अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंThree rebellious teenage girls decide to even the score in the battle of the sexes.Three rebellious teenage girls decide to even the score in the battle of the sexes.Three rebellious teenage girls decide to even the score in the battle of the sexes.
- पुरस्कार
- 1 जीत और कुल 1 नामांकन
- Mr. John Stockwell
- (as Ambassador John Loeb Jr.)
कहानी
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाIn one scene, Dominique Swain's character is naming girls that Dan has dated and mentions "Chelsea Swain" who is one of Dominique's sisters in real life.
- भाव
Lincoln Roth: Twas the night before a party, when all through the town, no pigs were stirring, no cops were around.
Lincoln Roth: We drank Seagram's, and smoked Panama Reds, while visions of the munchies danced through our heads
Lincoln Roth: But all of a sudden, came a knock at the door. We all yelled 'Pigs' and hit the floor.
Lincoln Roth: But what to our red-glazed eyes should appear? A fucking pound of Colombian, with two kegs of beer.
Lincoln Roth: The man at the door flashed us a smile, so we said 'come on in, man, you should party a while.
Lincoln Roth: But we heard him exclaim, as he flew through the sky: Marijuana to all, and to all a great high!
- साउंडट्रैकI'm OK
Written by Cindy Alexander & Robbie McKinney
Published by Jamcat Music (BMI), Records On Fire (ASCAP)
Performed by Cindy Alexander
But 20 minutes into "The Smokers" I was fighting a most uncharacteristic urge to hit the Stop button.
And 30 minutes into the film I found myself in great sympathy of those animals who gnaw their legs off to escape a trap.
I picked up the film on spec because it had some good people involved with it. And I cannot hold them at fault for my discomfort -- all of the actors do their best with the material. (Thora Birch is a standout as the younger sister.)
But it is the material itself which is at the root of my desire to flee. What was (I believe) intended as a trenchant commentary on power, empowerment, and male-female relations instead struck me as a mean-spirited, dark and ultimately pointless exercise.
Perhaps if I were more familiar with the subjects of the film -- rich, bored, disaffected boarding school girls -- it would be more poignant for me. But I'm not a rich, bored, disaffected boarding school girl (nor do I think I ever shall be), just a film enthusiast with the ability to empathize with characters on screen if given half a chance. I ended up not caring two squirts what happened to any of these characters, and the vague message of the movie regarding the validity of the culture which produces rich, bored, disaffected etc. -- one of the characters tells her little sister "I don't want you to end up like mom" -- was insufficient reason to care about the film itself.
This film obviously comes from a very personal space, as many films which are written and directed by the same person do. Just as obviously, the director had it in the back of her mind that this film become a cult favorite -- the wild makeup is otherwise largely pointless.
An ardent feminist might claim that the source of my discomfort comes from receiving the barbs directed at self-serving men. To which I say pish. *And* tosh. The characters are empty on both sides of the sexual divide. I am a feminist (a humanist!) myself, and I feel this movie makes no contribution to insight regarding the opposite sex, and is in fact so confused and hostile that it can actually cause greater problems. My wife felt the same way.
Midway through the film, my wife and I debated whether or not to see it through; we decided to reach the bitter end, to see if *any* redemption was offered. But we also discussed what movie we should watch afterward, to take the taste of "The Smokers" out of our mouths. Something cheerier, like "Apocalypse Now".
And I found myself thinking of Kurtz's penned message: "Drop the bombs. Exterminate them all."
The horror. The horror...
- insightstraight
- 22 जून 2003
- परमालिंक
टॉप पसंद
- How long is The Smokers?Alexa द्वारा संचालित