Fix
FIX takes you from Beverly Hills to Watts, and places in between, in one day, as documentary filmmakers Bella and Milo race to get Milo's brother Leo from jail to rehab before 8pm, or Leo goes to prison for three years.
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- Cast:
- Shawn Andrews , Olivia Wilde , Megalyn Echikunwoke , Dedee Pfeiffer , Frank Alvarez , Aesop Aquarian , Andrew Fiscella
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Reviews
The Worst Film Ever
Admirable film.
The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
Filmmakers Bella (Olivia Wilde) and Milo (Tao Ruspoli) are pushed into driving Milo's brother Leo (Shawn Andrews) from prison across town to rehab or else Leo will be spending time in jail. Bella is not too happy as Milo is obligated despite their previous appointments. As they film their trip, Leo goes from one location to another in search for money to pay the $5k for the rehab. They meet sketchy characters doing questionable things as it seems like there is always another stop.This looks like an indie a bunch of friends did on their day off. Shawn Andrews gives a very kinetic performance, but it wears thin quickly. The problem with the story is that Bella and Milo keep repeating the same mistake over and over again. Leo is obviously lying to them as he spends the money on drugs. At some point, a clear thinking person would just stuff Leo into the back of the car while they drive him to the rehab instead of letting him go to every drug spot he knows. Somehow the movie needs to set up why the couple would go along with any of this.
I wasn't sure I was going to like this film, but it turned out to be very engaging. Kudos to Olivia Wilde. I really enjoyed the ride. Looking forward to this one on DVD. THe cinematography was especially wonderful. I went back and forth with believing this was a real documentary and a narrative film. It had a lot of wonderful elements. It was creepy, quirky, realistic, suspenseful, and in some ways it felt like those old Hope and Crosby road pictures. I didn't love the ending. Some of the supporting players were very good and believable. It was a fun ride through the many sites and sounds of LA. The music was very eclectic and it seemed that the script was written around the music. The scene in Watts was particularly realistic.
I had a chance to catch this film at a screening and wow, I am so glad I decided to go see it.Tao and the rest of the creatives really put together a wonderful team -- the ease and joy with which they worked is apparent in every shot. The character performances are bold, lovable, strong and somehow vulnerable at the same time. The locations are stellar -- it is a complete and all-encompassing homage to Los Angeles. And the cinematic guerrilla-style shooting really serves the piece -- allowing for some truly magical moments to unfold throughout the film that would not have otherwise been captured.The audience was laughing, or should I saw guffawing, at the beginning and also at the end of the piece. Yet we were also moved by some very touching, pulled-from-real-life dialogue and the patchwork of cultures that make up the fabric of a fabulously seedy, not-often-shown-in-the-movies LA.What else can I say? I loved it. Go see this film -- if you can, as fast as you can, with as many people as you can. You will not be sorry.
I suppose the "shaky camera" style is there to add a sense of realism. Well, it doesn't. It just makes you think your watching a high school project that was made with the parents Handycam. The entire movie is shot from the storyteller's Point Of View, which is very hard to do well, and in this case it isn't. (Try any episode of Peep Show to see this technique done well). Also annoying was the preposterous situations. Like drug dealers supposedly being "cool" with video taping the transaction and many more like this. The minor characters were almost universally unbelievable and very poorly acted. Most of the dialogue was sparse, uninteresting, and unrealistic. Shawn Andrews is the bright spot and adds a professional touch to an otherwise puerile film.