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Speak (2004)

Drama | 90 minutes
3,30 168 votes

Genre: Drama

Duration: 90 minuten

Country: United States

Directed by: Jessica Sharzer

Stars: Kristen Stewart, Steve Zahn and Hallee Hirsh

IMDb score: 7,2 (31.945)

Releasedate: 20 January 2004

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Speak plot

"The Truth Will Change Everything."

After a traumatic experience during the summer, Melinda starts the new school year. Struggling with school, friends, and family, she tells the story of her dark experience, and why she chose not to speak anymore.

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avatar van Onderhond

Onderhond

  • 87594 messages
  • 12841 votes

Fine.

A small drama that is quite skillfully executed. Sharzer makes sure that it is not overdone (given the theme not so easy) and thus delivers a somewhat tame but sincere drama.

Stewart carries the film, the character fits her style quite well, but considering her young age here she does it quite well. Zahn is a nice supporting role, I thought the rest of the cast came out a bit less well.

The film is a bit too flat to really impress, although there are a few scenes where Sharzer manages to shift up a gear, especially through good use of the soundtrack. It never becomes great, but it does draw attention to the strong points of this film.

Strange that it remained with this film.

3.5*

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van scorsese

scorsese

  • 13165 messages
  • 11076 votes

Nice film in which a teenage girl is no longer the same after the summer holidays. A well-developed main character, something that applies less to the rest of the characters. Also, the story structure is a bit chaotic at the beginning. The last part of the film is the strongest. Kristen Stewart is more than fine in her first leading role.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van Collins

Collins

  • 7294 messages
  • 4311 votes

The film follows 13-year-old Melinda (Kristen Stewart) as she begins her freshman year of high school. An event during the summer break has led to her being ostracized from her group of friends. Now she has been demoted from popular girl to outsider. She increasingly withdraws into her own world and barely speaks a word to anyone. Her behavior is based on a loaded secret that she cannot talk to anyone about.

Because director Jessica Sharzer had a limited budget at her disposal, she was forced to tell the story not in great detail but rather in a very essential way. The film was shot with only one camera. That means no room for multifaceted perspectives. The lack of perspectives is not really a shortcoming because the lack of perspectives leads to fascinating image compositions. The viewer often sees Stewart standing completely alone and lost in a gigantic frame, thus impressively underlining the isolation and loneliness of her character. These are powerful impressions. Penetrating and moving.

Stewart, who was also 13 when the film was made, delivers a great performance. It is truly fantastic how she visualizes her emotional world, particularly through facial expressions and body language. The other characters are in her shadow. Most of them are exaggerated representations of a certain type and are not portrayed very realistically. Because the film tells the story from Melinda's perspective, it could be that Melinda actually experiences the characters around her in this way.

Despite the somewhat flat content, the supporting roles are not necessarily uninteresting. Steve Zahn as an eccentric and committed teacher, Hallee Hirsch as a best friend, Elizabeth Perkins and DB Sweeney as desperate parents form a strong foundation on which Stewart can excel in this fine film.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original