All
Over Me is one of those
films that is so realistic, it's difficult to watch.
Written by Sylvia Sichel and directed by her sister
Alex, the 1997 film is set in the Hell's Kitchen area of New
York City and tells the story of two fifteen-year-old girls,
Claude (played by Alison Folland, who went on to roles in Good
Will Hunting and Boys Don't
Cry) and Ellen (played by Tara Subkoff)--best friends
who over the course of a few days in the summer, discover they
don't have as much in common as they thought they did when a
tragedy occurs and they end up on opposite sides of the truth.
Claude
is a solid, socially-awkward girl who is into punk music and
Ellen; Ellen is a self-absorbed, volatile anorexic just waiting
for some guy to come along and treat her like shit--which is
exactly what happens. Ellen meets homophobic neighborhood thug
Mark (played by Cole Hauser, who also plays a homophobic thug
in Higher Learning),
who immediately recognizes Claude for the threat she is and
begins pulling Ellen into his life of violence and drugs.
Claude,
meanwhile, begins to make other friends as well, including a
gay teenager (played by My So-Called Life's Wilson
Cruz) with whom she works at the pizza place, and her new gay
upstairs neighbor. And then she meets Lucy (played by Leisha
Hailey, who will play a bisexual woman in the upcoming tv
series The L Word ),
a pink-haired rocker grrl who plays the guitar and is much more
open about her sexuality--and her attraction to Claude. But
before Claude can explore that relationship, she has to figure
out where she stands with Ellen.
At
its heart, the movie is a meditation on adolescent
friendship and the ways in which conflicting desires and changing
priorities can pull friends apart. It's also a love story, about
how Claude finally begins to love herself. The film is particularly
good at portraying the downward spiral experienced by many girls
in their mid-teens, without resorting to preachy, heavy-handed
dialogue.
The
characters are well-developed in an understated way, and eerily
identifiable--whether you grew up in the inner-city, the suburbs,
or the countryside, you are likely to recognize yourself or
friends you grew up with in Claude or Ellen. And this is what
gives All Over Me its universal appeal--the trials
of adolescent girls, and the ways in which their friendships
are strained as they grow into who they will become, are similar
the world over.
The
acting in the film is excellent all around, as is the dialogue
and the directing. The production quality is definitely on the
gritty rather than polished side, but for the most part, this
works for the film by reinforcing its realistic feel. The film
does feel a little slow in places, although the intense character
study ultimately pays off in allowing the viewer to more fully
absorb the characters' world.
The
lesbian aspect of the film is treated in an understated
way--there are no conversations between any of the characters
around being gay, or coming out, despite the fact that the film
includes several gay characters; Claude's awareness of her feelings
for Ellen and then Lucy just unfold and progress naturally as
she interacts with the other characters. This is refreshing
in the context of so many other lesbian-themed movies today,
which can err on the side of talking the subject to death.
In
this and a few other ways, All Over Me is similar to
Show Me Love, which explores
teen friendship and lesbian relationships in suburban Sweden.
While on the surface they tell very different stories, both
movies movingly and realistically portray the weight of loyalty,
peer pressure, and cruelty among teenage girls.
Despite
being a film about excessive behavior and its consequences,
All Over Me is fairly balanced in
tone--while it's not a happy, upbeat film, its not exactly depressing,
either. It is ultimately an optimistic story, but in
an "rising from the ashes" sort of way--which, unfortunately,
is just the way things so frequently seem to happen in real
life.