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IMDbPro

Portrait d'une muse

Original title: Factory Girl
  • 2006
  • R
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
23K
YOUR RATING
Sienna Miller in Portrait d'une muse (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from Weinstein Co.
Play trailer2:09
1 Video
81 Photos
BiographyDrama

Based on the rise and fall of socialite Edie Sedgwick, concentrating on her relationships with Andy Warhol and a folk singer.Based on the rise and fall of socialite Edie Sedgwick, concentrating on her relationships with Andy Warhol and a folk singer.Based on the rise and fall of socialite Edie Sedgwick, concentrating on her relationships with Andy Warhol and a folk singer.

  • Director
    • George Hickenlooper
  • Writers
    • Captain Mauzner
    • Simon Monjack
    • Aaron Richard Golub
  • Stars
    • Sienna Miller
    • Guy Pearce
    • Hayden Christensen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    23K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George Hickenlooper
    • Writers
      • Captain Mauzner
      • Simon Monjack
      • Aaron Richard Golub
    • Stars
      • Sienna Miller
      • Guy Pearce
      • Hayden Christensen
    • 119User reviews
    • 59Critic reviews
    • 45Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Factory Girl
    Trailer 2:09
    Factory Girl

    Photos81

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    Top cast75

    Edit
    Sienna Miller
    Sienna Miller
    • Edie Sedgwick
    Guy Pearce
    Guy Pearce
    • Andy Warhol
    Hayden Christensen
    Hayden Christensen
    • Musician
    Jimmy Fallon
    Jimmy Fallon
    • Chuck Wein
    Jack Huston
    Jack Huston
    • Gerard Malanga
    Armin Amiri
    Armin Amiri
    • Ondine
    Tara Summers
    Tara Summers
    • Brigid Polk
    Mena Suvari
    Mena Suvari
    • Richie Berlin
    Shawn Hatosy
    Shawn Hatosy
    • Syd Pepperman
    Beth Grant
    Beth Grant
    • Julia Warhol
    James Naughton
    James Naughton
    • Fuzzy Sedgwick
    Edward Herrmann
    Edward Herrmann
    • James Townsend
    Illeana Douglas
    Illeana Douglas
    • Diana Vreeland
    Mary Elizabeth Winstead
    Mary Elizabeth Winstead
    • Ingrid Superstar
    Don Novello
    Don Novello
    • Mort Silvers
    Grant James
    Grant James
    • Priest
    Richard Folmer
    • Waiter
    Tarajia Morrell
    Tarajia Morrell
    • Reporter At JFK Airport
    • Director
      • George Hickenlooper
    • Writers
      • Captain Mauzner
      • Simon Monjack
      • Aaron Richard Golub
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews119

    6.322.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8I-Sense-A-Plot

    Edie Through The Looking Glass

    (Possible spoilers, though unlikely)

    Okay, let me say that I enjoyed Factory Girl for what it is and think it is worth renting.

    The story stars Sienna Miller as the fated Edie Sedgwick and Guy Pearace as vapid pop culture icon, Andy Warhol.

    The movie isn't nearly as close to as bad as critics claim it is. The first 40 minutes is much ado about talk of cocks, Andy and Edie's irreverence, and a series of disjointed images. The first act is aimless. But it makes sense because Edie and Andy are aimless and so are the termites chewing Andy's wood at "The Factory".

    Enter Hayden Christensen as Billy Quinn and the movie develops its paper thin plot. Though, I should say it's unfair to characterize the story this way. Edie's life was a paper thin plot, so the director, Hickenlooper can't be blamed for that.

    Andy, who never says he is gay, though everyone else assumes (or knows) he is, is in love with the idea of Edie "The Superstar" and Billy Quinn simply wants to open her eyes. She becomes the rope in a tug of war. Billy's "soul" cries for the world in a time of upheaval versus the-devil-may-care, drug den world of Andy. And while the latter may be in "love" with his muse, Billy cares and wants Edie to know, if art is the food of the soul, then Edie is eating from an empty soup can.

    Edie is a sympathetic character. You get the sense that no one really knew her. Not because she was empty and vapid but that she was so shattered inside the only part of herself she allowed the world to see was the facade her Andy created. In Factory Girl we see Edie through the looking glass. Not as she was, but as she appeared. Warped.

