| Index | 4 reviews in total |
17 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
Everly Brothers, the Shirelles and Edie Sedgwick, 4 March 2004
Author:
littlesiddie from Cambridge, MA
The first half of this movie is a real pain to watch because Warhol thought
it would be cute/interesting to film it out of focus. One of his self-styled
bold innovations, of course. The only good thing about this sequence is the
"best of the Everly Brothers" record playing in the background. I gave up
trying to see through the out-of-focus fog after about 7 minutes and just
sat back and relaxed, listening to the Everlys. Apparently the action during
this half consists of Edie doing her morning toilette. And this also
included, towards the end, of shooting up. I wouldn't have noticed, except
for the helpful snicker of the lady sitting next to me in the
theatre.
The second half is in focus and totally marvelous because it shows Edie at
her brightest. The background music, to begin with, is the Shirelles, and
its beautiful to see Edie's response to the songs, especially when she sings
along with "wasn't that a sweet thing".
Apparently the Velvet Underground's "Femme Fatale" was written about her,
but it just goes to show how jealous some people are. If there was anyone
who was less of a femme fatale, it was Edie Sedgwick. Anyone who's ever seen
her in the few movie appearances she made can easily see that if she flitted
from one beau to another, it wasn't from calculation, but from a crippling
inability to connect and commit.
Anyway, this film, like "Inner and Outer Space", shows Edie's face as it
runs through a gamut of different emotions, and the occasional looks of
terror and hopelessness are even more pronounced and heartbreaking. Its as
if she throwing everything she's got into trying to shine a light from her
soul into the snotty sounding Brit she's talking to off camera, all to no
avail: he remains completely hard and closed to her. Since her mercurial
mood changes show her to be extremely vulnerable and teetering on the edge
of a nervous breakdown, these moments of horror are all the more
heartbreaking. Nonetheless, I wish that this, and the other films she
appears in were available on DVD so I could watch them over and over. I've
very much fallen in love the poor little waif.
11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Warhol's Best Edie Portrait, 6 August 2002
![]()
Author:
alexduffy2000 (alexduffy2000@yahoo.com) from Hollywood, USA
POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL is Andy Warhol's best Edie Sedgwick film, along with LUPE, her last film for Warhol. It's split into two parts, Edie out of focus, and Edie in focus trying on clothes. There is no plot, it's a character study/documentary of Edie Sedgwick, Warhol's most famous superstar, and it's great to watch. The first half is beautiful, out-of-focus mystery, like nothing I've ever seen before. The second half Edie talks to someone off-screen while getting stoned, trying on clothes, and showing off her fabulous legs. It's hard to describe, it's very much a 60's period piece, but it transcends that somehow by getting the viewer to feel sympathy for Edie, she's so harmless and tragic and ambitious all at once, she radiates the hope of youth, and somehow that's all captured by Warhol's camera. If you've never seen any of Warhol's experimental films of the mid-1960's, this is a great one to start with.
10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Hagiography of a demon?, 12 October 2000
Author:
Jerry Langford (loveunlimprod1@hotmail.com) from los angeles
The first thirty minutes are worthless: out of focus, Edie Sedgwick groggily moves about her bed without saying a word. Somehow, even as a large white blob, she's sexy. Then, in the second reel, we get the real Edie. Warhol's passive fascination has a sexual, hypnotized quality. Is he guiding her, goading her, or silently letting her run free? Hard to tell, but the encyclopedia of expressions and mannerisms he collects are gasp-making. As much as his masterly OUTER AND INNER SPACE, this Andy-Edie collaboration has the rapt and electric quality of both sacred and pornographic art.
2 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Focus Andy!! Focus!!, 12 October 2000
Author:
mark czuba (gspotbuy@hotmail.com) from Edmonton, Ab.
Poor little rich girl is a two reel film that came out of the Factory just as Warhol was staring to include sound and camera movement. The film is mainly about Edie Sedgewick she is the sole focus of the film. (though not in focus in the first reel) Reel one starts of with Edie lounging on the bed, she does not talk much, the second reel is mercifully in focus and here she talks about her fur coat, her spent inheritance, and many other boring stuff. This film is strictly for Edie/Warhol fans only, if you can sit through the first reel then there is something wrong with you. Warhol has a knack of infuriating, and provoking audiences with his devoid of narrative, boring subject matter 'films'. "is it art or are you making fun of me Warhol?" In fact what makes Warhol films fun is the characters and this one lacks any spontaneity that is in other films like Chelsea Girls.
| Ratings | Parents Guide | Plot keywords |
| Main details | Your user reviews | Your vote history |