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IMDbPro

Pretty Persuasion

  • 2005
  • R
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
11K
YOUR RATING
James Woods, Jane Krakowski, and Evan Rachel Wood in Pretty Persuasion (2005)
Trailer 1
Play trailer2:08
7 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark ComedySatireComedyDrama

A 15-year-old girl incites chaos among her friends and a media frenzy when she accuses her drama teacher of sexual harassment.A 15-year-old girl incites chaos among her friends and a media frenzy when she accuses her drama teacher of sexual harassment.A 15-year-old girl incites chaos among her friends and a media frenzy when she accuses her drama teacher of sexual harassment.

  • Director
    • Marcos Siega
  • Writer
    • Skander Halim
  • Stars
    • Evan Rachel Wood
    • Ron Livingston
    • James Woods
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marcos Siega
    • Writer
      • Skander Halim
    • Stars
      • Evan Rachel Wood
      • Ron Livingston
      • James Woods
    • 87User reviews
    • 64Critic reviews
    • 45Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos7

    Pretty Persuasion
    Trailer 2:08
    Pretty Persuasion
    What Roles Has Evan Rachel Wood Turned Down?
    Clip 2:52
    What Roles Has Evan Rachel Wood Turned Down?
    What Roles Has Evan Rachel Wood Turned Down?
    Clip 2:52
    What Roles Has Evan Rachel Wood Turned Down?
    Pretty Persuasion
    Clip 0:43
    Pretty Persuasion
    Pretty Persuasion Scene: Scene 1
    Clip 1:19
    Pretty Persuasion Scene: Scene 1
    Pretty Persuasion Scene: Scene 3
    Clip 1:00
    Pretty Persuasion Scene: Scene 3
    Pretty Persuasion Scene: Scene 4
    Clip 0:46
    Pretty Persuasion Scene: Scene 4

    Photos185

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    Top cast45

    Edit
    Evan Rachel Wood
    Evan Rachel Wood
    • Kimberly Joyce
    Ron Livingston
    Ron Livingston
    • Percy Anderson
    James Woods
    James Woods
    • Hank Joyce
    David Wagner
    • Morgan
    • (as David T. Wagner)
    Brent Goldberg
    • Rick
    Adi Schnall
    Adi Schnall
    • Randa
    Elisabeth Harnois
    Elisabeth Harnois
    • Brittany
    Stark Sands
    Stark Sands
    • Troy
    Jane Krakowski
    Jane Krakowski
    • Emily Klein
    Michael Hitchcock
    Michael Hitchcock
    • Headmaster Charles Meyer
    Danny Comden
    Danny Comden
    • Roger Nicholl
    Jaime King
    Jaime King
    • Kathy Joyce
    Josh Zuckerman
    Josh Zuckerman
    • Josh Horowitz
    James Snyder
    James Snyder
    • Dave
    Cody McMains
    Cody McMains
    • Kenny
    Mike Erwin
    Mike Erwin
    • Barry
    Ira David Wood IV
    Ira David Wood IV
    • Martin Stivers
    • (as Ira Wood)
    Selma Blair
    Selma Blair
    • Grace Anderson
    • Director
      • Marcos Siega
    • Writer
      • Skander Halim
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews87

    6.411K
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    Featured reviews

    7ferguson-6

    Like Shooting Ducks in a Row

    Greetings again from the darkness. This one just defies all labels, categories and genres. Definitely not a teen comedy, but it is part Black Comedy, Social Commentary and is written like a spoof ... but it is not a spoof of anything in particular.

    The first feature film from director Marcos Siega is off beat as both a comedy and drama. The viewer finds himself in situations of uncomfortable, guilty laughter while at the same time mesmerized by the social topics and excellent acting. The cadence of the dialogue is beyond description and is perfectly displayed at the dinner table with Evan Rachel Woods, her dad played by an over the top James Woods and her new step mom. The family dog plays a big part in the "conversation".

    The heart of the story is the devilishly orchestrated false (or are they?) accusations of sexual harassment against drama teacher Ron Livingston (so great in "Office Space"). With so many different agendas at play, we can't help but be drawn into to this story on many levels. Jane Krakowski ("Ally McBeal") shows a real Priscilla Presley side as the lesbian, glory-hound reporter. Selma Blair (Reece Witherspoon's nemesis in "Legally Blonde") is terrific as Livingston's semi-supportive wife.

    Make no mistake, the real star of the film, and the reason it works is the extraordinary talents of Evan Rachel Wood (just plain brilliant in "Thirteen"). Wood takes teen ego and self-centeredness and revenge to a whole new level. As one of the male teacher's states, her character is the devil. Watching how she manipulates her friends, teachers, boys and adults is quite the guilty pleasure. Very few actresses her age could pull off the role of this complex character.

    The music of the film is very interesting. It is almost as if each character has their own theme song - you can really sense the focal point of the scene by the music. Not sure who to recommend this to as it is impossible to categorize. If you are up for a strange, outside the box story that is well acted, simply filmed and full of uncertain laughter, then this is the one for you!
    6noralee

    Drawn Out Social and Political Satire of Teen Girls

    "Pretty Persuasion" crosses "Mean Girls" with an updated slant on Lillian Hellman's "The Children's Hour," but its social and political satire feels in too many scenes like an extended "Saturday Night Live" sketch.

