Speak or It Gets the Again

2004 American independent coming-of-historic period teen drama

Speak
Speak film.jpg

Promotional release poster

Directed past Jessica Sharzer
Written by
  • Jessica Sharzer
  • Annie Young Frisbie
Based on Speak
by Laurie Halse Anderson
Produced by
  • Fred Berner
  • Matthew Myers
  • Annie Immature Frisbie
  • Jessica Sharzer
Starring
  • Kristen Stewart
  • Michael Angarano
  • Robert John Burke
  • Eric Lively
  • Elizabeth Perkins
  • D. B. Sweeney
  • Steve Zahn
Cinematography Andrij Parekh
Edited by
  • Mark Bennett
  • Billy Hopkins
Distributed by Showtime Networks Inc.

Release date

  • January twenty, 2004 (2004-01-20)

Running fourth dimension

92 minutes
Country United States
Linguistic communication English
Budget $1 meg

Speak is a 2004 American independent coming-of-age teen drama film based on the honor-winning 1999 novel of the same proper noun past Laurie Halse Anderson. Information technology stars Kristen Stewart as Melinda Sordino, a high school freshman who practically stops talking after a senior student rapes her. The picture show is told through Melinda's eyes and is wrought with her sardonic humor and edgeless honesty. It was broadcast on Showtime and Lifetime in 2005 later premiering at the Sundance Moving picture Festival in 2004.[1]

Plot [edit]

Fourteen-twelvemonth-old Melinda Sordino begins her first year in high schoolhouse and struggles on the kickoff solar day. She doesn't have any friends to hang out with, and appears bad-mannered and uncomfortable when speaking to others. Throughout the 24-hour interval, she is fabricated fun of by several students, repeatedly called a "pig". A serial of flashbacks reveal that she called the police to a firm political party during the previous summertime. Her reason for calling ix-1-1 was to tell the police that she had been raped by a senior pupil at the party, Andy Evans, just her trauma prevented her from reporting the rape over the telephone or to the police when they arrived.

When her parents run across her report carte, they prompt Melinda to see a instructor named Mr. Cervix, who tells her to write an essay on whatever history topic. Later on refusing to read her paper aloud to her course, she is sent to the primary's function. Melinda is squeamish to a new educatee named Heather Billings, who claims to be Melinda'southward "friend", but Heather soon abandons Melinda when the run a risk for social advocacy arises. The simply other student with whom Melinda has a positive experience is her lab partner, Dave Petrakis, who has successfully managed to avert affiliating himself with a clique.

The restoration of Melinda'south conviction progresses at a painfully slow rate, with some assist from Dave and her art teacher, Mr. Freeman. Her former best friend, Rachel Bruin, starts dating Andy, and Melinda fears that Rachel volition suffer the same fate as she did. Melinda meets Rachel at the library and tells her the truth about what happened at the party by writing it on paper. Rachel first refuses to believe, thinking that Melinda is lying out of jealousy and calls her "sick", but comes to realize the truth by confronting Andy who had spoken Melinda'south name before (despite claiming to accept never met any of Rachel'due south friends before). Rachel so avoids Andy out of anger for his lies and for fear of getting raped past him, telling other people of what happened at the party all the while.

Exposed as a rapist and a liar, Andy retaliates against Melinda, cornering her; he tries to strength her to tell everybody at school that the incident is imitation and attempts to rape her again. Melinda struggles and throws a bottle of turpentine at his face, blinding him, and overpowers him after property a shard of glass from a broken mirror to his neck, threatening to kill him. They are found past Melinda's distanced friend Nicole who, along with other girls from her field hockey team, help Melinda trap a now-helpless Andy to prevent further set on. The altercation removes whatever uncertainty nigh what happened at the house party, and the girls who restrain him are outraged by it and tempted to vanquish him with their sticks out of spite. Mr. Neck sees Melinda walking abroad from the scene and asks what was going on, simply Melinda doesn't respond.

