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  • I'm gonna keep this spoiler-free as I really want to speak to potential viewers BUT I will mark clearly at the very end some spoilers so that you can avoid it. But I wanted to cover that bit a little.

    So, I gave this a chance despite the low rating as I don't really trust IMDB ratings anymore. I'm really glad I did. This turned out to be a nuanced, complex, and interesting film. I only discovered afterwards that the 22 year old young woman who played the lead also co-wrote it, directed it, and produced and/or wrote most of the songs in it. She is someone to watch as it's so surprising to me that somebody so young could get across such complex ideas.

    What I loved is there is no Bad Guy/Good Guy-everyone is just human, with good qualities and bad. I don't think the trailer conveyed that. It leaves a lot of questions unanswered which some have complained about, but I still find it satisfying as Miss Shephard gave us enough clues that we can fill it in. Many audiences today prefer not to have to think and ponder and use their imagination, they just want stories with simple plots that tell them everything. I found it wonderful. To wrap up, give this a chance!! Especially if you enjoy unusual indie movies.

    SPOILERS NEXT. LOOK AWAY IF YOU DONT WANT TO SEE!

    ****

    I loved this ending, I really did. Those last few scenes weave together perfectly. The way it ended with her teacher was fantastic. He showed respect for her and it was obvious on her face that that meant the world to her. She felt valuable. And we are left reminded that even people who make very very poor choices, can have moments of maturity and kindness. Lovely film!
  • The girls are attractive; the drama teacher is not. Yet both of the hysterical, psychotic HS girls want him. None of the characters are likable, relatable, or even tolerable. I gave up emotional attachment to the film after the first half. I just let them play it out; and get what they deserved. By the end, I was hoping it would all blow up. But then, it didn't. It didn't do anything at all.
  • davoudhajhasani24 August 2019
    Warning: Spoilers
    The movie is about the real problem that happens all over the world, but I think it could be perform much better. Choosing of Actresses are great.
  • nkatrinelist10 December 2019
    I want to appreciate to Quinn Sheppard. She has very great job. Director, writer, Actress, and lyricist for the soundtrack. Other actors really great for their acting. But, for the story, little bit confusing for me. It's good movie.
  • Truly captures the essence of teen angst and jealousy amongst girls in high school. The character's were layered and fascinating to watch. All the actors were amazing. I was particularly blown away by Nadia Alexander in her role as "Melissa". You could feel something brewing just beneath the surface throughout the entire film. Just incredible acting. Excellent. Loved it so much am leaving this review!
  • I watched this with mixed expectations. On the one hand, it has a relatively low IMDB rating. But it also has a high score on Rotten Tomatoes.

    I must say the movie exceeded my expectations. I found some parts of the film slightly disturbing, but I felt the ending was able to really bring the different elements together.

    From what I can tell, the ending confused a lot of people. But it seemed relatively straightforward to me. I liked that it was a hopeful ending and I liked where the 3 main characters ended up, as per my reading of the ending.

    Overall, it had more depth than I initially gave it credit for. A definite recommendation from me.
  • MadamWarden11 July 2020
    An ok little movie. Fair plot, acting, direction. All a bit over the top and unrealistic really. Annoying, stupid characters.
  • This isn't really my type of movie but I watched it only because it was filmed at my high school. Pretty solid film overall as long as you can get around the fact that this isn't how high school kids act at all, at least when it comes to the corny bullying of Shepard's character. That being said, I think Quinn Shepard has a lot of potential as a director and writer. Interested to see what she'll do next.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Though there were things I liked I was just confused to how the film was set up. Abagail first has a limp but mysteriously that is goes away for no reason. She is hated by her classmates and called different names and yet none of this is ever explained even though the film keeps hinting for some resolution. It just seemed to me there was this whole build up to give her a backstory some meat but at the end of the film the only backstory that was ever explained was to her foe.
  • Abigail Grey (Quinn Shephard) reluctantly goes back to school after some troubles. She is bullied by mean cheerleader Jennifer (Trieste Kelly Dunn) and her group. They call her Sybil and slut. New drama teacher Jeremy Woods (Chris Messina) assigns the Arthur Miller play 'The Crucible' to the class. He notices the bullying and gives an important role to Abigail relegating Jennifer as the understudy.

    This starts with a bit of Heather. It's going on a predictable but still compelling path. Then it goes away from the path. First, there is the classroom scene where Abigail turns the table on Jennifer. It leaves Abigail as an unreliable character. It would work if it fully commits but it simply left me questioning her with no resolution. Next is the journal entry. I would think any girl would take a picture with her phone. The rumor could spread and the plot moves forward. Instead, that plot sorta stalls until the climax. Also the climax introduces something which is left hanging. Overall, there is a lot of interesting work from young new filmmaker Quinn Shephard but it's not quite sharp enough with too many loose threads and not enough payoff.
  • American movies typically fail when they want to be edgy and transformative about the subject matter. However, except for the rare film such as Kids (1995), these movies fail to have the courage to deliver on edginess and end up merely teasing edginess.

