- On the Doll
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On the Doll
On the Doll PosterDirected by Thomas Mignone Produced by Jeff Most
John Saviano
Jay ScullyWritten by Thomas Mignone Starring Brittany Snow
Josh Janowicz
Stephen Sowan
Clayne Crawford
Shanna Collins
James Russo
Paul Ben-VictorMusic by Paul D'Amour Cinematography Nicole Hirsch Editing by Michal Shemesh Studio Jeff Most Productions
Doom IncorporatedDistributed by G-Machine (2007)
Your Half Media Group (2008)Release date(s) United States
Germany
12 October 2007(Austin Film Festival)
13 June 2008(New York City, New York)
11 September 2008(Oldenburg International Film Festival)Running time 102 min Country United States Language English Budget $750,000 On the Doll is a 2007 American drama film, and the first feature written and directed by music video director Thomas Mignone.[1][2][3][4]
Contents
Background
The film's title comes from the phrase "Show me on the doll where you were touched", often asked of young children who have been the victims of sexual abuse. The film covers multiple lives of victims and victimizers, sharing the pain of how early childhood traumas can continue throughout adult lives.
Plot
Jaron (Josh Janowicz) struggles to work for sleazy publisher "Uncle" Lou (Marcus Giamatti) in order to settle the obligations of his friend Tara (Angela Sarafyan), who works in a peep show for Jimmy (Paul Ben-Victor). He meets Balery (Brittany Snow), a call-girl who wants to place an ad in Lou's paper. She seeks an accomplice to help her rob a regular client she particularly dislikes. Jaron decides to take up the offer himself. Meanwhile, Wes (Clayne Crawford) whores out his girlfriend Chantel (Shanna Collins) in order to make enough money to buy her an engagement ring just to shut her up about his lack of commitment. Wes gets violently upset when he discovers she's been performing lurid sex acts on her customers just to make the extra money he wants. Two intimately close high school girls Melody (Candice Accola) and Courtney (Chloe Domont) play flirtatious games with their teacher Mr. Garrett (Eddie Jemison) in order to improve their grades, without realizing the violent dangers their teasing could lead to.
Partial cast
- Brittany Snow as Balery
- Josh Janowicz as Jaron
- Stephen Sowan as Tre
- Clayne Crawford as Wes
- Shanna Collins as Chantel
- James Russo as Janitor
- Paul Ben-Victor as Jimmy Sours
- Eddie Jemison as Mr. Garrett
- Marcus Giamatti as Uncle Lou
- Angela Sarafyan as Tara
- Candice Accola as Melody
- Chloe Domont as Courtney
- Ethan Cohn as Brian
- Nolan North as Charlie
- Theresa Russell as Diane
- Dave Baez as Rick
Release
On The Doll had a limited theatrical release in the United States. Its debut was at the 2007 Avignon Film Festival, followed by the Fort Lauderdale Film Festival. In 2008 it screened at the Austin Film Festival and then the Cinequest Film Festival. The DVD release includes commentary from director Thomas Mignone, behind-the-scenes featurettes, and deleted scenes.[2]
Critical response
Dennis Harvey of Variety wrote that as Mignone's first feature, the film "strains so hard to shock that this criss-crosser set among various L.A. denizens soon passes from the contrived to the ridiculous". He offered that as the script was "contrived and sensational", and that the characters lacked depth, "what Mignone intends as explosive comes off as exploitative". He also offered that "the movie winds up an expression of victim culture as attitudinal cool", and that for "viewers who think life is one big angry vintage Korn song, that approach will have considerable appeal". He concluded that despite flaws, "Mignone has delivered a fairly tight package that draws generally good performances from thesps in largely one-dimensional roles".[1]
Christopher Null of Filmcritic.com wrote that "Mignone does a remarkable job at taking what starts as a mild flirtation or tiptoeing into perversity and showing how baby steps can soon lead to full-on, downhill slides". He writes that of the many stories intertwined in the film, the "movie is surprisingly at its best in the story of the two teens", who flirt with a teacher played memorably by actor Eddie Jemison), when noting the "shocking transistion" of two girls seen worrying about their grades riding with their teacher to a porn studio to be "crudely sized up for their value to the viewing audience". He offers that while the film tries to wrap everything up tidily, it "is perhaps the wrong approach for a movie about an industry with no happy endings". He concludes that the film is memorable "more for its performances than its plot", and that "this somewhat scrappy independent doesn't fade from the mind quickly".[2]
Marina Antunes of Quiet Earth compares the film to David Slade's Hard Candy but makes note of the script's drawbacks in that ideas are never fully developed. The reviewer also felt the dialog was juvenile and awkward, and that the character's back stories and situations felt forced. Opining that the "story itself is not completely successful", Antunes offers that "Mignoe's style is an interesting mix of saturated colours and unusual visuals. There is a feeling of the impending downfall which is wonderfully communicated through the set design. Mignoe has a talent for capturing the ugliness in beauty, something which lends itself well to the story he is telling here." Remarking on Mignole's ability, Antunes summarizes "though On the Doll is a good first attempt at a full length feature, it doesn't completely work".[5]
Gerry Putzer of DVD Talk wrote that the film "has big ambitions but gets awfully muddled." He noted that while Brittany Snow might have been "the marquee name in the cast", her role is no larger than anyone elses. Putzer compares the film with Paul Schrader's 1979 porn-world thriller Hardcore, in that the sex in the film is as "uniformly bizarre, degrading and joyless". He concludes that the film "deserves high marks for ambition", and that the actors do a "convincing job under first-time writer-director Thomas Mignone, whose structural adventurousness is intriguing."[3]
David Nusair of Reel Film Reviews writes that while Mignone "generally does a nice job of infusing the proceedings with an intriguing visual style, there's little doubt that the increasingly uneven nature of Mignone's screenplay proves detrimental to the movie's overall success". He notes that "Mignone's decision to employ a sprawling structure - replete with almost a dozen recurring characters - undoubtedly ranks high on the film's list of problems". He concludes by offering that Mignone's film "definitively established itself as a misfire that nevertheless might just signal the emergence of a promising new talent".[4]
References
- ^ a b Harvey, Dennis (May 12, 2008). "review: On the Doll". Variety. http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117936480.html?categoryid=31&cs=1. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
- ^ a b c Null, Christopher (July 17, 2008). "dvd review: On the Doll". Filmcritic.com. http://www.filmcritic.com/reviews/2008/on-the-doll/. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
- ^ a b Putzer, Gerry (August 13, 2008). "dvd review: On the Doll". DVD Talk. http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/34274/on-the-doll/. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
- ^ a b Nusair, David (August 11, 2008). "review: On the Doll". Reel Film Reviews. http://www.reelfilm.com/padram1.htm#on. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
- ^ Antunes, Marina (July 6, 2008). "review: On the Doll". Quiet Earth. http://www.quietearth.us/articles/2008/07/05/Review-of-On-the-Doll. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
External links
Additional sources
Categories:- American films
- English-language films
- 2000s drama films
- 2007 films
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