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All The Real Girls (2003)
Released By: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment   Rating: N/A   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: N/A
Director: David Gordon Green
Language: English
Official Website: http://www.sonyclassics.com/alltherealgirls/
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Benjamin Mouton, Patricia Clarkson, Paul Schneider, Zooey Deschanel, Maurice Compte
Published ID: 117291
UPC: 043396002371,
Plot: David Gordon Green, who in 2000 made a splash on the festival circuit with his independent debut feature, George Washington, directed this drama about two people entering into a mature romantic relationship -- the sort that neither has been accustomed to. Paul (Paul Schneider) is a guy in his mid-'20s who lives in a small Southern town, where he earn a living fixing cars for his uncle. A man with little in the way of ambition, Paul still lives with his mother, Elvira (Patricia Clarkson), and still hangs out with his best friend from high school, rowdy Tip (Shea Whigham), and their buddies Bo (Maurice Compte) and Bust-Ass (Danny McBride). Among his friends, Paul has a reputation as a ladies' man, but he's not at all good with long-term relationships; most of Paul's romances last only a few weeks, and he's slept with nearly every girl in town who's worth having. Deep down inside, Paul senses that he would like to lead a different life, and that feeling becomes all the more clear when he meets Noel (Zooey Deschanel), Tip's teenage sister who has come back home after attending a boarding school. Noel is smarter and deeper than the girls Paul is used to, while Noel is taken with his charm, wit, and down-to-earth nature. Paul and Noel soon fall in love, but for Paul this is a different sort of relationship than he's accustomed to -- Noel is still a virgin, and her contemplative nature gives him a desire to be a better, stronger person. However, Tip doesn't approve of Paul dating his younger sister, which leads to a rift between these longtime friends. All the Real Girls was awarded a Special Jury Prize at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival; Patricia Clarkson's performance was also cited by the jury. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
A more realistic look at people in love
Added 1/18/2010

The Bottom Line:

A film about a relationship in a small town, All the Real Girls is blissfully devoid of the twists and turns that typically characterize larger budget romances and instead of gives the impression that the two leads (played by Paul Schneider and Zooey Deschanel) could be real people--though the occasional moment rings false and the film never becomes more than "good," it's a film worth checking out if you like your romantic films more true to life.

3/4

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Oww! My brain hurts now!
Added 12/25/2009

Talking...REAL...SLOW...like...this...does...not...make...you...an...authentic...Southerner...It...just...makes...you...sound...retarded...or...like...you...had...a...bad...dialogue...coach.

I got this movie only because of Zooey Deschanel, who is such a cute sweetheart of a girl to watch onscreen. But even having her in this movie couldn't save it from its fatal flaws of a slow meandering dialogue and relationships that seemed to go nowhere. And those awful Southern accents. Nothing about this movie was authentic, the crying, the feelings of guilt, and lost opportunities, etc., etc. Least of all the relationship between the two main characters. Could not figure out who they really were or why they were together.

It got to be a headache to watch this movie and have to try to listen to and understand those extra slow and fake Southern accents. Thank goodness for the fast forward. Thank goodness it was just a rental.






0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
There's more to making a movie than hiring actors and pointing a camera at them.
Added 6/11/2009

This movie has a fine stock of potentially interesting characters. Unfortunately, you never get to know them. The movie suffers from an acute lack of directing, editing, script and continuity. Having a story to tell doesn't count unless you know how to tell it.

The cinematography does have its moments. But intimate moments are shot from too far away to tell what's happening to the people; establishing shots don't fit together enough to establish anything. Musical passages are chosen not so much to create or enhance mood as to just cover up gaps in dialog.

In order for a "small town romance" -- or any kind of romance -- to work, you have to care about the people. Without this foundation, all you have is random people going through random events.

The high points of the movie are some of the supporting actors, and Zooey Deschanel, who manages to come off naturally even when she isn't given enough to do.

2 out of 4 people found this helpful.
A real love roller coaster
Added 1/17/2009

If this movie didn't make people with southern accents look so stupid,
I might have given it a higher rating.
The slow empty music is irritating in a drama like this.
The sound tract is generally tentative.
Ain't you been listening, girl? He has slept with everybody ( 26 is his count). Young love...so this time it is the real thing?
His mom doesn't believe it either.
They share secrets, then it hits the rocks.