    The positive aspects of the movie. Nadia Alexander plays the ultimate mean girl. I hope her career takes off from this point. Quinn Shepherd does great as a dowdy student who gains confidence gaining some degree of agency as the movie progresses.

    If the movie hadn't advertised itself as edgy I would have liked it more. It did and then it didn't deliver. With European movies becoming more explicit, American movies are becoming more PG. Quinn Shepherd wrote and directed the movie and made the decision that she would not ask her actors do to anything more telling than appearing in a bra. Understandable after all the gratuitous scenes usually involving only women. However, the movie is advertised as edgy and transformative when neither the story nor its presentation is either. The top review says that this is an amazing debut film when it is only a very competent Lifetime movie. See it but understand going in what it is and is not.
  • "Blame" treads on some risky territory, but Quinn Shephard handles it with maturity and nuance far beyond her 22 years. The acting is solid from all involved. Kudos to Chris Messina for working with this young filmmaker and portraying a man who is certainly flawed, but is not evil.

    Some reviewers have thrown around the word "pedophilia" and I suggest they look up the word in the dictionary. While the relationship between the teacher and the student is inappropriately close, it is mostly an emotional affair between 2 lonely souls.
  • Was good I had to deduct points for wholes. Acting was good. They left wholes that makes you assume. The ending has my mind thinking it was one of 2 scenarios.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The most compelling part of "Blame" was the development of the role of Abigail, a student whose study of literature overwhelms her life when she begins to identify with the characters. She was apparently suspended from school for her embodiment of Sybil, which is not a good idea when the other students have only one personality. After transferring to another school, Abigail is consumed by the character of Laura Wingfield in Tennessee Williams's "The Glass Menagerie" to the degree that she has adopted Laura's limp.

    Now, in Mr. Woods's drama class, the students will be putting on scenes from Arthur Miller's "The Crucible." The instructor does not hold conventional auditions, but assigns the role of Abigail to a student with the same name because he thinks that is nifty! This will lead to charges of favoritism and especially strong resentment when another student, Melissa, also wanted to play Abigail, but is relegated to the serving as understudy.

    The actual classroom scenes, wherein the students were working on their characters, were deadly dull because they only seemed to be running lines. In a real rehearsal situation, they should be up on their feet and being coached by a director. Instead, the students were merely sitting around and looking over their scripts. Mr. Woods was continually at his desk, paying no attention to staging the play. It was also inconceivable that he would be acting in "The Crucible" with shirt and tie, while the other actors were garbed in Puritan costumes from the seventeenth century.

    Melissa serves as the catalyst of the action as she attempts to take down both Abigail and Mr. Woods. Her devious plotting involves allegations of harassment and sexual misconduct on the part of Mr. Woods. Yet, the crucial scene in the principal's office where a police officer is asking her questions, demonstrated that Melissa's allegations were directed more towards her abusive stepfather than to Mr. Woods.

    The filmmakers dropped the ball in the film's ending with too many unresolved issues. It made no sense that the impressionable Abigail, whose character in Miller's drama wanted to be Mrs. John Proctor, would settle for a kiss on the forehead and the gift of a coat from Mr. Woods. There was also an inherent dishonesty in the transformation of the villainess Melissa from her Gothic mode into the girl next door in the closing moments of the film.

    Despite the compelling performance of the actress playing Abigail, the film had an amateur feel to it. Mr. Woods did a terrible job in casting "The Crucible": the inherent evil that defined the behavior of Melissa would have made for the perfect Abigail in his high school play production.
  • The story is just not connected ,, the script is scattered all over , i believe it was a total waste of one and a half hour.

    The story is repetitive and not has one single element of originality, and the screenplay was not engaging at all.

    As for the cast , i really love Chris Messina back from The Mindy Project, but now he was like WTH !!! , the other girls were over-acting so you can easily see through the whole scene.

    Final thought, Just don't watch it , 3 stars for effort i think.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Not being snarky here; except for a few Eff-words, this could easily have been tailored for bored soccer moms. The acting was better than average, the chemistry was good, but there were a lot of huge eye-rolls, too. No way is a cheerleader going to homecoming in freaking leather bondage gear and publicly rub up against two boys; it also made the big REVEAL not exactly a revelation. Not judging; just saying it is farcically unrealistic.

    Still, for a first-time effort by a 22-year one, it shows promise. Maybe her work will mature along with screenwriter/lead actress.
  • I didn't know until the movie was over just how many times the name of the star Quinn Shepard would appear in the credits. So a lot of the credit for how the movie turned out should go to her, and not just for her fine performance. When she played the part of the "Crucible" character, she was quite good. In fact, too good, but I don't want to give too much away. And when she was merely the high school student, she managed to display quite a range, not just the disturbed and insecure girl shown at the movie's start. Sometimes she showed confidence and sometimes she was happy. And sometimes she was terrified and sometime quite sad. And she wore a lot of outfits, one or two somewhat puritanical like her character.

