Dirty Girl

    Dirty Girl
    2010

    Synopsis

    When Danielle is banished to special education because of her misbehavior, she joins Clarke on a road trip to discover themselves.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Juno TempleDanielle
    • Jeremy DozierClarke
    • Milla JovovichSue-Ann
    • Mary SteenburgenPeggy
    • Dwight YoakamJoseph
    • William H. MacyRay
    • Nicholas D'AgostoJoel
    • Elsie FisherTiffany
    • Tim McGrawDanny
    • Maeve QuinlanJanet

    Recommandations

    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      A sweet 'n' sassy period comedy with a "Juno" sensibility and the soul of a "Little Miss Sunshine," the hard-to-resist Dirty Girl announces the official arrival of Juno Temple.
    • 65

      Movieline

      Dirty Girl is harmless enough, and the early scenes, in which Danielle surveys poor Clarke with snobbish contempt, have a pleasing nastiness.
    • 60

      Variety

      For those not hip to its smug "out is in" mentality, Dirty Girl's redeeming feature is its cast. Temple is vixen enough to carry the part, but manages to project a real wit burning beneath the layers of makeup and dumb-blonde shtick her character affects around others.
    • 50

      Observer

      Dirty Girl is a bad movie with no insights that is broadly drawn and genuinely plagued by filthy dialogue. You don't laugh. You just wince, and wonder how the whole thing ever got financed.
    • 50

      San Francisco Chronicle

      Watching this movie is like eating a hot fudge sundae and lasagna in alternating bites.
    • 40

      Time Out

      A standout in smaller parts in films like "Kaboom" and "Atonement," this frizzy blond actor has the air of a star-in-training in search of the right opportunity. This isn't it, unfortunately, but Temple does turn what's essentially a magical-hussy role into something more grounded and human.
    • 40

      Village Voice

      For a film that's supposed to be rooted in such a specific time and place, Sylvia isn't really concerned with details: Costumes, hair, and décor appear to be the work of "That '70s Show" interns; William H. Macy, as Danielle's Mormon soon-to-be stepdad, continuously muffs a Sooner State drawl.
    • 40

      The New York Times

      Deep down, though, this movie by the first-time writer-director Abe Sylvia is desperate for approval. Starting out with a blast of profanity and sexual brazenness, it lands in a zone of earnest, sloppy weepiness.

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