Genre: Drama/Mystery/Thriller
Director: Karen Moncrieff
Cast: Josh Brolin, Rose Byrne, Toni Collette,
Bruce Davison, James Franco, Marcia Gay Harden, Mary Beth Hurt,
Piper Laurie, Brittany Murphy, Giovanni Ribisi, Nick Searcy,
Mary Steenburgen, Kerry Washington
Runtime: 1 hr 33 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: M18 (Sexual Scenes)
Official Website: www.firstlookmedia.com/deadgirl
Opening Day: 27 September 2007
Synopsis:
The life of a lonesome caretaker (Toni Collette) is turned
upside down when she stumbles
upon the body of a murdered girl. The discovery may provide
closure for a forensics
graduate student (Rose Byrne) whose sister went missing when
she was a child. A
housewife (Mary Beth Hurt) makes a disturbing connection between
the body and her own
husband (Nick Searcy) which leads her to take dark and decisive
action. A mother (Marcia
Gay Harden) desperately searches for answers about her runaway
daughter’s life and finds
answers in one of her troubled young friends (Kerry Washington).
A volatile young woman
(Brittany Murphy) goes on an odyssey to get a birthday present
to her little girl. Together,
these stories paint a devastating portrait of seven women
whose lives are linked by a single
act of violence and a desire for change..
Movie Review:
“Each
story is like a different looking glass in a kaleidoscopic
contraption of Moncrieff’s cinematic brilliance- it
leaves you marvelling at the intricate and interweaving picture
each and every one spins.”
It’s not hard to understand why The Dead Girl snagged
the grand prize at the 33rd Deauville Festival of American
Film. Writer and Director Karen Moncrieff spins a tale of
5 shorts involving 11 women, whose lives are interrupted by
the death of a girl, played by the earnest, effervescent Brittany
Murphy. Casting efficient, professional role actors and actresses
and a screenplay that’s tightly-knit and never strays
far away from the film’s didactic thematic focus, The
Dead Girl effuses the brilliance of Moncrieff’s narrative
work through and through as she speaks through the film on
the social dynamics and consequence of violence and crime
against women and girls in society.
The Dead Girl’s prominent on three counts: its distinct,
recognisable narrative style, its dark, socially affecting
thematic nature and lastly its prominent engagement of role
characters tasked with bringing out thematically driven characterisation
without drawing focus and attention on themselves. Moncrieff
succeeds veritably on all three counts. The Dead Girl starts
with the end at the beginning, much like Chris Nolan’s
Memento. A tortured, lonesome caretaker (Toni Collette) discovers
the body of dead girl and starts of the chain of stories that
examines the different views of the single murder incident.
From the start you know what to expect: a film that wants
you to experience the process of character interaction and
its social commentary.
It’s always hard to avoid being pretentious when dealing
with flashbacks and choppy narratives of short stories that
each gets introduced with a black screen and titles like “The
Stranger” and “The Wife”. Yet, Moncrieff
carries across a very minimal and representative screenplay
that is one of the most natural and realistic yet. The pacing
is superb, there’s nary a moment where one feels any
irksome sense of pretension or high-handedness in presentation.
The
stories are segmented for a very clear purpose- we are guided
intuitively to look at the different perspectives of a single
event, and the various characters that are intertwined in
the murder. Each story is like a different looking glass in
a kaleidoscopic contraption of Moncrieff’s cinematic
brilliance- it leaves you marvelling at the intricate and
interweaving picture each and every one spins. The feeling
of “we are all in this” never leaves you, much
like in Magnolia.
As with movies with multiple short stories, The Dead Girl
boasts a large cast. The likes of Toni, Collete, Rose Byrne,
Marcia Gay Harden, Giovanni Ribisi, James Franco, Bruce Davison
and Brittany Murphy form a considerably powerful ensemble
that delivers supremely. Where often you see certain shorts
stand out more than the other, like Indonesia’s Oscar
contribution Love For Share, here every character truly grasps
and executes with artistic dexterity and technical virtuosity
performances that exude the grittiness and uncompromising
look at the trials of the 11 women involved.
The Dead Girl, for a fact, deals with the feminine issues
that surround the characters involved. The females provide
introspective and layered performances, in particular an excellent
Toni Collette and an immensely commendable Rose Byrne as an
emotionally wrecked sister struggling with her missing sister
that she imagines is the dead girl she is forced to forensically
examine. The guys, in their roles as foils, execute likeable
performances that one cannot fault. Watch out for a brilliant
Giovanni Ribisi as Rudy, the charismatically oddball kiosk
help that strikes an interest in Toni Collette’s troubled
caretaker character. James Franco, whom many will recognise
as the young Green Goblin from Spiderman, charms splendidly
as the man who tries to connect Rose Byrne to her emotional
loss and need for support.
Director and writer Karen Moncrieff deserves a double dose
of credit for ace-ing both writing and directorial responsibilities
simultaneously when many have failed doing just one. Inspired
by her personal experience as a juror on a murder trial of
a prostitute victim, Karen’s connection with the struggle
of violence and crime against women strikes a tonal connection
with our conscience.
She
declares sexual scenes will never be included unless they
advance the story, admitting to producing some of the hardest
to watch scenes that often do not cheaply titillate. The level
and detailing in the gore and blood is far from extreme but
raw, hard-hitting and very realistic in presentation. Though
for the weak-hearted it the image of the dead girl and the
violence in the film might stick a bit too strongly, this
was a director that scores on the moral and ethical front
– watching the film is like a teacher marking an essay
that effuses lushness in description without he or she even
once needing to pause at any bugbear display of verbosity.
The
Dead Girl is a film that receives my deepest recommendations
for any self-respecting and socially conscious moviegoers;
equally so for both males and females. The didactic flavour
of the film never sinks into feminist preachy-ness or self-pity-
instead it speaks like a wise, battle-hardened orator that
shares with you the troubles of a world so warped in the comfort
of a dark, shanty room, cigarette in hand, ready to blow you
away with the rawness and honesty of its story.
Movie Rating:
(It is true, that corpses do tell tales. The Dead Girl for
one gives a brilliantly thought-evoking account of cinematic
brilliance)
Review by Daniel Lim
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