    Edie is the cute girl you meet in passing at a party at some stranger's house. You like her, but never see her again. Though, over the years you hear the occasional rumor or two, until one day, you hear she's hit rock bottom and died. That's how it feels to watch Edie Sedgewick's story in The Factory Girl. On one hand, you want to mourn her. On the other hand, you wonder, what has the world lost? That in itself is the real tragedy.
    hilarythebaker

    Edie Sedgwick

    Not the best biopic I've seen recently (actually saw it on DVD last night). I have read "Edie" by Jean Stein about a million times, so I could figure out a lot about what was wrong in the movie. I also thought the use of the musician character was quite amusing, simply because he was supposed to be a portrayal of Bob Dylan, and from what I have read, Bob Dylan barely even remembers Edie Sedgwick.

    Another goof I caught in the movie was when Edie was listing all the popular drugs at the Factory, was that Adderall was mentioned. This drug did not come out until 1996. I was rather surprised it was mentioned, because if they had been on methylphenidate at the time, Ritalin was probably their drug of choice. It was available at the time. I myself have been on Adderall (for ADHD) for a very brief period in the 90s, and it was really horrible...I can't possibly imagine anyone wanting to be on that thing.

    In the 90s I knew a guy who had been Warhol's room mate in the 1950s and a very, very minor character in Andy's later life, I asked him once if he ever knew Edie, and he just groaned and said, "she was the MOST BORING girl I ever met in my life." End of discussion.
    4maryamishani

    one dimensional all the way through

    I knew a lot about Edie Sedgwick before seeing the film and was even prepared for inaccuracies but the major problem with this film is that it is inaccurate not for the purpose of making a point but that it is inaccurate for the purpose of making a one-dimensional film.

    Did Hickenlooper paint Edie as a perpetual victim (notice how throughout the film she is never injecting herself but is bent over while others inject her?) just so that he could show her as a victim of Andy Warhol and his drug fiend factory friends? Or that she was always a victim of people like her friend Chuck who did a complete turn on her for that villain Andy? Is Hickenlooper trying to say that the biggest mistake of Edie's life was not choosing Dylan over Warhol in that elevator scene where her future self voices over, "that was the biggest mistake of my life"? Edie Sedgwick came to the factory a sick person, she was already headed for a crash even before she set eyes on Andy Warhol. In reality, she was rejected by the factory friends and many others for the drugs she brought with her everywhere, she was not introduced to them at the factory as the movie shows.

    Hickenlooper seems to me to be trying to say that Edie Sedgwick, that fresh faced wasp in knee socks and pearls who left Cambridge with sketches tucked under her arms could have potentially had a wonderful and peaceful life, even a stable marriage with Bob Dylan had she only not met Andy Warhol and been subject of those movies.

    I have a problem with this film because I am so interested, most people are, in the real Edie Sedgwick and I agree with another poster who suggested you see Ciao!Manhattan to get a better sense of who she was. If you want a tragic love-story about a good girl who chose the wrong guy, watch Factory Girl.

    The real Edie Sedgwick was a person whose hystrionics and drugs were symptoms of a soul that was always trying to fly away, for her the world was always too small and her pain was always too big, and she lived her life as though she dreamed of having her wings singed flying too close to the sun.
    6ferguson-6

    You're the Boss, Applesauce

    Greetings again from the darkness. Andy Warhol and The Factory poses quite the challenge to any filmmaker attempting to capture the look, feel and pain of that world unto itself. Director George Hickenlooper's best work has been "Mayor of Sunset Strip" and "Dogtown", neither of which drew much of an audience. "Factory Girl" probably has little hope of attracting much attention from movie-goers as well.

    While we do spend a good portion of the film in The Factory, this is more the tragic story of Edie, rather than an insightful look at Warhol's art. Edie was really the first to make being famous a job ... think Paris Hilton today. No real talent herself, her name, family money and looks got her inside the art world and exceptionally close to Warhol. Of course, those things were not enough to carve out any real territory and the ending, while tragic, is not at all surprising.

    The film is overly choppy in attempting to find the right look and feel and yet with Jagger, Velvet Underground and the Dylanesque Hayden Christensen, the importance and power of music for this era is clearly established. Aussie Guy Pearce does a nice impersonation of Warhol and Jimmy Fallon has his first serious role. Other support comes from Mena Suvari as Edie's friend, Beth Grant as Warhol's mom, Don Novello (Father Guido from early SNL), and Illeana Douglas as Diana Vreeland.

