Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.
Let's be realistic.
Highly Overrated But Still Good
This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.
View MoreA fine opening for a first time director. I saw it specially for Juno Temple and her performance was the major plus point but her co-star attracted to my eyes. I liked Juno Temple very much in 'Dirty Girl' but afterwords she was good, also exposed her body consistently and I disliked it. Sometime we hate someone we admired do like that. She could have been a good actor liked by everybody including family audience if she does not expose much of her skin.Anyway this movie was good, delivers a fine message and kinda a lesson to youngsters to learn. This was the story of two teenage girls Lily and Alison from a small town. Fifteen, the age of self discovering and curious about everything in the world, to find out what is future and where it will be. These girls are unhappy with their poverty and pollution town, so wanted to runaway. One day they meet the boys from Los Angeles and follows them. What comes to them is not as they expected and theirs response to the circumstance brings the curtain to the movie.Good story and the movie looked realistic to me. The element about blackmail through social media was one of the highlights of the movie. It was based on actual happenings in everywhere like the movie 'Trust'. I am happy they used it very well for this movie. This independent drama about youngsters mistakes is totally worth seeing.8/10
View MoreMovies like this force you to learn geography. We gather it is set near the Salton Sea, but what is "the Salton Sea?" Well it turns out the Salton Sea is a California State Recreation area, about a 3-hour drive southeast of Los Angeles. The lake's salinity, about 44 g/L, is greater than that of the waters of the Pacific Ocean. From the website: "One of the world's largest inland seas and lowest spots on earth at -227 below sea level, Salton Sea was created in 1905 when high spring flooding on the Colorado River crashed the canal gates leading into the developing Imperial Valley. For the next 18 months the entire volume of the Colorado River rushed downward into the Salton Trough. By the time engineers were finally able to stop the breaching water in 1907, the Salton Sea had been born at 45 miles long and 20 miles wide – equaling about 130 miles of shoreline. " So that's where two teenage friends live, Juno Temple (21 during filming) as Lily Hobart and Kay Panabaker (20 during filming) as Alison Hoffman. Both were playing girls of about 15 or 16, in this run-down, dry, ugly place. Plus they each had lost parents and lived without the trappings of normal teenagers.Lily and Alison couldn't be more different. Lily was sassy, rebellious, and always looking to the side for a different experience. Like standing on the tracks to see how close the approaching train could get before she jumped off. Alison was more serious, polite, and followed normal conventions.Their lives changed when one day they came upon several boys using an empty, abandoned swimming pool as a skateboard park, remarking "You could never find a place like this in Los Angeles." One of the boys, who seemed nice, gave Lily his phone number, just in case she ever made it to Los Angeles.They did make it there, Lily who couldn't drive talked Alison into "borrowing" a pickup truck of an adult friend, but they found that the boys didn't really have a home there, they were squatting in an abandoned motel. And, they were not so nice, dragging the two girls into their schemes.This isn't a pretty movie, but it shows what can happen when kids throw caution to the wind and get mixed up with the wrong people.SPOILERS: The boys cooked up a scheme, they would use Lily as "bait", advertising her online and then when she brought men into the secluded space mug and rob them. The first one worked, but the second one didn't, a fight broke out, the man angry decided to get what he came for and began to rape Lily. Then a shot rang out, as the camera slowly pans we see Alison, who had left but came back for her friend. As the movie ends they are back home, at the Salton Sea, their lives changed.
View Morethis movie was unique in several ways which was very refreshing. sure, it may have had the whole "small town teenage girl dying for an escape" plot cliché, but it was made into something very different and raw from what you would normally see. the plot (climax especially) was unlike what you would see in most movies. the characters were extremely genuine. the relationship between Lily (Juno Temple) and Alison (Kay Panabaker) was extremely touching and a little bit depressing how much Alison relied on Lily. the dynamic between the two was very authentic and usually what you would observe between any two close, young female friends. overall, the writer and director captured the essence of this movie perfectly, leaving you with wandering thoughts at the end. if you're open minded and looking for a movie with a different sort of perspective, i highly recommend Little Birds.
View MoreJuno Temple has a talent to choose very contemporary items for her films, and 'Little Birds' is another example of this.In this film we are introduced to teenage girls aged 15, discovering the world around them. Complete with worrying parents, runaway-problems, and other nice & painful experiences.Watching 'Little Birds', for the first time I get the impression that Juno Temple is able to support a fully mature film. The structure of its plot shows no flaws.Representing the young generation, Juno Temple increasingly gets better in making us part of their current problems.
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