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Speak

Speak (2004)

January. 20,2004
|
7.2
|
PG-13
| Drama

Freshman high-school student Melinda has refused to speak ever since she called the cops on a popular summer party. With her old friends snubbing her for being a rat, and her parents too busy to notice her troubles, she folds into herself, trying to hide her secret: that star senior Andy raped her at the party. But Melinda does manage to find solace in her art class headed by Mr. Freeman.

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Reviews

Kartik Pillai
2004/01/20

This movie is about a girl, who has a very depressing party memory which she doesn't share with anyone. I think the story needed a bit more polishing. The only good I found in this movie was the positive role modeling shown in this movie else there's nothing new in this movie and I think this movie best meant to be watched as a time killer.

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Nadia Salvatore
2004/01/21

Yes, I did watched this because of Kristen Stewart.This story is heartbreaking. It tells about a teenage girl, Melinda Sordino who is quiet and weird. But she wasn't like that to begin with. There's a reason for why she behaved like that.Kristen Stewart is perfect for the role. She can do great if she choose the right movie for her. And this movie is one of her right choices.I think everyone can relate to the story of withdrawal and rejection, relationship with family and friends, and how expressing yourself can set you free.I almost cry at the end but no tears so I gave a 9.

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mads leonard holvik
2004/01/22

I liked most of the characters in this movie. Melinda and her parents start off as distant, but then I realized that both her mum and dad were pretty cool. So was Melinda, but I guess they all three just needed to figure some things out. Especially Melinda, because she has a big secret. It tears away at her. I also liked Melinda's friends. Both her x-friends from last school year and her new ones. Although Rachel comes off as a little bitchy at first. The one person I didn't like was Andy. But he is the bad guy, so that's the way it should be. Oh, Mr. Neck is a bit over the top as the teacher who breathes down their necks when they are two minutes late or if they have opinions of their own.I am a teacher, and maybe I could appreciate easier some of the stereotyped characters at the school. Anyways, although this is a movie with a serious theme, it all goes well, and all I can say is it left me with a good feeling.

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jpschapira
2004/01/23

It might be the effect of watching a lot of bad films in a row but the truth remains: sometimes there just comes a great movie. Jesssica Sharzer's "Speak" is one of those pictures that gets everything right. Like "Thirteen" or "The virgin suicides", it chooses characters, explores their environment and takes care of covering every aspect of a heartbreaking story. A heartbreaking story told, shot with respect is not the only thing these films have in common. The most important characters are girls, and the writer/directors are women. This can't be a coincidence. However, what changes is the point of view. Where "The virgin suicides" was seen through the eyes of boys and "Thirteen" was a whole new (extreme at times) experience for a high school girl, "Speak" takes a step back. It's a humbler movie; neither entirely poetic nor filled with the emotions its main character is desperate to express.Melinda (Kristen Stewart) has done something terrible and is starting the new school year without friends. She wants her friends back, but something else happened and it's making very difficult for her to walk calmly around the hallways. There is a reconstruction of events, poetically narrated, which includes images that represent the bliss of adolescence and its biggest fears at the same time. The music, a fantastic score by Christopher Libertino, works perfectly when we witness the past and also Melinda's everyday life. When her mother (Elizabeth Perkins) wakes her up and she's screaming, she says: "Don't worry, the boogeyman is gone". Melinda knows this is not true. She walks around with ghosts and talks only when necessary. We have the privilege of listening to her thoughts, but the movie title is precise about it: Melinda can't speak up."Speak" gets everything right because Sharzer keeps it real. It's an important detail in films like these that things don't get out of hand. Disbelief may cause distraction, but here the camera is not flashy, the dialogue is not excessive, the key moments are not over dramatized; the economy of resources in general is astounding and seems intentional. What we know about the multiple characters is from what Melinda thinks of them in particular moments or what she directly says to them in important situations. The rest we have to figure out for ourselves (specially the relationship of Melinda with her parents, also an important detail in movies like this one). The movie never explains or anticipates too much because its story depends on what we find as we watch it. Proof of this fact is the most outspoken character, and art teacher played by Steve Zahn, who has a typical bohemian/philosophic/life lesson intended speech that for any viewer may sound like bullshit. Art plays a big part in "Speak", but it's not due to the art teacher's words… It's simply because of the direct relationship Melinda experiences with art and how it widely affects her; a relationship mainly generated by the art teacher.Kristen Stewart is amazing. The depressive look on her face she has completely mastered finds its inception in "Speak". High school, lack of satisfaction, quirkiness that is sexy, a world of questions inside a world of unresolved problems and, in the end, some kind of kindness. You could say by now that she's typecast, but if I didn't say it before I dare anyone to find any other actress who can do it better. The close-ups of Stewart here are plenty and I find it hard to write (this means 'try to explain') how two eyes that seem lost in the middle of nowhere can transmit so much. I've already praised Stewart so. I'm a bit tired. Go and watch it for yourselves."Speak" is a fabulous experience, though not the happiest. You don't imagine how good it feels when a movie understands that there's nothing more left to show; that the story has been told and the screen needs to go black. I envy the way this film resolves its ending, when nothing else can be said. And don't forget the movie's called "Speak".

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