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Pumpkin
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Adam Larson and Tony R. Abrams' directorial debut Pumpkin is an unconventional love story. College senior Carolyn McDuffy (Christina Ricci) agrees to coach handicapped athletes from a local town in order to help her sorority win an award. She and her sorority sister Jeanine (Dominique Swain) are put off by the activity. Carolyn's discomfort begins to dissipate after meeting Pumpkin Romanoff (Hank Harris), a young man in a wheelchair who has dreams of competing in the shot put. Slowly, Carolyn falls in love with Pumpkin, sending her into conflict with her boyfriend Kent (Sam Ball), her sisters, and Pumpkin's mother (Brenda Blethyn). This film was screened at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
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JakeStevensJakeStevens As Satirical As They Come
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
is neutral about it.
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"I love a good, black comedy. It took me about half way through the film to realize I was actually watching a comedy at all, which is a credit to the filmmakers for playing everything straight (or mostly straight, the exception being Dominique Swains' annoyingly over-the-top performance and he obvious stock footage of an explosion towards the end of the film). Both Christina Ricci and Hank Harris are excellent in their respective roles, and to his credit, I thought Hank Harris got the role because of an real handicap. Not for everyone, but for those who like their comedies dark and satirical, this is the film for you. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
There may have been no advisable way to market Pumpkin, other than how they did: an outré assault on good taste in the spirit of the Farrelly Brothers, starring Christina Ricci, the youth queen of sarcasm. After all, who would believe -- or pay to see -- a mostly straightforward look at a privileged college girl falling for her mentally retarded charity case? Black comedy is probably the right category for Pumpkin, but its subversive agenda loses steam midway through, resulting in a more conventional romantic drama using unconventional parts. Still, it offers its characters a fairer shake than they get in most sorority movies full of caricatures and pre-established satirical norms. Tony R. Abrams and Adam Larson Broder have succeeded in more ways than they've failed in their directorial debut, but their earnest attempt to supply stock characters with sympathetic dimension can seem naïve. Ricci's character is better when obliviously trampling on emotions, as when she sets up a blind date between Pumpkin and an overweight girl in her poetry class, trying to link up their lost souls. Achieving genuine empathy is her destiny, but it deprives Broder's script of some of its prior bite. On the other hand, making fun of all the characters would have been an easier, more certain route, so the rookie filmmakers can't be blamed for taking risks that don't pan out. If Pumpkin is ultimately unconvincing, it's because the subject matter has so much built-in implausibility, not because it was mishandled. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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mkerr353
mkerr353
loved it.
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glooberman
loved it.
wenweimar
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Indie
lost interest.
Kyan
Kyan
disliked it.
Diabolical_Shadow
Diabolical_Shadow
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