Towelhead

September 26th, 2008







Advertisments





Towelhead

No valid json found

Still of Toni Collette and Summer Bishil in TowelheadStill of Toni Collette, Peter Macdissi and Summer Bishil in TowelheadAaron Eckhart at event of TowelheadStill of Toni Collette, Aaron Eckhart, Peter Macdissi and Summer Bishil in TowelheadStill of Toni Collette and Summer Bishil in TowelheadStill of Toni Collette in Towelhead

Plot
A young Arab-American girl struggles with her sexual obsession, a bigoted Army reservist and her strict father during the Gulf War.

Release Year: 2007

Rating: 7.0/10 (7,037 voted)

Critic's Score: 57/100

Director: Alan Ball

Stars: Summer Bishil, Aaron Eckhart, Peter Macdissi

Storyline
Against the backdrop of the first Gulf War, Jasira Maroun is 13, physically well developed but naïve and unable to say no. As puberty arrives, her mother sends her from Syracuse to Houston to her curt, up-tight, Lebanese-born father. Over the next few months, Jasira must navigate her father's strict indifference, her discovery of sexual pleasure, the casual racism of a neighbor boy and her classmates, the sexual advances of the boy's father, the proffered friendship of a pregnant neighbor, and her attraction to Thomas, an African-American classmate whom her father forbids her to see. Things happen to her, but can she take responsibility and control, or is tragedy inevitable?

Writers: Alan Ball, Alicia Erian

Cast:
Summer Bishil - Jasira Maroun
Chris Messina - Barry
Maria Bello - Gail Monahan
Peter Macdissi - Rifat Maroun (as Peter MacDissi)
Gemmenne de la Peña - Denise
Robert Baker - Mr. Joffrey
Eamonn Roche - School Photographer
Aaron Eckhart - Travis Vuoso
Carrie Preston - Evelyn Vuoso
Chase Ellison - Zack Vuoso
Irina Voronina - "Snow Queen" Centerfold
Cleo King - Sales Clerk
Michael McShae - Middle School Jerk
D.C. Cody - Middle School Jerk
Soledad St. Hilaire - Janitor

Taglines: How Can You Find Yourself if No One Can See You?



Details

Official Website: Official site |

Release Date: 26 September 2008

Filming Locations: Chino, California, USA

Opening Weekend: $52,823 (USA) (14 September 2008) (4 Screens)

Gross: $367,638 (USA) (12 October 2008)



Technical Specs

Runtime: USA:



Did You Know?

Trivia:
This film, based on the book Towelhead by Alicia Erian, debuted at the 2007 Toronto Film Festival with the non-controversial title Nothing is Private. However, after consultation with Erian and Warner Brothers, the filmmakers decided to release the movie in the United States and other countries with the same title as the book, obviously an ethnic slur. The title was met with controversy and protests from the Arab-American community. Some complained about the slur itself, others accused Warner Brothers of choosing a buzz-generating controversial title that was misleading since the story centers more on Jasira's sexual behavior than her ethnicity. This and other topics are discussed on the DVD's two panel discussions.

Goofs:
Anachronisms: When Jasira is talking to her mother on the payphone when her father has locked her out, there is a "We Card" sticker visible in the convenience store window. The "We Card" tobacco program was not started until 1995, several years after the movie takes place.

Quotes:
[first lines]
Barry: You're beautiful just the way you are, Jasira. Those other girls are just jealous because you're growing up faster than they are. And you're prettier than they are. Listen, don't let it get you down. Stupid names they're calling you. This year - just gimme a second
[wets the razor]
Barry: this year, your gonna shut them up. Only, probably you shouldn't tell your mom about this.



User Review

Sundance premier under new name

Rating: 9/10

Just left the Sundance premier. They changed the title back to Towelhead, kind of a harsh turn-off while choosing a movie, but I guess that was the name of the semi- autobiographical novel. The author was present and looks well recovered from her childhood.

I can see why many reviewers hate this movie. It's cringe-worthy to watch the sexual awakening of a pubescent teen, when her parents and other important adults are childishly self-centered, in contrast to her own childlike innocence, honesty and vulnerability. That contrast and that cringe are what make it real and relevant. An unnerving part of the story is that the protagonist is never a victim. She is too inexperienced and too unmentored to act in what an adult would consider her own best interest, at least at first. But, she never participates in anything against her will. She is never denied her freedom, at least no one who tries to restrict her has the will and persistence to succeed for long. Hers is not to suffer, then be redeemed and live happily ever after. Hers is to introduce sex into her life this way, then go on.

Regarding the mechanics of the movie, it is explicit, but not graphic. Viewers hoping for teen porn will be disappointed, body parts stay covered or concealed by camera angles.

The story engages all types of Americans around this kid's ambivalent choices, a socially liberal me-generation mom, a conservative Christian Arab Dad, right-wing white Christian neighbors, liberal social activist neighbors, a middle class black friend, and a Latina mom- figure who mistakes her of one of her own. The acting is great. As one would expect, there's lots of room for humor. Once over the cringing,if you did get over it, it was an engaging and thought-provoking movie.





Comments:

Comments are closed.


Advertisments










Searching...