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Pretty Persuasion

Pretty Persuasion is a 2005 American black comedy film directed by Marcos Siega, written by Skander Halim, and starring Evan Rachel Wood, James Woods, Ron Livingston, Elisabeth Harnois, and Jane Krakowski. Its plot follows a manipulative, sociopathic 15-year-old student at an elite Beverly Hills academy who accuses her drama teacher of sexual harassment.

Pretty Persuasion
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMarcos Siega
Written bySkander Halim
Produced by
  • Marcos Siega
  • Matt Weaver
  • Todd Dagres
  • Carl Levin
Starring
CinematographyRamsey Nickell
Edited byNicholas Erasmus
Music byGilad Benamram
Production
companies
Distributed by
Release dates
Running time
109 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2.5 million
Box office$537,100[2]

Plot edit

Kimberly Joyce is a precocious, narcissistic, sociopathic high school student at Roxbury Academy, an elite preparatory school in Beverly Hills. She and her best friend Brittany take Randa, a new Muslim student who recently emigrated from the Middle East, under their wing. Kimberly's home life is troubled; her bigoted and disaffected father Hank, an electronics executive, shows little interest in her life, while her vapid stepmother, Kathy, constantly attempts to reprimand her for her coarse language and attitude. Kimberly dreams of becoming an actress, and obtains a coveted role as Anne Frank in the school play.

The school drama teacher, Percy Anderson, orders Kimberly and Randa to after-school detention one day for disrupting class, and forces Kimberly to write an essay reflecting on her transgression. Percy takes the essay home that evening and has his wife, Grace, read it aloud provocatively as a role play before the two engage in sex. After Brittany is publicly humiliated by Percy during an acting exercise, Kimberly devises a plan to accuse him of sexually harassing each of them. Unable to afford an attorney, Percy agrees to his friend Roger—a clueless high school law teacher who passed the bar —acting as his attorney. In court, Roger proposes that the accusations are in retaliation to Kimberly having been replaced in the school play after referring to her Jewish classmate Josh's lawyer father as a "money-grubbing shyster."

The case becomes a media sensation covered extensively by Emily Klein, a local lesbian reporter. Shortly after the trial begins, Kimberly has a sexual encounter with Emily. Kimberly then manipulates Josh with oral sex into convincing his father Larry, a renowned defense attorney, to defend Percy pro bono. When Larry cross examines Brittany, she confesses on the stand that she, Kimberly, and Randa fabricated the accusations. When Emily confronts her outside the courthouse, Kimberly reveals she filmed their sexual encounter, and uses it as blackmail to receive favorable press coverage.

Overwhelmed with the shame brought on her family by the false accusations, Randa shoots herself dead at school. Grace, now aware the essay Percy had her read was written by Kimberly, leaves him. In the storm of media coverage, Emily extolls Kimberly as a mere "victim" of society, and the ensuing press incites Hollywood producers to give Kimberly a bit part on a daytime soap opera.

When Brittany visits Kimberly at her house, Kimberly reveals she manipulated Josh into having his father defend Percy as she knew it would cause Brittany to buckle under pressure in court. When Brittany asks why, Kimberly explains that she devised the calculated plot to garner publicity for herself, as well as exact revenge against Brittany for having stolen her ex-boyfriend, Troy. Brittany lambasts her and leaves, vowing never to speak to her again. Kimberly turns on the television and sees herself on the episode of the soap opera. Switching through channels, she watches snippets of an interview with a school shooter and news footage of Randa's suicide before returning to the soap opera. As she watches herself onscreen, tears begin streaming down her face.

Cast edit

Themes edit

The plot primarily focuses on sexual harassment accusations within a school system, as well as the repercussions of one 15-year-old girl's actions. But the film also makes commentary on many other social issues in contemporary American culture as well, many of them being controversial. Some of the topics that are commented on include racism, ignorance, discrimination, gender identity, homosexuality, intolerance, immigration, teenage behavior, suicide, parenting, deceit, narcissism and fascination with celebrity status and the entertainment industry.[3]

Director Marcos Siega, commenting on the film's thematic message, said: "At the end of the film there isn’t one overriding message I am trying to convey. I want the audience to walk away with their own opinions of what they have seen and their own feelings intact. The reality is that there are a lot of things wrong with our society and this film deals with some of those frustrations. I expect people’s reactions to be varied, and my only hope is that they walk away talking about it."[4]

Production edit

Development edit

Screenwriter Skander Halim developed the story based on a news article he read about an eighth-grade girl in his hometown of Ottawa, Ontario who accused her teacher of molesting her.[4] After moving to Los Angeles and reading scripts for production companies several years later, Halim wrote the screenplay for the film, setting it in Beverly Hills.[4] "It struck me that this was the perfect setting for that story," he said. "I wrote it as The Script That Could Never Get Made, and I was shocked when it did."[4]