    The film is heavy-handedly based on the sociological findings that instead of doing Columbine-like violence, teen age girls lash out with spiteful aggression in social situations. The film makes the extended case that teen girls are more like Machiavelli than "Carrie" or as in "Heathers." The male debut writer and director can't resist adding in dollops of male fantasy about girls and women. Even under the guise of examining how ambiguous male-driven media messages from Britney Spears to Lolita to TV shows, etc. create confusing role models of appropriate behavior for girls in their real lives, males are seen as clueless pawns of younger females.

    One effective touch is to replay scenes in flashbacks from different angles to show how miscommunications and misunderstandings can occur and be manipulated.

    Individual scenes and caricatures are very funny, particularly James Wood doing a comic take on his "Ghosts of Mississippi" role. Adi Schnall is touching as a naive Muslim student thrown in with the sharks of the American Dream. Jane Krakowski enjoys making fun of the ambitious bombshell roles she usually plays. Elisabeth Harnois is the most affecting as the best friend, but she is so natural she almost seems to be in a different movie. Selma Blair has a brief funny scene as a wife mocking her husband's fantasies, though a notable episode of TV's "Angel" did the exact same scene with more dark bite, as well as the general theme taken up more effectively by Joss Whedon's "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and Ryan Murphy in "Popular."

    But most of the rest of the broad, scatter shot attacks on ethnic, racial and sexual PC clichés end up just wooden and go on repetitively for too long. Individual lines like "I can sympathize with the immigrant experience because I'm Canadian." are amusing, as are ongoing jokes about putting on the story of Anne Frank as the high school play, but pile up in dialog that even the commanding Evan Rachel Wood has trouble making seem real.

    The closing montage ties all the disparate themes together in a sudden shift of tone, but it was a long time getting there, in moving from the obvious to the touching to twists in using high school as the usual metaphor for the world at large.

    The cinematography is all appropriate bright pink. The set design is full of visual jokes, more than the can be picked up quickly.

    For a film set in the world of teenagers, there are few songs on the sound track, perhaps due to budget limitations, but more music might have helped the pacing.
    8tomsview

    Pretty perceptive

    "Pretty Persuasion" is more outrageous than the combined monologues of Ricky Gervais on the Golden Globes Awards.

    The people who will definitely get their money's worth out of this film are the easily offended; for them there is something to offend every couple of minutes.

    A number of critics felt the film "...hovered uncomfortably between comedy and satire..." but who cares about genre when it's this funny.

    I loved it.

    Despite the high school setting - elite Roxbury Academy in Beverly Hills - it's not another "Clueless" or "Mean Girls". It possesses more the anarchic spirit of "God Bless America".

    The script is clever; perception is a key motif throughout, and the way the film revisits earlier scenes to show what really happened is inspired.

    Although Evan Rachel Wood's character, Kimberly Joyce, seems interested in the well-being of others, she really has no filter; manipulation and passive aggressiveness are built into her DNA. Although she blatantly parades her hypocrisy, she also exposes it in just about everyone around her - often hilariously. In the end though, vulnerabilities are exposed.

    When she befriends a quiet, Middle Eastern student, Kimberly's cynical views on migrants, race, religion, sex and just about everything else come to the fore - nothing is sacred. However one commentator nailed it when he said that Kimberly does all this with such obvious pleasure in naughtiness that she's impossible to hate.

    The film has an original score by Gilad Benamram. It's light and chilled, and acts as a dispassionate commentator as events unfold.

    Evan Rachel Wood's performance is mesmerizing, However, I have one criticism, as others have noted, she slurs her words and speaks so fast it's sometimes hard to understand her. I found myself straining to catch the dialogue, but I didn't want to miss a word because I was enjoying it so much.

    "Pretty Persuasion" is fifteen years old now, but has lost none of its bite. Forget the negative comments. This one will have you on the edge of your seat waiting for Kimberly to reveal the next nugget of political incorrectness.
    8DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Pretty Persuasion

    I kinda liked this film for almost all the wrong reasons. It's politically incorrect and doesn't make any apologies for doing so, but yet demonstrates a notion that we can be bigots, and yet not be consciously aware of it. After all, it's what has already been internalized, but it becomes exposed quite naturally through our actions and dialogue.

    Evan Rachel Wood is the star of the movie. As Kimberly Joyce, she's the high school frat girl like Alicia Silverstone's Cher in Clueless, but in terms of character, she's on the other side of the spectrum. Way on the other side. She's looking for fame, and would do absolutely anything to obtain her 15 minutes worth. She's a temptress, a seductress, highly intelligent, and so manipulative, she can stab you in the back while smiling in front of you, with you none the wiser and probably still worshipping the ground she treads on.

