A popular influencer named Abbie Rose finds her Hollywood home invaded by a group of activists who hack her social media empire to carry out a risky plan with a huge payout. (No influencers ... Read allA popular influencer named Abbie Rose finds her Hollywood home invaded by a group of activists who hack her social media empire to carry out a risky plan with a huge payout. (No influencers were harmed in the making of this film.)A popular influencer named Abbie Rose finds her Hollywood home invaded by a group of activists who hack her social media empire to carry out a risky plan with a huge payout. (No influencers were harmed in the making of this film.)
Victoria D. Wells
- Four
- (as Victoria Danielle Wells)
Ian Richard Jones
- Five
- (as Ian Jones)
Desanka Julia
- Lisa XoX
- (as Desanka Ilic)
Brie Krawczyk
- Abbie's Intern #1
- (as Brittany Krawczyk)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This isn't the typical movie experience but presents some dark, topical themes in a new and funny way.
Social media influencer Abbie Rose is a glorious disaster of a person.
Covering her exterior with glamor and glitter, she seemingly lives for the camera. Eventually, an embattled major corporation, beset with internal human rights issues and external environmental disregard itself, proposes an offer that she - as an online personality - both despises and desires. On the tentative edge between accepting their lucrative deal and retaining her own arbitrarily-selected life values, Abbie goes all in and accepts the deal.
What happens next literally changes her life forever - and to some degree, Abbie herself.
This film has many laudible aspects to it. For example, during one critical scene, Abbie delivers a monolog in the form of a culturally-relevant anecdote as the shot gradually creeps in tighter on the character. The focus becomes Abbie's own realization of self; the first sign that, though through trauma, Abbie is capable of redemption.
Too, the film's color palette can best be described as contemporary and fabulous. From the wardrobe to the sets, not a detail is overlooked.
Also, the actors were believable in their respective roles; Kasia Szarek made me believe that she *was* Abbie Rose. Each of the primary players breathed the air of life into the characters, of course, but equally notable were the brief appearance by skilled actors such as Dylan Wayne Lawrence, channeling the late Tommy Sexton (of "Wonderful Grand Band" and "CODCO" fame) in his role as Abbie's professional contact person.
The film's denouement might have left room for further plot resolution (for instance, perhaps an explanation of what drew this highly specific collection of strangers together to play the film's presumed antagonists would have stated the film's theme even more strongly).
In the end, this was a masterfully-crafted indie film, and viewed through this lens, "The Influencer" is an engaging story with intriguing, multi-dimensional characters I'd like to have gotten to know a lot better.
Covering her exterior with glamor and glitter, she seemingly lives for the camera. Eventually, an embattled major corporation, beset with internal human rights issues and external environmental disregard itself, proposes an offer that she - as an online personality - both despises and desires. On the tentative edge between accepting their lucrative deal and retaining her own arbitrarily-selected life values, Abbie goes all in and accepts the deal.
What happens next literally changes her life forever - and to some degree, Abbie herself.
This film has many laudible aspects to it. For example, during one critical scene, Abbie delivers a monolog in the form of a culturally-relevant anecdote as the shot gradually creeps in tighter on the character. The focus becomes Abbie's own realization of self; the first sign that, though through trauma, Abbie is capable of redemption.
Too, the film's color palette can best be described as contemporary and fabulous. From the wardrobe to the sets, not a detail is overlooked.
Also, the actors were believable in their respective roles; Kasia Szarek made me believe that she *was* Abbie Rose. Each of the primary players breathed the air of life into the characters, of course, but equally notable were the brief appearance by skilled actors such as Dylan Wayne Lawrence, channeling the late Tommy Sexton (of "Wonderful Grand Band" and "CODCO" fame) in his role as Abbie's professional contact person.
The film's denouement might have left room for further plot resolution (for instance, perhaps an explanation of what drew this highly specific collection of strangers together to play the film's presumed antagonists would have stated the film's theme even more strongly).
In the end, this was a masterfully-crafted indie film, and viewed through this lens, "The Influencer" is an engaging story with intriguing, multi-dimensional characters I'd like to have gotten to know a lot better.
I love the main character's acting. She's a professional actress who excels in her performances. The rest of actors and actresses tried their best in making the storyline make sense. However, I wonder Why would an unknown director named Megan Weinstein spent this much time in making videos that almost nobody watches even when it's free? She has a life time to waste on making meaningless garbage that worth nothing? This is art work? What's the point of this really? Or does she have unlimited amount of money to waste and burn? I hope she's going to connect with a famous director or something so that they will invest money in her so called movies. Netflix videos cost millions per episode. Meanwhile, if you don't have that types of connection and/or money to invest in your own pitch, don't waste your time and people's time. Garbage is garbage, why producing more garbage? Trash!
From the artistic vernacular, to the strong female cast/crew- The Influencer is refreshing and true to its form. If you rated it anything less than 10 you're probably just too dull to understand the subtleties of its novelty and wit. Congratulations to Meghan Weinstein for seamlessly incorporating the paradox of the pseudo-self, a feminist agenda, and classic comedy together in a wonderfully colorful masterpiece.
- How long is The Influencer?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Color
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