Casting edit

Evan Rachel Wood was the first to be cast in the film as the lead character of Kimberly Joyce.[4] After Wood's casting, James Woods signed on to play her character's father, followed by Ron Livingston as the teacher that her character accuses of sexual harassment.[4]

Music edit

The musical score was composed by Gilad Benamram. The film deliberately does not feature any popular music songs.[5] Similarly, the wardrobe and props do not feature contemporary branding.[5]

Release edit

 
Krakowski and Wood pictured at the film's 2005 Sundance Film Festival premiere

Pretty Persuasion premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2005.[6] The film was given a limited theatrical release in the United States on August 12, 2005.[7]

Critical response edit

Roger Ebert called Pretty Persuasion "daring, and well-acted", but also said that it "exists uneasily somewhere between comedy and satire."[8] Phil Villarreal of the Arizona Daily Star called the film a "scathing and hilarious social satire."[9] While Stephen Holden of The New York Times praised the film: "An obscene, misanthropic go-for-broke satire, "Pretty Persuasion" is so gleefully nasty that the fact that it was even made and released is astonishing. Much of it is also extremely funny. Any satire worth its salt should not be afraid to offend, and "Pretty Persuasion" flings mud in all directions with a fearless audacity."[7] James Mottram of Channel 4 opined, "Hovering uncomfortably between comedy and satire, Pretty Persuasion never quite gets the balance right."[10] Carlo Cavagna thought it a "dark teen comedy that tries way too hard to be a dark teen comedy."[11]

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer accused the film of being an "ugly, cheap attempt at satire",[12] and Slant magazine called it "a pretty unpersuasive lecture".[13] Adam Vary of The Advocate called the film "rife with political incorrectness."[14] Critic Armond White deemed the film "ingenious."[15]

The film has a "rotten" 33% approval rating on internet review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes based on 79 reviews, with an average rating of 5/10. The site's consensus reads: "Pretty Persuasion aims for high satire but falls short of poignancy by depending on too much black humor, with too little redeeming humanity to provide balance".[16]

Accolades edit

Home media edit

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment released Pretty Persuasion on DVD on December 13, 2005.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ "Pretty Persuasion". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
  2. ^ "Pretty Persuasion (2005)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved January 17, 2024.
  3. ^ "The Satire Misfires in 'Pretty Persuasion'". Hartford Courant. September 9, 2005. Archived from the original on January 17, 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Pretty Persuasion : Q&A WITH DIRECTOR MARCOS SIEGA AND WRITER SKANDER HALIM". Cinema.com. 2005. Archived from the original on January 17, 2024.
  5. ^ a b Siega, Marcos. . Landmark Theatres. Archived from the original on April 28, 2007.
  6. ^ Kleinman, Geoffrey. "2005 Sundance Film Festival Coverage". DVD Talk. Archived from the original on January 17, 2024.
  7. ^ a b Holden, Stephen (August 12, 2005). "A High School Princess who treats the world like a frog". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 17, 2024.
  8. ^ Ebert, Roger (August 26, 2005). "Pretty Persuasion". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved June 22, 2018.
  9. ^ "Pretty Persuasion". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 17, 2024.
  10. ^ Mottram, James. . Channel 4. Archived from the original on December 15, 2006.
  11. ^ Cavagna, Carlo. "Pretty Persuasion". Online Film Critics Society. AboutFilm.com. Retrieved June 22, 2018.
  12. ^ Axmaker, Sean (September 2, 2005). "'Pretty Persuasion' is an ugly, cheap attempt at satire". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved December 27, 2007.
  13. ^ Schager, Nick. . Slant Magazine. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved December 27, 2007.
  14. ^ Vary, Adam B. (August 30, 2005). "Pretty persuasive". The Advocate. p. 70. ISSN 0001-8996.
  15. ^ White, Armond. "Film Review: Towelhead". NY Press. Retrieved January 7, 2009.
  16. ^ "Pretty Persuasion". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved March 17, 2021.
  17. ^ Jones, Preston (December 11, 2005). "Pretty Persuasion". DVD Talk. Archived from the original on January 17, 2024.

