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6/10
Manhattan Mis-o-drama
17 November 2009
I saw this film last night on its UK premiere at the National Film Theatre (although it had previously been given a preview showing to a sell-out audience during the London Film Festival last month). Sasha Grey, the star of the film, appeared in person at the end and participated in one of the longer Q&A sessions in my, admittedly limited, experience of these events in which she batted away questions, mainly about her adult film career, with the same show of glacial insouciance that her character demonstrates in the film.

The film which is a series of episodic vignettes about the encounters, both professional and personal, of a high-priced Manhattan escort girl set in the run-up to last year's US Presidential election is not really about prostitution either as a means of earning money or as a paradigm for the despair of the human soul.

What it is really about is speed-dating, not as an extra-curricular activity but as a well-rewarded existence. The film opens with Ms Grey leaving a hotel and getting into a car and giving a deadpan account of her previous encounter with a client. She prefaces her remarks by listing her complete outfit down to her underwear since this was obviously part of the client "package" which he has purchased, if only for a short time. This sets the tone of the film as being a triumph of, quite literally, style over substance.

This is a very sanitised world with no violence, no drug-taking and even no cooking although enormous importance is attached to meals, mainly taken in commercial premises, where many important conversations take place with Chelsea describing her situation either to clients, an alternately amused and bemused girlfriend (of the platonic variety), and to a journalist. In Chelsea's profession making intelligent, if superficial, conversation is as, if not more, important than her bedroom gymnastic skills.

Whilst Ms Grey's elegant Ice Maiden, a persona she has exploited with astonishing ability in her adult film roles, is eminently watchable the main weaknesses of the film are the character and the plot. Ms Grey and her personal trainer boyfriend are mismatched and seem to have nothing in common except vapid self-regard.

There is not so much a narrative thread as a series of threads that Soderbergh pulls out then almost immediately lets drop again. The scene with the boyfriend where Chelsea tells him she is thinking of going away for the weekend with a client put me briefly in mind of Paul Snider's jealous murderous rage towards Dorothy Stratten (who emerged from the softcore world of Playboy to be on the brink of a carer as a serious actress before her untimely demise) at the end of Bob Fosse's biopic of that tragic figure, "Star 80", but it is never developed and it never becomes clear whether they patched up their differences or parted company.

The most interesting scene and the one where Chelsea almost has a "Goodbar" moment is an encounter with a blog reviewer of erotic "services", the gelatinous self styled "Erotic Connoisseur" . This stands out in sharp contrast to the rest of the film as the dialogue is sharp and pointed and even witty, provoking laughter in the audience, as relief from the surrounding conversational banality. However part way through the scene fades and we do not learn the denouement until later when she describes it in a conversation with a client.

This is one example of how scenes crucial to the action are discussed rather than depicted. This may have some value in a documentary but it weakens a drama which should have both conflict and resolution and this has neither and instead is a few days in the life of a New York escort girl except Ms Grey isn't an escort girl in reality but portraying one in fiction.

Lastly, we come to Ms Grey herself, who I think will be the major selling point of this film particularly for those who have come across at least some of her other 180-odd films she has appeared in since the age of 18 which will never receive a cinema release. Soderbergh himself makes an ironic reference to this in the final scene where a mountainous Jewish jewellry store owner achieves release by merely being embraced by Ms Grey, clad only in bra and pants, just as many others have achieved release by being electronically embraced by Ms Grey through watching her films.

Ms Grey is the most intriguing figure to come out of the adult film industry and attempt a mainstream crossover since Traci Lords in the mid-1980s. Her svelte, dark-haired willowy appearance stands in sharp contrast to the blowsy, blonde, silicon-assisted features of previous adult film stars who have entered the wider public consciousness in more recent times such as Jenna Jameson.

Could Ms Grey achieve what Dorothy Stratten was on the brink of doing before tragedy intervened and become widely accepted as a mainstream actress? On this evidence she has a long way to go yet but this reviewer will continue to follow her career with interest.
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St. Trinian's (2007)
Brave Effort
27 December 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I saw the film yesterday and whilst not being the funniest film ever made I liked it and thought both Rupert Everett, doing an homage to the late great Alastair Sim in a double role (including the cross-dresser role as the Headmistress and Colin Firth's unlikely love interest), and Colin Firth were particularly good and show a particular aptitude for comedy (which we know already from "My Best Friend" and "Bridget Jones"). There are two allusions to Firth the actor - one when he is thrown out of the window from the Posh Totty room after he is discovered there with his trousers around his ankles (don't ask!) and emerges dripping wet a la BBC-2's "Pride and Prejudice" (Miss Fritton's, the Headmistress', dog, who develops a fondness for Firth's leg is also called "Mr D'Arcy" after Firth's character in "P & P").

The other allusion is to the painting "The Girl with the Pearl Earring" which looms large in the plot and in the film version of whose creation Firth, of course, played the artist Vermeer. There are two references to the film in this: when the Head Girl, Kelly Jones, played by Gemma Arteton (another excellent performance) suggests stealing it she is met with the response: "You're not going to kidnap Scarlett Johanssen!" and when two of the St Trinians' girls first see the picture it elicits the response: "I can see now why Colin Firth wanted to shag her!" For film trivia buffs I wonder how many films there are in which one of the characters is referred to by his real name (the only ones I can think of are Bob Hope's insulting references to Bing Crosby in the "Road" movies).

I can see that this will not be to everybody's taste as the jokes are in the broad, vulgar "Carry On" tradition (but still more tasteful than the breaking-wind and "T & A" humour of US campus comedies that have provided the bulk of cinematic comedy offerings in recent years). It will not appeal to the puritanical or the politically correct or those who see child abuse at every turn (I suggest you don't go to see this movie in that case) although a film which shows girls as resourceful and self-reliant as well as funny doesn't seem to be aiding or encouraging abuse, quite the contrary.

For those (of us) who like watching attractive girls (who are definitely over-age - check them out on this website) dressing up in abbreviated school uniforms there is, I admit, an attraction but which has to be sustained by a good script and good acting (which the previous one in the series "The Wildcats of St Trinians" in 1980 definitely didn't do despite its resort to Page 3 girls and bare breasts - which the latest in the series avoids) I liked the in-joke of deliberately dressing down the doll-faced supermodel Lily Cole, who looks far more provocative and child-like on the catwalk, by having her play one of "the nerdy girls" and a bespectacled computer geek.

It obviously lacked the wit and charm of Stephen Fry's "Bright Young Things" (the best British comedy, IMO, of recent years)although it does feature the excellent Fenella Woolgar, who appeared in that film but who is disgracefully under-used in this in a walk-on part as the hockey mistress. Others might also spot Juno Temple who features in the recent "Atonement".

My heart started to warm to this film when I saw the legend "Ealing Studios" in the opening credits. No, this isn't "The Lavender Hill Mob" and no one could rationally suggest it ever could be but at least it's a British film set in Britain with a British cast (with the exception of Mischa Barton in one scene as the previous Head Girl, who does enter into the spirit of the piece with surprising élan) and with actors such as Stephen Fry and Russell Brand (in a surprisingly good supporting role as the Flash Harry character originally created by George Cole) little known to transatlantic cinema-goers but well-known to British TV audiences.

All-in-all a creditable revival of a genre that many had thought (rightly or wrongly) the Age of PC had made permanently extinct.
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