It's frequently unlike the stereotype of "boy beats guy up, and it's over -- simple." And in those cases, it's particularly damaging when you've been socialized into the idiotic philistine social orthodoxy of boys not being allowed to cry, and boys have to keep a stiff upper lip and hide and suppress their feelings.

    Anyway.... the film accomplishes its goals and its messages beautifully. 9-outta-10.
    7Claumaur

    Lifetime does it again!

    Odd Girl Out is probably one to of the most realistic movies made-for-teens\pre-teens out there. I have seen She's Too Young, Mean Girls, etc, but this is the best. It is about a girl Vanessa who is one of the top popular girls in her school. Her life is great- she's got straight A's,she's on the school soccer team, and her best friend Stacy by her side. Everything is great- except for her friend Nikki. Slowly, but surely Nikki begins to build a web of lies, taunts, and rumors about Nikki. She tells Stacy that Vanessa is trying to steal her "boyfriend", and Vanessa goes from the popular table to the loser table. Nikki, Stacy, Emily, the Nikki replaced clone, and other girls begin to tear apart Vanessa's life-taunting her, calling her fat, and playing mind games on her. Soon Vanessa becomes depressed and goes desperate to claim her throne in the popular crowd once again.

    This movie was so good! Except for the dim lighting and the that rap they had in there it was great. Leah Pipes and Alicia Morton played such good roles I"ll never be able to watch Disney movies the same way again. Alexa Vega was great and played a believable thirteen year old, unlike Leah Pipes who was a little too old for the movie.

    Overall, it's a great movie! I think anyone between the ages 12-15 should watch it!
    martenaw

    Becoming strong within self

    I watched the movie on Monday and I believed it touched many lives, even young men. Vanessa character I thought showed her growing towards the end. She gained confidence of not having or needing to appease Stacy and the others. I enjoyed the scene where Vanessa's mother, gave her an example of an incident in her life. This helped Vanessa to come down off the defensive and communicate with her mother. Therefore, it showed strength in her character with the help of a new friend. I don't believe the lighting was bad at all in the classroom scenes. In watching on my television the lighting was adequate.

    I did notice a scene that the actress was in a different position than the actual shot. When editing how many times are scenes looked over? This is for my knowledge. Thanks.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      During a scene where Alexa Vega's character Vanessa ends up cutting her hair off, Vega accidentally cut off her own hair in addition to the fake hair pieces she was suppose to chop.
    • Gaffes
      After Vanessa is rejected from the lunch table for the second time, she runs to the bathroom and into a stall. She puts her backpack on the floor and stands on the toilet seat to hide when she hears the other girls coming. One of the girls takes a picture of the bottom of Vanessa's stall with their camera phone. When the picture is shown later, you see Vanessa's backpack along with her feet clearly planted on the floor.
    • Citations

      Ms. Donnely: [Referring to Vanessa's suicide attempt] I guess I'm just wondering if anyone has any feelings about what she did.

      Stacey: Um, Vanessa and I have been friends for, all our lives, and I just wish I could've done something to help her.

      Emily: That is such crap!

      Ms. Donnely: Excuse me Emily!

      Emily: Stacey drove Vanessa to it. She humiliated her. She practically drove her out of school

      [Surveying the whole class]

      Emily: and everyone knows it.

      Stacey: What? That is such a lie! You've known her what, five minutes? Vanessa and I are incredibly close.

      Emily: Yeah, close enough to kill her.

    • Bandes originales
      I Luv How You Feel
      Performed by Tiffany

      Written by Tiffany, & Tim Feehan

      Available on the album "Dust off & Dance" - Tiffany (2005)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 24 octobre 2005 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Savage School
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Jefferson Parish, Louisiane, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • Barnholtz Entertainment
      • Granada America
      • Jaffe/Braunstein Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 24 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.78 : 1

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