External links edit

pretty, persuasion, this, article, about, film, song, song, 2005, american, black, comedy, film, directed, marcos, siega, written, skander, halim, starring, evan, rachel, wood, james, woods, livingston, elisabeth, harnois, jane, krakowski, plot, follows, manip. This article is about the film For the song see Pretty Persuasion song Pretty Persuasion is a 2005 American black comedy film directed by Marcos Siega written by Skander Halim and starring Evan Rachel Wood James Woods Ron Livingston Elisabeth Harnois and Jane Krakowski Its plot follows a manipulative sociopathic 15 year old student at an elite Beverly Hills academy who accuses her drama teacher of sexual harassment Pretty PersuasionTheatrical release posterDirected byMarcos SiegaWritten bySkander HalimProduced byMarcos Siega Matt Weaver Todd Dagres Carl LevinStarringEvan Rachel Wood Ron Livingston James Woods Jane Krakowski Elisabeth Harnois Danny Comden Michael Hitchcock Adi SchnallCinematographyRamsey NickellEdited byNicholas ErasmusMusic byGilad BenamramProductioncompaniesRen Mar Studios Prospect PicturesDistributed bySamuel Goldwyn Films Roadside AttractionsRelease datesJanuary 22 2005 2005 01 22 Sundance Film Festival August 12 2005 2005 08 12 U S Running time109 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 2 5 millionBox office 537 100 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Themes 4 Production 4 1 Development 4 2 Casting 4 3 Music 5 Release 5 1 Critical response 5 2 Accolades 5 3 Home media 6 References 7 External linksPlot editKimberly Joyce is a precocious narcissistic sociopathic high school student at Roxbury Academy an elite preparatory school in Beverly Hills She and her best friend Brittany take Randa a new Muslim student who recently emigrated from the Middle East under their wing Kimberly s home life is troubled her bigoted and disaffected father Hank an electronics executive shows little interest in her life while her vapid stepmother Kathy constantly attempts to reprimand her for her coarse language and attitude Kimberly dreams of becoming an actress and obtains a coveted role as Anne Frank in the school play The school drama teacher Percy Anderson orders Kimberly and Randa to after school detention one day for disrupting class and forces Kimberly to write an essay reflecting on her transgression Percy takes the essay home that evening and has his wife Grace read it aloud provocatively as a role play before the two engage in sex After Brittany is publicly humiliated by Percy during an acting exercise Kimberly devises a plan to accuse him of sexually harassing each of them Unable to afford an attorney Percy agrees to his friend Roger a clueless high school law teacher who passed the bar acting as his attorney In court Roger proposes that the accusations are in retaliation to Kimberly having been replaced in the school play after referring to her Jewish classmate Josh s lawyer father as a money grubbing shyster The case becomes a media sensation covered extensively by Emily Klein a local lesbian reporter Shortly after the trial begins Kimberly has a sexual encounter with Emily Kimberly then manipulates Josh with oral sex into convincing his father Larry a renowned defense attorney to defend Percy pro bono When Larry cross examines Brittany she confesses on the stand that she Kimberly and Randa fabricated the accusations When Emily confronts her outside the courthouse Kimberly reveals she filmed their sexual encounter and uses it as blackmail to receive favorable press coverage Overwhelmed with the shame brought on her family by the false accusations Randa shoots herself dead at school Grace now aware the essay Percy had her read was written by Kimberly leaves him In the storm of media coverage Emily extolls Kimberly as a mere victim of society and the ensuing press incites Hollywood producers to give Kimberly a bit part on a daytime soap opera When Brittany visits Kimberly at her house Kimberly reveals she manipulated Josh into having his father defend Percy as she knew it would cause Brittany to buckle under pressure in court When Brittany asks why Kimberly explains that she devised the calculated plot to garner publicity for herself as well as exact revenge against Brittany for having stolen her ex boyfriend Troy Brittany lambasts her and leaves vowing never to speak to her again Kimberly turns on the television and sees herself on the episode of the soap opera Switching through channels she watches snippets of an interview with a school shooter and news footage of Randa s suicide before returning to the soap opera As she watches herself onscreen tears begin streaming down her face Cast editEvan Rachel Wood as Kimberly Joyce James Woods as Hank Joyce Ron Livingston as Percy Anderson Elisabeth Harnois as Brittany Adi Schnall as Randa Stark Sands as Troy Jane Krakowski as Emily Klein Michael Hitchcock as Headmaster Charles Meyer Danny Comden as Roger Nicholl Jaime King as Kathy Joyce Josh Zuckerman as Josh Horowitz James Snyder as David Dave Cody McMains as Kenny Selma Blair as Grace Anderson Clyde Kusatsu as Judge Carl Munro Robert Joy as Larry Horowitz Octavia Spencer as WomanThemes editThe plot primarily focuses on sexual harassment accusations within a school system as well as the repercussions of one 15 year old girl s actions But the film also makes commentary on many other social issues in contemporary American culture as well many of them being controversial Some of the topics that are commented on include racism ignorance discrimination gender identity homosexuality intolerance immigration teenage behavior suicide parenting deceit narcissism and fascination with celebrity status and the entertainment industry 3 Director Marcos Siega commenting