On the style back from the hospital after existence treated for her injuries, Melinda rolls down the car window and breathes in deeply. She finally finds the strength to tell her mother, who already suspects something atrocious, the truth about what happened at the party.

Cast [edit]

  • Kristen Stewart as Melinda Sordino
  • Michael Angarano as David Petrakis
  • Robert John Burke as Mr. Neck
  • Hallee Hirsh equally Rachel Bruin
  • Eric Lively equally Andy Evans (IT)
  • Elizabeth Perkins as Joyce Sordino
  • D. B. Sweeney as Jack Sordino
  • Steve Zahn as Mr. Freeman
  • Allison Siko as Heather Billings
  • Leslie Lyles as Hairwoman
  • Tyanna Rolley equally Nicole
  • Cameo: Laurie Halse Anderson, the novel's author, as a lunch lady

Production [edit]

Producer and screenwriter Annie Young Frisbie read the novel and successfully made a bid to get the rights to a motion picture version. Production took place in Columbus, Ohio considering a production partner, Matthew Myers, was relocating there with his wife.

Pic production took but 21 days in August 2003. Flooding during an peculiarly heavy summer rain acquired filming to be temporarily postponed and during that time author Laurie Halse Anderson visited the set with her daughter. Anderson cameos in the flick as the lunch lady who gives Melinda the mashed potatoes.

The school scenes for the picture show were shot at Eastmoor Academy on the east side of Columbus.

Reception [edit]

Marilyn Moss of The Hollywood Reporter gave an overwhelmingly positive write-up, describing the film as, "well-made and extremely touching." She praised Stewart'due south operation, saying she gave an "understated performance that will touch everyone who sees [the film]." Moss besides praised the score and editing, maxim it "merges [Stewart's] character'southward interior and exterior worlds beautifully."[2] On his YouTube channel, Chris Stuckmann gave the film a retrospective positive review, praising Stewart and Zahn'south performances, the cinematography, and direction. Stuckmann also said the picture show feels "at home" for him, because of the filming that took place in Ohio (Stuckmann's home land).[three] Barbara Shulgasser-Parker of Mutual Sense Media gave the film a rating of iv out of v stars, and called it, "a startlingly skilful flick on what has become a familiar subject area in both fiction and life." She praised Stewart'southward performance and the management.[4]

Christopher Null of ContactMusic.com gave the film a rating of three out of five stars, proverb it "is decent, fifty-fifty pretty adept at times, only ultimately this material feels so familiar that we run across every turn in the story telegraphed from miles abroad."[v] Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times praised Stewart and Zahn's acting, but concluded that, overall, the cast was populated with "dismaying caricature[s], and so much so that it costs the movie some credibility" and that the film "comes nowhere nearly capturing the wise, subtle tone of the book."[6] Dennis Harvey of Variety called the production values "OK," simply said, "Eventual coming-to-terms (plus the culprit's public humiliation) would've been much more potent with less caricatured adult characters and more nuanced management."[vii]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Sundance Constitute".
  2. ^ Moss, Marilyn (September 5, 2005). "Reviews: Speak". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on November seven, 2005. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  3. ^ Stuckmann, Chris (May 21, 2020). "Speak (2004) – Overlooked Movies (video)". YouTube . Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  4. ^ Shulgasser-Parker, Barbara (November 6, 2016). "Movie Reviews: Speak". Common Sense Media . Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  5. ^ Null, Christopher (January twenty, 2004). "Reviews: Speak". ContactMusic.com . Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  6. ^ Genzlinger, Neil (September 5, 2005). "For One Teenager, the Party's Over". The New York Times . Retrieved March 27, 2011.
  7. ^ Harvey, Dennis (January 27, 2004). "Reviews: Speak". Diverseness . Retrieved May 21, 2020.

External links [edit]

  • Speak at IMDb
  • Speak at Rotten Tomatoes

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speak_%28film%29

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