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Previously criticized for her marginal acting skills, Sofia Coppola made her directorial debut with The Virgin Suicides and silenced her detractors. No amount of coaching from her director father (Francis Coppola) or husband (Spike Jonze) could have guaranteed a film this assured, and in adapting Jeffrey Eugenides's novel, Coppola demonstrates the sensitivity and emotional depth that this material demands. Surely the pain of youth and public criticism found its way into her directorial voice; in the story of four sisters who self-destruct under the steady erosion of their youthful ideals, one can clearly sense Coppola's intimate connection to the inner lives of her characters.
Played in a delicate minor key, the film is heartbreaking, mysterious, and soulfully funny, set in a Michigan suburb of the mid-1970s but timeless and universal to anyone who's been a teenager. The four surviving Lisbon sisters lost a sibling to suicide, and as its title suggests, the film will chart their mutual course to oblivion under the vigilance of repressive parents (Kathleen Turner and James Woods, perfectly cast). But The Virgin Suicides is more concerned with life in that precious interlude of adolescence, when the Lisbon girls are worshipped by the neighborhood boys, their notion of perfection epitomized by Lux (Kirsten Dunst) and her storybook love for high-school stud Trip (Josh Hartnett). Unfolding at the cusp of innocence and sexual awakening, and recalled as a memory, The Virgin Suicides is, ultimately, about the preservation of the Lisbon sisters by their own deaths--suspended in time, polished to perfection, and forever untainted by adulthood. --Jeff Shannon
A divine directorial debut from one of this generations brightest
stars!Reviewed by Andrew Ellington, 2010-03-03
One of the best directorial debuts of this generation (especially
of this decade), Sophia Coppola's masterful `The Virgin Suicides'
is a gritty and emotionally stirring example of cinema's finest.
With a warmth needed to help sell the emotional gravity of the
film, without once wavering from the stern and almost callous
atmosphere needed to illuminate the harshness of the `reality'
presented, Coppola helped establish herself as one of the best
visionaries of her generation.
Her subsequent films (`Lost in Translation' and `Marie Antoinette')
further proved her brilliance.
Taking place in the 70's, the film centers around a group of boys
and their obsession with the Lisbon sisters. These girls are the
center of their existence, not because they are anything truly
special but because they are so mysterious, and their home life
(guarded strictly by their overprotective parents) is something of
in depth conversation. When one of the sisters ends her own life,
the family spirals down a dark and destructive course that
eventually leads to heartbreak and tragedy, but the film (albeit
`gloomy') carries an air of light delicacy that beautifully
captures the breathtaking quality of innocence that obviously
overwhelms these young girls (and the boys who obsess over
them).
There are few ensemble casts that truly reach that peak of
perfection that `The Virgin Suicides' does. In fact, every
performance is perfectly layered with enough gritty realism to
elevate their characterizations. Even small roles inhibited by
actors like Josh Hartnett become something truly memorable and
enticing. Kirsten Dunst basically owns this movie, with her
sensually frustrated take on Lux, the most compelling and absorbing
of the Lisbon sisters. She bares her acting chops with an
effortless fluctuation of frail naivety and startlingly aggressive
tenacity. Kathleen Turner, and especially James Woods, are
brilliantly cast as the Lisbon parents. Woods embodies this
character with enough parental warmth to make his outlandish and
easily misunderstood actions appear much kinder and warmer than
they should. There is an obvious love there, just misapplied.
Coming from an actor who portrays sly and sinister without batting
an eyelash, complete stripping that trait from this character is a
marvelous (and commendable) feat.
But the star of this show is, without doubt, is Sophia Coppola.
Once the target of cruelty for her horrendous acting talent (she
deserved the slaying she received in 1990), Coppola has switched
careers (and bold and brilliant move) and established herself as a
force in this industry. Being the daughter of the legendary Francis
Ford Coppola, Sophia has big shoes to fill, but she has found her
own style, her own niche and her own voice; and she sings loud and
clear with each film.
Weaving her film through a cascade of identifiable and relatable
emotions, Coppola creates a crystal clear masterpiece with `The
Virgin Suicides'. The fact that she only got BETTER from this point
forward is further testament to her skill behind the camera.
The Virigin SuicidesReviewed by B, 2010-03-02
Was delivered extremely fast came in great condition and the quality of the movie was very impressive I would definitely buy from this company again and recommend it.
Completely unique and surreal - don't try and pin it down, just
enjoyReviewed by Andrea Boettcher, 2010-02-03
Melancholy, dreamy, wistful, artistic, sexy, dark, haunting......a masterpiece that demonstrates how film can command music, cinematography, casting, etc. to completely immerse you in a feeling - and that's what you should focus on for this film, is the strange but pleasant feeling that it evokes. This movie has been criticized as boring or too simplistic in its theme, but I say that you should enjoy the subtle nuance and tenderness in each moment. It's a depressing ending (as the title suggests) and you'll find yourself a little frustrated that the 'point' seems to slip through your grasp or maybe doesn't sit well (sounds like life to me). But this movie is a quiet gem with a unique exection that I would suggest to anyone who tires of the Hollywood machine.
I hate titles. 3 stars.Reviewed by Adrian the Complex Lonely, 2009-12-25
December 25th, 2009
The Virgin Suicides is an alright movie that features some good 70s
music and then some OK 70s music. It's somewhat of a moody affair
and you might have to force yourself to watch it again some day but
I think it's worth at least one watch.
It starts off with the character that plays 13-year old Cecilia
trying to kill herself in the bathtub. Why? I'm still not sure. But
she was my favorite character along with her 14-year old sister,
Lux played by the oh-so-charming Kirsten Dunst (she looks much
older than her character and has gone blond for the role).
The sisters live a fairly strict and fenced-in type of life and it
only gets worse after Lux doesn't come home on time after the
school dance.
A lot of things happen in this movie (right?) but I don't wanna
spoil the whole plot.
I believe this is a PG-13 rated movie but it almost doesn't deserve
that rating.
There is a bit of kissing, Kirsten's character quickly plays with
the belt of a young boy's trousers in the film and during the
football field scene, when the dance is taking place she grinds
with the school "hottie". Oh, and there are scenes where people are
shown dead. But they aren't gory mind you.
All in all, I think I'd give it a rent and watch it with a friend
or two. You will either be half-intrigued or laugh your way through
the movie, I'm not sure which one.
The theatrical trailer makes the movie seem like it's going to be
really good, and well...it falls flat. But if you don't go in this
with super-high expectations, you just may like it.
3 stars.
end note: I will probably watch this once more, but not alone; with
a friend. I definitely don't think it's worth owning for me at
least but it is somewhat entertaining (plus, he wants to see it
so...).
Happy Holidays!
Conservative family kills daughtersReviewed by editrrr, 2009-09-29
Or something to that effect. Another in the "American Beauty" camp of willfully narrow-minded views of middle America.