    That's just the character of Abigail. But then she directed and wrote too? Not quite an Oscar caliber production, but this girl is young enough to play a teenager. Amazing! Also, she was responsible for a lot of the music. Given my musical taste, that's not something to brag about, but the teen girls who are probably the movie's target audience must surely like what she did.

    Nadia Alexander played the nearly ideal mean girl. Usually angry and dressed like a rebel, with loud "music" blasting to drown out the rest of the world. And she likes skimpy outfits, which will make one possible target audience happy. Still, she has a vulnerable side and shows that quite well in several scenes. Understandably, this is a girl who doesn't want to show that about her. And she has a good reason for her anger.

    Sarah Mezzanotte is another bad girl, but not angry. Just trying to be a friend. Those who don't support her friend can't be friends with her. Well, maybe they can, but only if it benefits Sophie. I really was convinced Sophie was trying to show concern, but with all the scheming and lying going on, who knows?

    Tessa Albertson isn't really a bad girl. She just wants to be liked by her friends. But are they really her friends? And she too gets to be vulnerable.

    Luke Slattery is nice enough or trying to convince people he is. He is involved in real or pretend romance with so many girls, can you blame him for being confusing? He is likable though.

    Owen Campbell is a kind of mean guy who is also likable in a way, but more snarky than his friend.

    Chris Messina is the teacher who may or may not be getting too close to a particularly talented student who really wants to learn not just acting, but everything that goes into theater. He's likable enough and good at the role in "The Crucible".

    I have said a lot of good things, but other than the fact this movie is a great effort from a young person, it wouldn't be called outstanding. It mostly sticks close to the teen movie formula with bad girls, bullying, lying, drinking, implied sex, drugs and so on. There is an amazing plot twist late, though given some reviews and summaries I have read since I watched, I now wonder how much I missed and whether the development was really unexpected.

    I did see this on broadcast TV and based on what I have read, some scenes may have been cut out completely. I do know a lot of bad language was removed. Although in the version I saw, the censors somehow missed one use of the F-word that might be missed if someone is not paying attention, since it is in the background. And in Ellie's diary, if you freeze the video (I record everything) and read the parts that are not what you're supposed to be reading, the s-word is there. I think it goes without saying this is far from family-friendly. For those who like it, the cheerleaders are shown changing. And in their uniforms dancing.

    I've already mentioned the music isn't my taste, but maybe for teen girls, this is what is considered good. Rap is there for those who like that sort of thing.

    If you don't mind yet another teen movie which seems to be better than average, I think this might please you.
  • dixonent27 January 2021
    So stupid.....just as it starts to get interesting - the movie abruptly ends
  • deadwishes3 February 2018
    9/10
    damn
    Well, I'm blown away! I was binge-watching trailers on youtube and stumbled on this title. then I decided to go for it because, ya know, seems promising.

    and all I could say now is just, wow. I can't believe the lead actress is also the director and writer and the producer herself. like, this is great stuff. and she's still so young. I'm finding myself thoroughly enjoying this movie.

    really looking forward to another Shepherd works in the future.
  • It glorifies pedophilia. its predictable and boring. a cliche. not worth watching.
  • After an hour, I wasn't enthralled anymore. The film went off on a lot of tangents (such as showcasing the preppy high schoolers' drinking/sex scenes or the scenes in the cafeteria and the Homecoming dance).

    The core of the film should be to tap into the mind of Abigail and the teacher, to figure out what is missing in their lives and why they seek one another. I felt that Abigail's backstory was limited and there's not a full rationale of why her classmates antagonize and insult her. And we also don't see why the teacher is distant towards his girlfriend.

    It's really a shame because the actress for Abigail (who also serves as the film's director) does a prime job here.
  • rvinterrobert14 January 2019
    Warning: Spoilers
    This is one of the worst movies I have seen in my life. For all of those people that gave this film anything more than 4 stars, I'm not sure what is wrong with you. There is no action whatsoever, the characters lack any depth and all the plot twists are nothing more than unnoticeable. Whoever wrote the script for this movie must have been under the age of 10. Do not waste your time with this movie. You will thank me later.
  • This film purports to show high school students, 14-18; in fact they are little more than foul mouthed creatures from the warped mind of Quinn Shephard. I was going to note how many times the "F" word is screeched but I couldn't count fast enough.

    The film highlights the cheap, crass and clearly illegal relationship between Shephard's character and her teacher as if it's, well, you know, common place.

    Shephard claims, "I am praised for my ability to capture High School in this film." No, she doesn't. It's a sordid view of jaded deviants. It's nasty is what it is.

    Any adult who would dare to show this to REAL High school students should be arrested for contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
  • The trailer is extremely misleading first off (.) Had this film been presented in the way it should have, it would have had a better review. Yes it's a slow burn, yes it's a coming of age film, but the content is so much more. In a digital age we are all guilty of looking for instant gratification and scandal. We sometimes forget life it's self is messy. Every love ballot or tragedy was not written by Shakespeare rather a real person desperately trying to navigate the muddy waters the surround us all.
  • svader10 May 2021
    Pleeeeeeease be over.

    Why are 20 somethings playing teens !!

    Dumb film.
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