Links to Full Text
The NewYork Times
The New York Observer
New York Newsday
Entertainment Today
E! Online
The Boston Globe
Los Angeles Times
LA Weekly
San Francisco Chronicle
Screen International
Hollywood Reporter
Variety
Reviews Home (quotes pg.)
|
Reviews - San
Francisco Chronicle
Surprising gem turns up on road trip with
'Alice'
December 19, 2003
by Mick LaSalle
What Alice Found: Thriller. Starring Emily Grace,
Judith Ivey and Bill Raymond. Directed by A. Dean Bell. (Not rated.
95 minutes. At Bay Area theaters.)
With so many movies coming out this month, "What
Alice Found'' is probably not on the must-see list of many filmgoers.
Made on a budget of about 8 cents and shot on grainy digital video,
it has nothing going for it but a terrific story and an amazing
performance by Judith Ivey, who plays an enigmatic Good Samaritan.
An enigmatic Good Samaritan? What does that mean? Well, here's the
problem: The great virtue of "What Alice Found'' is that it is consistently
surprising -- and surprising in different ways. Yet to explain this
-- to go into any kind of real detail at all about the film -- would
be to give away half the plot, and that will not be done here. So
if the following recommendation is a little vague, just know that
an explicit recommendation would demolish the experience of the
movie. It's about an 18-year-old girl from the wrong side of the
tracks in Massachusetts, who loves dolphins, because the one fun
thing she ever did in her life is go to SeaWorld. Summer vacation
is over, and a friend has already gone off to college in Miami to
study marine biology. So Alice (Emily Grace) - - adventurous and
unhappy -- decides to go on a road trip. In a beat-up car, she embarks
on a thousand-mile journey. Along the way, she meets and is helped
out by an older couple, Bill (Bill Raymond) and Sandra (Ivey), and
they start traveling together. ... And that's all anybody needs
to know. As for the rest, maybe nothing else happens. (This was,
after all, a Sundance movie.) Maybe the whole thing is just a meeting
of the minds, an exchange between generations, a heartfelt slice
of life that leaves everyone better off for the experience. ...
Or maybe not. I'm not talking. I will say that Ivey is fascinating,
cooing nonstop in a cozy Southern accent, friendly and accepting,
but also observant and oddly unknowable. It's a performance that
even gets better on second viewing. As for newcomer Grace, she is
all she needs to be as Alice, a gawky kid, wary but gullible, and
always a little bit angry about something. She doesn't know why
she's angry, only that she has a right to be. -- Advisory: This
film contains strong language, sexual situations and full frontal
nudity.
Best Sundance Surprise: "What Alice
Found."
Mick LaSalle, Chronicle Movie Critic
Writer-director A. Dean Bell's low- budget film,
shot on HDCam, concerned a teenage girl (Emily Grace) who takes
off on a road trip and is befriended by a retired couple. What I
love about this movie is the way the plot moves slowly into completely
unexpected areas, so that even an hour into the film, you have no
idea what's really going on. It's a masterfully paced little story,
and I hope it finds its way into theaters.
|
|