AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,0/10
1,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Recuperando-se de uma separação unilateral, Karen, com o coração partido, invade a casa do lago de sua ex. Lá, ela entra em uma relação complicada com a jovem provocadora Lana.Recuperando-se de uma separação unilateral, Karen, com o coração partido, invade a casa do lago de sua ex. Lá, ela entra em uma relação complicada com a jovem provocadora Lana.Recuperando-se de uma separação unilateral, Karen, com o coração partido, invade a casa do lago de sua ex. Lá, ela entra em uma relação complicada com a jovem provocadora Lana.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 6 vitórias e 5 indicações no total
Christopher Tallmadge
- Smoking Man
- (as Christopher Tallamadge)
Avaliações em destaque
Terrible, artificial and forced. Overbearing musical score is jarring
This film is completely and thoroughly boring. The score is absurd and fills the aura of suspense, but the only reveal is that nothing happens!
When you write a movie, despite what size of ego you have, in the end your job is to craft a escape for your audience. To ay least entertain them for 90 minutes... not put them to sleep. Clementine is a perfect example of how indie cinema is failing. Decent cast, decent production value... but otherwise complete bore. At least make a boring movie with an original story. Hopefully Gallagher will learn this on her next film.
Karen (Otmara Marrero) has a bad breakup with D (Sonya Walger) who changed the locks on her and even steals her dog. Karen takes off and breaks into a country house. She is befriended by neighbor teen Lana (Sydney Sweeney). Handyman Beau (Will Brittain) shows up to check on the house.
The first half has a great quiet intensity. Karen is constantly threatened with exposure which does lead to the question why. Why doesn't she simply leave? There is an answer about halfway in the movie. It's a good answer but the movie does need to find something quick to replace the tension. It's a little slow to get there but it does eventually get somewhere. The slow pacing is a double-edged sword. It's part of the movie's charms but it's also part of its problem. Filmmaker Lara Gallagher may be a name to look for in the future.
The first half has a great quiet intensity. Karen is constantly threatened with exposure which does lead to the question why. Why doesn't she simply leave? There is an answer about halfway in the movie. It's a good answer but the movie does need to find something quick to replace the tension. It's a little slow to get there but it does eventually get somewhere. The slow pacing is a double-edged sword. It's part of the movie's charms but it's also part of its problem. Filmmaker Lara Gallagher may be a name to look for in the future.
Greetings again from the darkness. A lovely opening sequence shows Karen in bed, the morning sun barely able to match the light of love emanating from inside her. We never see Karen's lover's face, but we hear D's voice as the two ladies share the beginning of a day. Our next scene has Karen unable to enter the house the two shared. Ramsey the dog barks at her through the glass pane of the door that Karen's key no longer opens. Frustrated, she hops back in her car.
We soon learn that Karen's idea of revenge (or coping) after being dumped is to break into D's Oregon lake house, take down a painting from over the bed, smoke some pot, drink some wine, and replay D's voice messages. Her plan doesn't seem to go much deeper, but it's not long before she has met Lana, a local girl who claims to be 19 years old - though we all know she's younger. Lana is a bit odd, though clearly attracted to Karen, herself intrigued by the unusual girl. This strange little cat and mouse game is then crashed by Beau, the handyman for D's lake house.
The first feature from writer-director Lara Gallagher excels at keeping us off-balance, despite moving at a pace that allows the viewer plenty of time for thought and observation. Complementing the uneasiness is the score from Katy Jarzebowski, with its harsh single piano note, sometimes accompanied by violin ... the sound of a horror film, though this is no Hollywood cabin in the woods. Three times we are shown the handgun in the drawer, and though it plays a significant part, it's not in the way that our movie mind has been trained.
Otmara Marrero plays Karen, and rising star Sydney Sweeney is Lana. The two joust very well, though it's Lana who fascinates. She's curious of love and life, while not quite being ready. Lana is a manipulator thanks to an innocence that draws Karen in. Will Brittain (BLOW THE MAN DOWN) plays Beau in a manner of which we are never really certain - friend or foe? Finally, Sonya Walger is D. She doesn't show up until late in the film, but she is precisely what we have envisioned.
There is an odd cadence to the film, and the performances assist with confounding us. It's a coming of age story for two females of different ages, and we can't help but notice that Karen has been involved in two relationships featuring the older woman/younger woman dynamic. Of course, her role reversal in the two relationships is at the core of the film. Indie band Lightning Dust contributes an outstanding song with "Antonia Jane", and we are left thinking this is a psychological thriller without the thrills. Filmmaker Lara Gallagher has delivered a personal project reminding us that toxic relationships aren't limited to man-woman.
We soon learn that Karen's idea of revenge (or coping) after being dumped is to break into D's Oregon lake house, take down a painting from over the bed, smoke some pot, drink some wine, and replay D's voice messages. Her plan doesn't seem to go much deeper, but it's not long before she has met Lana, a local girl who claims to be 19 years old - though we all know she's younger. Lana is a bit odd, though clearly attracted to Karen, herself intrigued by the unusual girl. This strange little cat and mouse game is then crashed by Beau, the handyman for D's lake house.
The first feature from writer-director Lara Gallagher excels at keeping us off-balance, despite moving at a pace that allows the viewer plenty of time for thought and observation. Complementing the uneasiness is the score from Katy Jarzebowski, with its harsh single piano note, sometimes accompanied by violin ... the sound of a horror film, though this is no Hollywood cabin in the woods. Three times we are shown the handgun in the drawer, and though it plays a significant part, it's not in the way that our movie mind has been trained.
Otmara Marrero plays Karen, and rising star Sydney Sweeney is Lana. The two joust very well, though it's Lana who fascinates. She's curious of love and life, while not quite being ready. Lana is a manipulator thanks to an innocence that draws Karen in. Will Brittain (BLOW THE MAN DOWN) plays Beau in a manner of which we are never really certain - friend or foe? Finally, Sonya Walger is D. She doesn't show up until late in the film, but she is precisely what we have envisioned.
There is an odd cadence to the film, and the performances assist with confounding us. It's a coming of age story for two females of different ages, and we can't help but notice that Karen has been involved in two relationships featuring the older woman/younger woman dynamic. Of course, her role reversal in the two relationships is at the core of the film. Indie band Lightning Dust contributes an outstanding song with "Antonia Jane", and we are left thinking this is a psychological thriller without the thrills. Filmmaker Lara Gallagher has delivered a personal project reminding us that toxic relationships aren't limited to man-woman.
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- How long is Clementine?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Клементина
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 34 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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