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Smithereens
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Directed by Susan Seidelman.
Written, produced, directed, and edited by Susan Seidelman in true student film fashion, Smithereens is the story of Wren (Susan Berman), an independent spirit from New Jersey trying to self-promote herself into the New York punk scene. She meets Paul (Brad Rijn), who ran away from Montana and lives out of his van in a parking lot. Paul seems to offer genuine friendship, however, Wren is only interested in forming meaningless relationships in hopes of bolstering her nonexistent career. She has no musical talents or industry skills, yet she aggressively pursues a pathetic spot for herself in places like the Peppermint Lounge. She drops Paul for Eric (Richard Hell, who also performs on the musical score), who has a record deal, and they work out a plan to escape to California, which requires Wren to pose as a prostitute in order to scam money from a prospective john. Things don't work out, and Wren finds herself hitting one wall after another, eventually getting kicked out of her apartment. With no place to go, Wren seeks out everyone she knows in the city, only to find herself left alone. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Susan Seidelman's independent debut Smithereens marks the filmmaker at her unconventional best. Like a crudely executed retelling of Truffaut's The 400 Blows, the story is a self-analyzing character study of Wren (Susan Berman), a struggling would-be star trying to make a name for herself in New York. With minimal skills and no support structure, Wren lives by her own witty, lighthearted efforts to validate her existence. She spouts off cynical lines that could be in any early-'80s dialogue, but her underlying hopelessness is uniquely presented. In failure after failure, Wren continues to persist in brightly colored fishnets and sneakers, only to meet with an enigmatic freeze-frame ending. The images are too dark and the sound is pretty bad, however, the lack of technical polish doesn't detract from the emotional impact. The New York punk soundtrack, featuring Richard Hell, is especially effective in capturing Wren's bleak desperation combined with her frantic survival. Seidelman creates in Wren a tragic hero, who is both funny and sad in her attempts at self-promotion. After the release of Smithereens, Seidelman would move away from personal drama for a more mainstream and profitable career in comedies. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
 



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