Rebecca tem um segredo muito incomum, que nem mesmo suas melhores amigas sabem. A última pessoa para quem ela espera revelá-lo é uma acompanhante chamada Paris.Rebecca tem um segredo muito incomum, que nem mesmo suas melhores amigas sabem. A última pessoa para quem ela espera revelá-lo é uma acompanhante chamada Paris.Rebecca tem um segredo muito incomum, que nem mesmo suas melhores amigas sabem. A última pessoa para quem ela espera revelá-lo é uma acompanhante chamada Paris.
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória no total
Bryan Mordechai Jackson
- Hank Westridge
- (as Bryan Jackson)
LeeAnne Pronitis-Matusek
- Megan
- (as Lee Anne Matusek)
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe little stuffed animal puppy dog that Paris' ex hides her engagement ring in is the same one Peyton carries as a small child in a flash back in the movie Elena Undone.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen Rebecca and Paris are set to meet a second time, Rebecca removes her ring to appear\feel less married. When they meet Rebecca rushes from the room without her rings. In the next few seems both Paris and Rebecca refer to them as ring not rings. In the same sequence Paris removes Rebecca's watch, in the next seen you see Rebecca without her rings or watch (at the dinner table), but just before Paris returns the rings Rebecca looks at her watch.
- Trilhas sonorasA Perfect Pavane
Performed by Kathy Fowler
Written by Gabriel Fauré
Orchestrated and Arranged by Bob Fowler
Produced by Bob Fowler and Melanie Rice
Recorded at S.S.R. Recording
Avaliação em destaque
While I cannot completely follow some enthusiastic reviews here, I have to admit that I am intrigued how this little movie seduces its audience, despite a small budget (175k is really very small), and despite a story that may not go very well for everyone, because it is some kind of 'Denver Clan 2012' ;-)
But, intriguing enough, we follow easily the introduction, where a woman in her fifties, called Rebecca, wealthy, with three grown-up children and a husband nobody can love, tells her friends that she never climaxed and has mostly forgotten everything about sex. And her friends, two lesbians (of course ?) persuade her to try a service that provides - a prostitute who can help her to finally climax (of course again ?). Now, this seems a bigger bit far-fetched, but it is delivered believable enough not to stand up and run away.
After that, when it comes to an appointment, everything goes wrong for Rebecca, although or even because the rented hooker is young and extremely beautiful and also skilled in the art of seduction. Rebecca is afraid of her own boldness and declines any interaction. But, we know it, it is the tentative beginning of a love story, and this love story isn't a common one.
Now many things are going on there and we learn that this is not a movie from Francois Truffaut or R.W. Fassbinder. And it isn't a movie about the troubles of homosexuality for an elderly woman. These aspects are completely and thankfully left out.
Instead, it is a movie about overcoming a common fate of women, about how your life has been passed by and you miss something real important for a sudden. This fate is of course not limited only to wealthy women, but the movie is located in a wealthy social class, and therefore it looks soapy in some of it's family-related side stories. But on the other hand, there is a distinct feeling for real emotional struggle.
Here comes the main actor in, Barbara Niven, who has the courage to play a woman on the edge of a wasted life, to show herself naked, together with a 30 years younger beauty (Niven is born 1953). And she never fails, you will be surprised, not only how good she looks, but how authentic she is.
The beautiful hooker in turn, played by Jessica Clark, places an attitude like Maggie Q in 'Nikita', when it comes to dialog, and that is sometimes too overused. She seems always slightly unreal, like being not really from this world, even while she is suffering from things happened in her past. I wonder if Director Nicole Conn intended that. And I wonder how Jessica Clark is in private.
Cinematically, the movie is solid modern upper B-grade with some nice ideas to break the narrative continuity for watchers who need a bit more than the standard menu. It looks always good and bright, and focuses wisely on every Detail of Barbara Niven's artful play.
While a hardcore lesbian will spit on this movie because it's too beautiful and calm, someone who wants to follow a butterfly eventually starting to use it's wings (as implied at the end), will be fully satisfied. 8 stars out of sheer earned sympathy.
But, intriguing enough, we follow easily the introduction, where a woman in her fifties, called Rebecca, wealthy, with three grown-up children and a husband nobody can love, tells her friends that she never climaxed and has mostly forgotten everything about sex. And her friends, two lesbians (of course ?) persuade her to try a service that provides - a prostitute who can help her to finally climax (of course again ?). Now, this seems a bigger bit far-fetched, but it is delivered believable enough not to stand up and run away.
After that, when it comes to an appointment, everything goes wrong for Rebecca, although or even because the rented hooker is young and extremely beautiful and also skilled in the art of seduction. Rebecca is afraid of her own boldness and declines any interaction. But, we know it, it is the tentative beginning of a love story, and this love story isn't a common one.
Now many things are going on there and we learn that this is not a movie from Francois Truffaut or R.W. Fassbinder. And it isn't a movie about the troubles of homosexuality for an elderly woman. These aspects are completely and thankfully left out.
Instead, it is a movie about overcoming a common fate of women, about how your life has been passed by and you miss something real important for a sudden. This fate is of course not limited only to wealthy women, but the movie is located in a wealthy social class, and therefore it looks soapy in some of it's family-related side stories. But on the other hand, there is a distinct feeling for real emotional struggle.
Here comes the main actor in, Barbara Niven, who has the courage to play a woman on the edge of a wasted life, to show herself naked, together with a 30 years younger beauty (Niven is born 1953). And she never fails, you will be surprised, not only how good she looks, but how authentic she is.
The beautiful hooker in turn, played by Jessica Clark, places an attitude like Maggie Q in 'Nikita', when it comes to dialog, and that is sometimes too overused. She seems always slightly unreal, like being not really from this world, even while she is suffering from things happened in her past. I wonder if Director Nicole Conn intended that. And I wonder how Jessica Clark is in private.
Cinematically, the movie is solid modern upper B-grade with some nice ideas to break the narrative continuity for watchers who need a bit more than the standard menu. It looks always good and bright, and focuses wisely on every Detail of Barbara Niven's artful play.
While a hardcore lesbian will spit on this movie because it's too beautiful and calm, someone who wants to follow a butterfly eventually starting to use it's wings (as implied at the end), will be fully satisfied. 8 stars out of sheer earned sympathy.
- pontram
- 11 de fev. de 2013
- Link permanente
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- How long is A Perfect Ending?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 175.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração1 hora 50 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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