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Good Film
Added 9/7/2008

All The Real Girls was David Gordon Green's 2003 follow up film to his 2000 debut film George Washington, which became an underground classic. The good news is that it is a superior film to that earlier excellent film, and Green shows real growth as a filmmaker. Like the earlier film, this film breaks with traditional narrative, and spends the first third, or so, of its hour and forty eight minutes running time devoted to simply introducing the viewer to the main characters of the small southern town it's set in, with rapturous cinematography by Tim Orr. Although the film was shot in and around Asheville, North Carolina, it's not set in any specific time nor place. There is very little, in terms of technology nor cultural references, to date it.
The film grabs the viewer from its terrific opening scene, where two unknown lovers talk about why the boy has not even tried to kiss the girl. It is an awkward, but tender, scene, and we will soon learn the reasons why he has not kissed her, but it is the sort of scene that no Hollywood producer would let any film of theirs open with. We soon learn that these two main characters are the town's noted Lothario, Paul (Paul Schneider), an aimless but earnest fellow in his early twenties, and his odd girlfriend Noel (Zooey Deschanel), the college aged sister of Paul's best friend, Tip (Shea Whigham), who looks like he just stepped out of a James Dean film. Of course, Tip objects to the relationship between his best friend and baby sister, for he knows that Paul is as big a poon hound as he is, and violence ensues. Yet, it is not in the Hollywood fashion, and plays no major role in the film, which follows the realistic ups and downs of the first real love relationship for both characters. Even though Noel is a virgin when they meet, as she comes back to town after being away at boarding school, it is Paul who is the more insecure about himself. This may be because Noel's family is from a richer social class, but the viewer need not be spoonfed such information for the scenes unfold, one after the other, and give us snippets not only into the lead characters, but into the lesser characters, too, and this, in turn, lets us know more about their social and family milieu than direct exposition through straight ahead narrative.... This film is thus one that transcends its chronological bounds on film. The viewer has seen more than enough of the lead characters to care for them, so this film is really more about the place this little romance unfolds in, not its particular participants. The film's producers, Lisa Muskat and Jean Doumanian should be commended for supporting such fine work. It will ease your angst, and make almost two hours of your life a little brighter.

1 out of 2 people found this helpful.
A more realistic look at people in love
Added 1/18/2010

The Bottom Line:

A film about a relationship in a small town, All the Real Girls is blissfully devoid of the twists and turns that typically characterize larger budget romances and instead of gives the impression that the two leads (played by Paul Schneider and Zooey Deschanel) could be real people--though the occasional moment rings false and the film never becomes more than "good," it's a film worth checking out if you like your romantic films more true to life.

3/4

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Oww! My brain hurts now!
Added 12/25/2009

Talking...REAL...SLOW...like...this...does...not...make...you...an...authentic...Southerner...It...just...makes...you...sound...retarded...or...like...you...had...a...bad...dialogue...coach.

I got this movie only because of Zooey Deschanel, who is such a cute sweetheart of a girl to watch onscreen. But even having her in this movie couldn't save it from its fatal flaws of a slow meandering dialogue and relationships that seemed to go nowhere. And those awful Southern accents. Nothing about this movie was authentic, the crying, the feelings of guilt, and lost opportunities, etc., etc. Least of all the relationship between the two main characters. Could not figure out who they really were or why they were together.

It got to be a headache to watch this movie and have to try to listen to and understand those extra slow and fake Southern accents. Thank goodness for the fast forward. Thank goodness it was just a rental.






0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
There's more to making a movie than hiring actors and pointing a camera at them.
Added 6/11/2009

This movie has a fine stock of potentially interesting characters. Unfortunately, you never get to know them. The movie suffers from an acute lack of directing, editing, script and continuity. Having a story to tell doesn't count unless you know how to tell it.

The cinematography does have its moments. But intimate moments are shot from too far away to tell what's happening to the people; establishing shots don't fit together enough to establish anything. Musical passages are chosen not so much to create or enhance mood as to just cover up gaps in dialog.

In order for a "small town romance" -- or any kind of romance -- to work, you have to care about the people. Without this foundation, all you have is random people going through random events.

The high points of the movie are some of the supporting actors, and Zooey Deschanel, who manages to come off naturally even when she isn't given enough to do.

2 out of 4 people found this helpful.
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