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New Waterford Girl
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Directed by Allan Moyle
While imagining the childhood of Andy Warhol, Lou Reed once wrote, "There's only one good thing about a small town: you hate it, and you know you have to leave." A similar notion seems to have occurred to Mooney Pottie (Liane Balaban), a 15-year-old Canadian girl growing up in a village deep in the rugged coal mining area of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. Mooney wants to be an artist and feels out of place among the rough-hewn villagers and her unsophisticated family. When her art teacher, Cecil Sweeney (Andrew McCarthy), tells her that he could arrange for her to attend an art institute in Manhattan, her parents refuse to allow her to go. Stranded in a place she hates, Mooney finally discovers a kindred spirit when new girl Lou (Tara Spencer Nairn) moves into the neighborhood. Lou's father was a boxer from Brooklyn, and she's inherited his talent for fisticuffs; Lou has a way with a sucker punch that soon has all the girls in town begging her to knock out their boyfriends when they get out of line. Mooney and Lou soon team up on a plan that will allow them to move on to bigger and better things. Canadian filmmaker Allan Moyle returned home for this comedy set in the mid-1970s, which features a soundtrack of classic Canadian rock, including vintage tracks by April Wine and The Stampeders. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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New Waterford Girl
by in JimBell Blog
is neutral about it.
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"New Waterford Girl is a movie I did not want to see, until I noticed that the few critics who bothered to review this Canadian film loved it. But who wants to watch an hour and a half of a pouty, 15-year old who thinks she is too good for her small Cape Breton town? Then when I started watching the movie I realized that it had a strong anti-male element: The kid’s new-found friend, a tough chic from New York, goes around punching guys who, supposedly, have done something wrong to some tee " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Director Allan Moyle (Pump Up the Volume) certainly gets the discontented mood right for Tricia Fish's autobiographical script in the coming-of-age drama New Waterford Girl. The coastal Nova Scotia town is beautifully captured in a stark blue house against barren fields, cloudy skies, and a rocky shore. The sense of time and place is what is best about this film, with the interiors suggesting all that is tacky and affordable about Northern Canadian life in the '70s. However, the characterizations are almost too mundane, as the everyday life of these people is never shown with any emotional pull, even during the film's many dramatic pauses. As Mooney Pottie, Liane Balaban is strikingly beautiful but vacuous, always putting up a front of brooding angst that appears false. The story stays lightly on the surface and never really gets into her psyche, despite the long takes where the camera lingers on her face. Cathy Moriarty as a Mambo teacher in a leopard coat and Andrew McCarthy as a handsome teacher with sideburns could have been interesting, if they had been more developed. Despite these flaws, New Waterford Girl can be enjoyed for the Canadian local color and moments of offbeat humor, including a short bit with Kids in the Hall's Mark McKinney. Although it doesn't offer the impact that it could have, this comedy drama might be best appreciated by fans of melancholy adolescence stories like My So-called Life or Girl, Interrupted. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
 

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