Whether you consider high school the best years of your life or are happy to have left them behind, director Burstein brings it all back.
American Teen (2008)
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Reviews Counted:143
Fresh:102
Rotten:41
Average Rating:6.5/10
Consensus: American Teen skates some thin ice with its documentary ethics but, in the end, presents a charming and stylish (if packaged) tale.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for some strong language, sexual material, some drinking and brief smoking-all involving teens
Runtime: 1 hr 35 mins
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:Jul 25, 2008 Limited
Box Office: $785,817
Synopsis:
American Teen is the touching and hilarious Sundance hit that follows the lives of four teenagers
- a jock, the popular girl, the artsy girl and the geek – in one small town in Indiana through...
American Teen is the touching and hilarious Sundance hit that follows the lives of four teenagers
- a jock, the popular girl, the artsy girl and the geek – in one small town in Indiana through their senior year
of high school. We see the insecurities, the cliques, the jealousies, the first loves and heartbreaks, and the struggle to make profound decisions about the future.
Filming daily for ten months, filmmaker Nanette Burstein (On the Ropes, The Kid Stays in the Picture) developed a deep understanding of her subjects. The result is a film that goes beyond the enduring stereotypes of high school to render complex young people trying to find their way into adulthood.
Hannah Bailey is smart and beautiful, but a misfit in her high school. She is a liberal, atheist living in a traditional, Christian, conservative town and dreams of moving to California after graduation. Colin Clemens is the star of the high school basketball team - and in Indiana, basketball is everything. Colin is under enormous pressure this year playing not only to make his town, his school, and his father proud, but for a college scholarship. Jake Tusing is considered to be a nerd in high school. Though quite funny and charming one-on-one, he is painfully shy in group situations and crushed with self-doubt. In his senior year he vows that nothing will stand in the way of him finding a girlfriend. Megan Krizmanich is the student council Vice President and the youngest daughter of a prominent local surgeon, anxiously awaiting word from Notre Dame University admissions. Wealthy, pretty, smart and popular, she rules her high school - just don’t get on her bad side. When Megan’s peers challenge her authority, she can’t help but take action, even if it means risking her future. Mitch Reinholdt is an attractive and charming Varsity basketball jock with a soft side. When he puts his social status on the line, avoiding his popular friends for dates with artsy Hannah Bailey, he strains to maintain his reputation while discovering a new side of himself.
With extraordinary intimacy and a great deal of humor, American Teen captures the pressures of growing up – pressures that come from one’s peers, one’s parents, and not least, oneself. --© Paramount Vantage
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Director: Nanette Burstein
Director: Nanette Burstein
Producer: Nanette Burstein, Jordan Roberts, Eli Gonda, Chris Huddleston
Composer: Michael Penn
Studio: Paramount Vantage
Reviews for American Teen
Nothing is revealed here, save for the sad fact that while young people's appetite for nonfiction film was supposed to be whetted by reality television, nonfiction film instead has turned into reality television.
It is medium-mesmerising, even if we are gnawed by secret shame at watching a glorified reality TV show.
Faux-doc or not, Burstein's film is funny and engaging, and it gives us an amazing intimacy and identification with these characters as it skillfully strips away the layers of their cliched teenage stereotypes to reveal the true person beneath.
The portraits of these kids often feel honest, sometimes intrusive, and occasionally they come off a little camera-conscious, which may simply be the nature of the beast.
Presented with humor but not at the expense of its subjects, American Teen was the toast of this year's Sundance Film Festival.
What her cameras capture shouldn’t be construed as truth but rather as scenarios that were cast in stone long before she came on the scene.
Burstein's goal was to film an authentic senior year of high school. Instead she showed that it's almost an impossibility.
At first, it seems 'American Teen' might patronize its subjects, but in fact Burstein treats everyone with sympathy...
This kind of production is better suited to television than movie theaters. American Teen is a pretty bauble: shiny and alluring from a distance but cheap and plastic when you get close.
Even as you watch, though, you begin to wonder how much is real life and how much of what you see was "staged" because the teens knew a camera was watching.
Candid, intimate, and often heart-wrenching, Nanette Burstein's documentary captures the confusion and agony of living through high school.
This film was for me marred by the persistent suspicion that the director wasn't being entirely straight with us.
This is an odd little film that really sneaks up on you, packing a much bigger emotional punch than you'd anticipate.
Teenagers are restless and get very worked up over interpersonal dramas. Gee willickers, I'm sure glad a film crew traveled all the way to north central Indiana to make that shocking discovery.
As a movie character, [Hannah's] a keeper; if she didn't really exist, Diablo Cody would probably have to create her.
An immensely appealing documentary that enables us to empathize with five very different teenagers in their last year of high school in Warsaw, Indiana.
Consciously or not, the movie's about the way we structure our lives as drama if we want them to have any meaning at all.
Latest News for American Teen
November 11, 2008:
Nanette Burstein Is Going the Distance ![]()
"American Teen" didn't live up to the hype at the box office this year, but director Nanette Burstein has parlayed her new name value into a gig behind the cameras for New... More...
July 24, 2008:
Critics Consensus: File The X-Files Under "Disappointing"
This week at the movies, we learn that the truth is out there (The X-Files: I Want to Believe, starring David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson) and that step-sibling rivalry can be... More...
July 17, 2008:
Paramount's American Teen Marketing Raises Eyebrows ![]()
How do you market a documentary in a year when documentaries are getting clobbered at the box office? For Paramount Vantage and American Teen, the answer seems to be "pretend it... More...
May 06, 2008:
American Teen (2008): Teen trailer ![]()
More...
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