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1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
If you're going to mock something, make sure you're not making a mockery of yourself., 16 June 2011
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Author:
MBunge from Waterloo, Iowa
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I'll admit that I've sat through films that were more emotionally,
physically and intellectually painful than Overnight Sensation.
However, when it comes to a complete lack of any redeeming virtues, I'm
not sure I've seen anything worse than this movie. That's because it's
not just bad, it's arrogantly bad. It's a limp wristed, frazzled,
myopic indictment of the film industry, created by people who aren't
qualified to clean the toilets in any studio in Hollywood, let alone
critique the way they do their business. Watching this bewildering
disaster is like listening to someone who flunked kindergarten finger
painting criticize the work of Picasso.
Recapping the plot of this miscarriage of cinema in any detail would be
quite a challenge. That's because there's what these filmmaker did and
then there's what they apparently thought they were doing, two things
which frequently have nothing in common. When watching Overnight
Sensation, you can just barely tell that moments or scenes or lines of
dialog are meant to be one thing, but they actually turn out to be
something else or are so garbled and misformed that they're really
nothing at all.
Let me try it this way. Matthew Wells (Sean Dugan) is an aspiring
filmmaker. He's also an awesomely self-important git you want to slap
almost every second he's on the screen. After quitting his job as a
production assistant on a film in a childish huff, Matthew decides to
go to the Sundance Film Festival to see if he can get someone to read
his script. When he arrives, Matthew meets his old film school roommate
Rick (Seth William Meier). Rick acts like an amateur Ben Affleck
impersonator, and a terrible one at that. I'm not sure if that's the
way Rick's character was supposed to be or if Seth William Meier is
that awful an actor, a conundrum repeated with many different things
about this movie.
Anyway, Matthew and Rick connect with this disgraced and seemingly
medicated agent named Abe Pollard (Mark Goddard), who hatches a
thoroughly impractical scheme to drum up interest in Matthew's
screenplay. They create a bit of a buzz at the festival, attracting the
attention of the over enunciating and childishly Machiavellian
super-agent Mark Connor (Maxwell Caulfield) and entertainment reporter
Jackie Cartwright (Michelle Federer), who also happens to be Matthew's
plain looking ex-girlfriend. The basic idea is that Matthew, an
idealistic a-hole, is caught between the old school integrity of Abe
Pollard and the slick, smarmy corruption of Mark Connor. The problem is
that idea is so poorly established and played out that this movie might
as well have been about the jumping yaks of Northern Tajikistan.
There's also a running subplot about a greedy young filmmaker (Dave
Rosenberg) and the bidding war over his popular festival entry and if
you can figure out what the ultimate point of this subplot is, I'll
give you $20.
For such a small tale, Overnight Sensation is epically terrible. The
cast seems to have spent most of the production in a collective haze.
The camera-work is fractionally better than what you'd see on public
access cable. The writing is almost autistic in it's inability to
express or comprehend normal human behavior and feeling. And what makes
it all the more appalling is the clear conviction of these filmmakers
that they're representing something superior to the conventional studio
product.
The only appropriate response to this movie is to throw rotten fruit at
it. Not at the screen as you watch it, but to literally throw rotten
fruit at the DVD itself. I didn't listen to the director's commentary
because I was afraid it would send me into a paroxysm of rage, but the
only commentary track Overnight Sensation should have is 90 minutes of
continuous apologies from everyone involved in the making of this
barren waste.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Forget FF use chapter skip on this turkey, 1 February 2011
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Author:
djderka from United States
Why doesn't Jerry Springer make movies. They would be better than this
turkey.
OH, he did make a movie and someone made a musical...I'd rather watch
those than this tripe.
This movie TRIES so hard to be hip and funny. But it is NOT. The script
falls flatter ten a pancake. They did show the ending script page from
Citizen Kane and the word Rosebud on the script page. This is the best
part of the movie...THE END.
Go rent Road to Sundance (aka R2SD), made about the same time. This
movie is a very funny tongue in cheek look at making films. It is from
NYC so it had a lot more style and verve. Overnight Sensation seems
financed out of Beverly Hill money from the "son" a producer and a
chance to make a "movie".
Seems there was a plethora of films about going to Sundance. Guess no
one had ideas about an original script.
Hollywood is really going to have to be careful to whom they rent those
Panavision cameras.
2 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
If you like movies about people trying to make movies..., 4 October 2004
Author:
Boffomusic from decline to answer
...you'll love "Overnight Sensation".
This movie is quite enjoyable. Filmed (mostly) at The Sundance Film
Festival.
A favorite moment of mine was the director of the super-violent "Pulp
Fiction" ripoff citing his inspiration as "Tarantino, John Woo, Robert
Rodriguez, but mostly Tarantino"
The idea behind the plot is ingenious. The only thing that detracts
from this film is bad ADR work, but it's only noticeable in a few
places.
Overall a 7 out of 10.
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