on the film s thematic message said At the end of the film there isn t one overriding message I am trying to convey I want the audience to walk away with their own opinions of what they have seen and their own feelings intact The reality is that there are a lot of things wrong with our society and this film deals with some of those frustrations I expect people s reactions to be varied and my only hope is that they walk away talking about it 4 Production editDevelopment edit Screenwriter Skander Halim developed the story based on a news article he read about an eighth grade girl in his hometown of Ottawa Ontario who accused her teacher of molesting her 4 After moving to Los Angeles and reading scripts for production companies several years later Halim wrote the screenplay for the film setting it in Beverly Hills 4 It struck me that this was the perfect setting for that story he said I wrote it as The Script That Could Never Get Made and I was shocked when it did 4 Casting edit Evan Rachel Wood was the first to be cast in the film as the lead character of Kimberly Joyce 4 After Wood s casting James Woods signed on to play her character s father followed by Ron Livingston as the teacher that her character accuses of sexual harassment 4 Music edit The musical score was composed by Gilad Benamram The film deliberately does not feature any popular music songs 5 Similarly the wardrobe and props do not feature contemporary branding 5 Release edit nbsp Krakowski and Wood pictured at the film s 2005 Sundance Film Festival premiere Pretty Persuasion premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22 2005 6 The film was given a limited theatrical release in the United States on August 12 2005 7 Critical response edit Roger Ebert called Pretty Persuasion daring and well acted but also said that it exists uneasily somewhere between comedy and satire 8 Phil Villarreal of the Arizona Daily Star called the film a scathing and hilarious social satire 9 While Stephen Holden of The New York Times praised the film An obscene misanthropic go for broke satire Pretty Persuasion is so gleefully nasty that the fact that it was even made and released is astonishing Much of it is also extremely funny Any satire worth its salt should not be afraid to offend and Pretty Persuasion flings mud in all directions with a fearless audacity 7 James Mottram of Channel 4 opined Hovering uncomfortably between comedy and satire Pretty Persuasion never quite gets the balance right 10 Carlo Cavagna thought it a dark teen comedy that tries way too hard to be a dark teen comedy 11 The Seattle Post Intelligencer accused the film of being an ugly cheap attempt at satire 12 and Slant magazine called it a pretty unpersuasive lecture 13 Adam Vary of The Advocate called the film rife with political incorrectness 14 Critic Armond White deemed the film ingenious 15 The film has a rotten 33 approval rating on internet review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes based on 79 reviews with an average rating of 5 10 The site s consensus reads Pretty Persuasion aims for high satire but falls short of poignancy by depending on too much black humor with too little redeeming humanity to provide balance 16 Accolades edit The film was nominated for the 2005 Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival It won the German Independence Award Audience Award at the 2005 Oldenburg International Film Festival Home media edit Sony Pictures Home Entertainment released Pretty Persuasion on DVD on December 13 2005 17 References edit Pretty Persuasion AFI Catalog of Feature Films American Film Institute Retrieved June 23 2018 Pretty Persuasion 2005 Box Office Mojo Retrieved January 17 2024 The Satire Misfires in Pretty Persuasion Hartford Courant September 9 2005 Archived from the original on January 17 2024 a b c d e f Pretty Persuasion Q amp A WITH DIRECTOR MARCOS SIEGA AND WRITER SKANDER HALIM Cinema com 2005 Archived from the original on January 17 2024 a b Siega Marcos Pretty Persuasion Anatomy of a Not So Teen Movie Landmark Theatres Archived from the original on April 28 2007 Kleinman Geoffrey 2005 Sundance Film Festival Coverage DVD Talk Archived from the original on January 17 2024 a b Holden Stephen August 12 2005 A High School Princess who treats the world like a frog The New York Times Archived from the original on January 17 2024 Ebert Roger August 26 2005 Pretty Persuasion Chicago Sun Times Retrieved June 22 2018 Pretty Persuasion Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved January 17 2024 Mottram James Pretty Persuasion Review Channel 4 Archived from the original on December 15 2006 Cavagna Carlo Pretty Persuasion Online Film Critics Society AboutFilm com Retrieved June 22 2018 Axmaker Sean September 2 2005 Pretty Persuasion is an ugly cheap attempt at satire Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved December 27 2007 Schager Nick Film Review Pretty Persuasion Slant Magazine Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved December 27 2007 Vary Adam B August 30 2005 Pretty persuasive The Advocate p 70 ISSN 0001 8996 White Armond Film Review Towelhead NY Press Retrieved January 7 2009 Pretty Persuasion Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved March 17 2021 Jones Preston December 11 2005 Pretty Persuasion DVD Talk Archived from the original on January 17 2024 External links editPretty Persuasion at IMDb nbsp Pretty Persuasion at AllMovie Pretty Persuasion at Box Office Mojo Pretty Persuasion at Rotten Tomatoes Cincinnati City Beat Happy Sundance Ending Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pretty Persuasion amp oldid 1206931168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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