    Which brings us back to the title, and makes you wonder if beautiful people can get away with almost anything. I guess it's probably almost human nature to be enchanted by the pretties, and anyone would most likely be lapping up at anything they say. It doesn't take much for a beautiful bitch to realize the power she wields on men who are drunk in her aura, and then to exploit this weakness of people around her.

    There are two more key reasons why I enjoyed the movie, besides being enchanted myself by the Kimberly character. The first is the dialogue in the movie - there's so much wit, and it's fast and laced with plenty of double entrées and satire, delivered in a deadpan manner by Rachel Wood no less, you would likely need to re-watch it again to grasp them all. The second is having Kimberly chaperon a newbie in school, an Arab girl called Randa (Adi Schnall), raising some eyebrows as the religious girl gets exposed to pop culture and blatant insensitive racists remarks, and inevitably too becomes a pawn in the whole scheme of things, as does Kimberly's best friend Brittany (Elisabeth Harnois) discover that it's not always fine and dandy being the hunter, as there is always something or someone else higher above in the food chain.

    The host of supporting characters raised the movie to another notch. James Woods shines as the foul mouthed father of Kimberly, who sprouts words of wisdom peppered with colourful vulgar, racist remarks. Jamie King completes the household as the long suffering trophy wife/stepmother in the Joyce household, constantly bearing the brunt of insults hurled at her by Kimberly. At school, we have Ron Livingston as Percy Anderson, as the meek and mild mannered school teacher who indulges in role-playing games with the wife at home (Selma Blair), and inadvertently becomes the target and public enemy #1 of Kimberly and friends. And Jane Krakowski in a bimbotic role, stars as a news reporter who finds it increasingly difficult to stay objective when covering possibly the juiciest scandal to hit town.

    There's a sub theme running that touches on "saving face", which is an issue to the successful in ensuring that their reputation does not get tarnished in the face of scandals, and is a trait that most Asians are familiar with. It's important that face is not ruined easily by careless actions, as face is something that is most difficult to build in an environment of shame. Having lost face and losing the faith to rebuild it, can lead people to an untimely sad demise.

    So if you're up for some scheming betrayal, and plenty of slimy tactics, if you want to observe how seemingly good intentions are actually poisoned barbs that kill slowly, then I hope I've already persuaded you enough to watch this flick.
    futures-1

    I expected a good film. I received more.

    I've liked every effort I've seen by young actress Evan Rachel Wood ("13" being a stellar example, and "Missing" being another). This is no exception. "Pretty Persuasion" is akin to "Election" (Reese Witherspoon) for the first half, with a dark, witty sense of humor about high school aged people playing mental "chess" with each other, their teachers, and parents. Slowly the story morphs darker, into something like "To Die For" (Nicole Kidman), with a media-made, fame-driven main character willing to do whatever it takes to reach a twisted idea of recognition and advancement. THIS would be enough for the film to be interesting and well done within its own right, but then it goes further. Further. This film is billed as a comedy. If it is, it is not for long… a) if you watch the entire thing, and b) you pay attention. I was expecting a good film. I received even more.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Jane Krakowski did her bra and panties scenes she asked that all crew that worked the shot be without a shirt.
    • Goofs
      In the courtroom scenes, the girls wouldn't have been allowed to be in the courtroom while the others were testifying.
    • Quotes

      Kimberly Joyce: I have respect for all races, but I'm very glad that I was born white. As a woman, it's the best race to be. Especially if you want to become an actress, like I do.

      [pause]

      Kimberly Joyce: If I wasn't white, then the next thing I would wanna be is Asian because a lot of men like Asian girls because they think they're docile and subservient and sweet which I don't really think is true because I once met this Asian girl at summer camp one time and she was a real bitch.

      [pause]

      Kimberly Joyce: If I couldn't be white and I also couldn't be Asian, then my third choice would be African-American because I've always wanted to be a gospel singer and also, black men are more forgiving if your butt gets big. Except I'd definitely want light skin and Caucasian features like... Vanessa Williams or Halle Berry. And finally, you know, no offense or anything Randa, but my very last choice would be Arab. I mean, truth be told you're not in a very enviable position. There's a lot of resentment in this country toward the Middle East and there's a lot of stereotypes floating around which I don't think are true because in the short amount of time I've known you, you haven't tried to bomb anybody and you currently smell okay to me.

    • Alternate versions
      There are apparently at least three different versions: 1 hr 50 min (110 min), 1 hr 44 min (104 min) (USA), 1 hr 47 min (107 min) (Argentina).
    • Connections
      Features South Park, le film : Plus long, plus grand et pas coupé (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Gare a Toi Jeune Amant
      Written by Gilad Benamram (ASCAP), Ran Pink (BMI) & Flora Benamram (ACUM)

      Performed by The Marionette Sextet

      Recorded and Mixed by Clint Bennett

      Published by EverBliss Music, Inc. (ASCAP), Ran Pink Publishing (BMI)

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 25, 2006 (South Africa)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official site (Germany)
      • Official site (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Belalı Oyun
    • Filming locations
      • Loyola High School - 1901 Venice Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • REN-Mar Studios
      • Prospect Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $305,800
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $58,570
      • Aug 14, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $537,126
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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