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Ellie Parker (2005)
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Reviews Counted:43
Fresh:22
Rotten:21
Average Rating:5.6/10
Consensus: Despite some poignant commentary about struggling actors and Naomi Watts' inspired performance, Ellie Parker stutters in making the transition from short to feature length.
Theatrical Release:Nov 11, 2005 Limited
Synopsis: Shot on digital video over a period of five years, ELLIE PARKER takes an unfiltered look at the Hollywood people rarely see. An insider's story in many ways, the film should appeal to actors and... Shot on digital video over a period of five years, ELLIE PARKER takes an unfiltered look at the Hollywood people rarely see. An insider's story in many ways, the film should appeal to actors and film-industry people for the way it pokes fun at the entertainment profession. Naomi Watts (MULLHOLLAND DRIVE, 21 GRAMS) throws herself fully into the role of Ellie Parker, an eager young Australian actress trying to break into Hollywood. Often transparent and rarely likeable, Ellie is an all too-realistic example of many striving actors. Changing clothes, applying makeup, and experimenting with various dialects in her car while on the way from one audition to the next, Ellie eagerly transforms herself at a moment's notice for the chance of getting a role. When Ellie finds out that her loser boyfriend (Mark Pellegrino) is cheating on her, she seeks solace in her best friend and fellow actress, Sam (Rebecca Rigg), and an equally hapless new love interest, Chris (Scott Coffey). Through chaotic and unrewarding auditions, hilarious acting exercises, therapy sessions, and messy one-night-stands, Ellie makes misguided but funny attempts to find herself in as dramatic a way as possible. While viewers might like to think of this perversely self-conscious, self-consumed, and shallow character as an anomaly, the film suggests that people like her are, unfortunately, a dime a dozen in Los Angeles. While meant to be funny throughout, ELLIE PARKER is also sad in that Ellie's real life feels even less genuine than her acting. First conceived as a 16-minute short, the film grew into a feature-length project with Watts as producer, and actor Scott Coffey as director. The two worked together on MULLHOLLAND DRIVE, and let that film's main character (also a striving actress)--along with Watts's own experiences--inform their story. [More]
Starring: Naomi Watts, Chevy Chase, Scott Coffey, Mark Pellegrino
Starring: Naomi Watts, Chevy Chase, Scott Coffey, Mark Pellegrino, Keanu Reeves
Director: Scott Coffey
Director: Scott Coffey
Screenwriter: Scott Coffey
Producer: Naomi Watts
Composer: B.C. Smith
Studio: Strand Releasing
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Reviews for Ellie Parker
While the material wears thin, every minute of this film is a tour-de-force performance.
Ellie Parker bounces along on Coffey’s deadpan capture of the no-exit, Hollywood Hills periphery of the movie industry.
While Coffey occasionally grasps for material to build a feature-length work, it is a truthful, funny testimony to the everyday masquerade of Los Angeles' pose of bohemian cool.
You don't have to have any actors in your life to get how killingly smart and accurate Ellie Parker is in its depiction of 24/7 navel-gazing, Hollywood-style.
A film has never been so representative of simultaneous reality than this little "inside" drama. Naomi Watts also shows us how many things a person can do while driving.
Ellie's story is as old as Hollywood, but Coffey brings to it a fresh, frenzied and often painfully raw vision in which Ellie begins to feel that her personality is as fragmented as life in Los Angeles can be.
Though Ellie Parker isn't an especially deep film, and Watts' character can come off a bit whiny and narcissistic (but hey, come on, she's an actress!), it is engaging and frequently funny.
Game for almost anything, Watts displays serious comic chops and is, as always, a delight to watch.
If you're considering a move to L.A. to pursue an acting career, this is your Scared Straight.
Enjoyable comedy with several laugh-out-loud moments and a terrific performance from Naomi Watts.
Watts is alternately annoying, sympathetic and hilarious in the title role. She's always entertaining.
O que falta de estilo ao filme é compensado por uma atuação corajosa, despojada e impressionante de Naomi Watts.
Watts fans will, of course, want to see Ellie Parker regardless of what I or anyone else say about it.
There's no question that what makes "Ellie Parker" work is the continued presence of Naomi Watts, a great film actress whether her film's budget is $187,000 or $187 million.
Ellie isn’t a particularly likable character, but thanks to Watts she’s an imminently watchable one. In many ways this is a daring, unforgiving performance.
This is the movie they should show in college acting classes, instead of tapes of Inside the Actors' Studio.
Watts, whose memorable audition scene in Mulholland Drive launched her into stardom, makes a glorious mess of herself playing her karmic opposite.
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