    By far the best part of this project is the performance of Sienna Miller as Edie Sedgwick. Even her vocal cadence is remarkable. The physical and emotional turmoil seems very real as Edie goes from top of world to desperation for life. Ms. Miller will at some point break out and become the film star she is destined to become. That role has just not quite happened yet. It could be later this year when she re-teams with her "Layer Cake" director. Let's hope so. Her talent is undeniable and although it is a pleasure to see her performance as Edie, she deserves a much wider audience.

    The weakness of the film is best shown by the interviews over the closing credits. Attempting to explain what we had just watched is a pure indication that the job had not been done well.
    6dead47548

    Not nearly as bad as it's made out to be.

    Better than I had expected. Is the story a bit aimless? Yes. Does it randomly introduce/evict characters for the sole reason that they were parts of Edie's life? Yes. Is it just an hour and forty minutes of Edie going to fabulous parties, meeting fabulous people and slowly declining into a complete wreck of drugs and poverty? Very much so. But I felt that the film did an accurate job of depicting Edie's life, since all that happened were parties, socializing and a terrible downfall. I mean her brother and widow have stated that it's an accurate portrayal, so I don't see how one could disagree. That being said, the film is clearly just a device to propel Sienna Miller's extraordinary performance. Her transformation into Edie Sedgwick is the most precise and utterly flawless portrayal of a real life person I've ever seen. It's quite easily the second best performance of last year (the first being Hard Candy's Ellen Page) and one of the top five female performances of all time. Guy Pearce is also quite fantastic, and Hayden Christensen was much better than I expected him to be. Overall, the film is nothing special. It's not necessarily bad, but it surely isn't great. It's all about Sienna.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sienna Miller improvised the scene in which Edie tells The Musician about her brothers' deaths.
    • Goofs
      Edie Sedgwick's relationship to Nico is depicted incorrectly: in reality they were friends and Edie warned Nico about Andy Warhol's behavior. Edie's death was very sad for Nico.
    • Quotes

      Andy Warhol: I wonder if people are going to remember us?

      Edie Sedgwick: What, when we're dead?

      Andy Warhol: Yeah.

      Edie Sedgwick: Well, I think people will talk about how you changed the world.

      Andy Warhol: I wonder what they'll say about you... in your obituary. I like that word.

      Edie Sedgwick: Nothing nice, I don't think.

      Andy Warhol: No no, come on. They'd say, "Edith Minturn Sedgwick: beautiful artist and actress...

      Edie Sedgwick: ...and all-around loon.

      Andy Warhol: ...Remembered for setting the world on fire...

      Edie Sedgwick: ...and escaping the clutches of her terrifying family...

      Andy Warhol: ...Made friends with eeeeverybody and anybody...

      Edie Sedgwick: ...creating chaos and uproar wherever she went. Divorced as many times as she married, she leaves only good wishes behind.

      [laughs]

      Edie Sedgwick: That's nice, isn't it?

    • Crazy credits
      During the first part of the end credits, photos are shown of the real Edie Sedgwick. Also people who knew her give testimonies about her.
    • Alternate versions
      According to the FAQ section: "For the home theatre market, an unrated version was released aside from the R-rated theatrical version. Most scenes which were re-inserted or alternately shifted, serve to specify character drawings and various aspects of the story which were only embedded in the theatrical version to some extent. However, there are also a few extensions with sexual contents and more explicit depictions of drug use."
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Norbit/Factory Girl/The Astronaut Farmer/Because I Said So/The Situation (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Dino's Song
      Written by Chet Powers (uncredited)

      Performed by Quicksilver Messenger Service

      Courtesy of Capitol Records

      Under License from EMI Film & Television Music

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    FAQ22

    • How long is Factory Girl?Powered by Alexa
    • What did Edie's brother say that he tasted until the day he died?
    • Why is Hayden Christensen's character listed as "Musician" and no longer as Billy Quinn?
    • What are the differences between the Theatrical Version and the Unrated Version?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 16, 2007 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Slovak
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Fábrica de sueños
    • Filming locations
      • Stamford, Connecticut, USA
    • Production companies
      • The Weinstein Company
      • L.I.F.T. Production
      • Holly Wiersma Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $7,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,675,241
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,572,632
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • SDDS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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