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The Quiet
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Directed by Jamie Babbit
A withdrawn, deaf, and mute teen adopted by her godparents following the death of her single father finds that life in her dysfunctional new home can be quite deadly in But I'm a Cheerleader director Jamie Babbit's slick and tense teen thriller. The last word Dot (Camilla Belle) ever spoke was when her mother died at the age of seven. Subsequently thrust into a world of silence as a result of her catastrophic loss, Dot lives in a world of withdrawn solitude. When the death of her father renders the muted teen both homeless and orphaned, her suburban godparents, Paul (Martin Donovan) and Olivia Deer (Edie Falco) readily agree to take Dot in and ensure that she has a place to stay as she finishes her high-school education. All is not well in the Deer household, however, and after being rejected and ridiculed by the couple's teenage daughter, Nina (Elisha Cuthbert), Dot soon becomes something of a human confessional to the troubled souls that surround her. From father Paul's twisted incestuous longings to mother Olivia's pill-popping excess and daughter Nina's murderous plan to do away with her leering dad, everyone has something to say to the girl who can say nothing. With Nina's prominent social life quickly unraveling and tensions within the household threatening to explode into violence, Dot is about to reveal that she has a few secrets of her own that are sure to complicate matters. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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BigJeffLebowskiBigJeffLebowski A film unsure of itself
by BigJeffLebowski in BigJeffLebowski Blog
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"I'm not sure if someone should have told director Jamie Babbit to lighten up or told co-screenwriters Abdi Nazemian and Micah Schraft to start taking themselves seriously. Whichever it may be, at some point in the production of the curiously confused The Quiet, all three should have gotten onto the same page. This is not to say it is a bad film -- it actually succeeds fairly well in spite of itself -- but there is a strong sense of a director and cast " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
When a movie grapples with issues as sobering as those in The Quiet, it feels irresponsible to hit it with the full brunt of one's critical scorn. However, just as it's possible to ineptly handle frivolous subject matter, it's also possible to drop the ball on incest, social alienation, prescription drug abuse, the death of parents, and teen deafness. The Quiet plays like a bunch of topical issues masquerading as an American Beauty knockoff, rather than an honest portrait of dysfunction. In visiting this intensely serious territory, director Jamie Babbit shows none of the humor that informed her previous work, such as But I'm a Cheerleader and numerous episodes of The Gilmore Girls. Like in Cheerleader, there's some attempt to satirize the social stratification of teenagers, but it's handled so heavily, with so few winks to the viewer, that it doesn't qualify as anything other than dark drama, verging on melodrama. While Camilla Belle and Elisha Cuthbert play familiar roles -- Belle an introvert, Cuthbert a temptress -- the latter's role is particularly problematic. As the victim of her father's sexual advances, she doesn't seem quite repulsed enough by his behavior for it to be an unambiguous condemnation. Sure, that's part of the psychological mind-screw of incest, but it would take a smarter movie than this to effectively distill those shades of gray. When payback does come, it's sensationalist to the point of unbelievable. Speaking of her father, Martin Donovan plays this creep against type, wasting his natural affability, while Edie Falco, also playing against type as an enabling pushover, never gets to haul out the fierce independence she showed on The Sopranos. It's commendable that the director and stars are trying to go outside their comfort zone, but not if the result is a shallow, scolding exercise like The Quiet. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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coLorFuLspLaSh
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loved it.
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