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Saved! (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:138
Fresh:83
Rotten:55
Average Rating:6/10
Consensus: A satirical teen comedy that, unfortunately, pulls its punches.
Theatrical Release:May 28, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $8,786,715
Synopsis: Brian Dannelly's debut feature SAVED! deftly blends indie-film edginess with a mainstream allure. Set in a Christian high school, the teen comedy follows a group of students who are all at... Brian Dannelly's debut feature SAVED! deftly blends indie-film edginess with a mainstream allure. Set in a Christian high school, the teen comedy follows a group of students who are all at different places in their lives. When Mary (Jena Malone) sacrifices her virginity in an attempt to heterosexualize her gay boyfriend, she is stunned to discover that she's become pregnant. With the help of wheelchair-bound Roland (Macaulay Culkin) and the school's only Jewish student, Cassandra (Eva Amurri), Mary must try to hide her pregnancy. But when her rival, the ultra-uptight Hilary Faye (Mandy Moore), finds out, all hell breaks loose. The film culminates on prom night, when a series of revelations put things in their proper perspective. Dannelly and co-writer Michael Urban have produced a script that is a breezy, hilarious ride through the tricky waters of adolescence, and their all-star cast jumps into their roles with glee (most notably Moore and the scene-stealing Amurri). Rather than merely making jabs at the Christian right movement, however, the film preaches a universal message of tolerance and acceptance, giving audiences something deeper to chew on. The result is a surprisingly poignant film that positions Dannelly as a director to watch in the years to come. [More]
Starring: Jena Malone, Mandy Moore, Macaulay Culkin, Heather Matarazzo
Starring: Jena Malone, Mandy Moore, Macaulay Culkin, Heather Matarazzo, Eva Amurri, Mary-Louise Parker, Martin Donovan, Patrick Fugit
Director: Brian Dannelly
Director: Brian Dannelly
Screenwriter: Michael Urban, Brian Dannelly
Producer: Michael Stipe, Sandy Stern, Michael Ohoven, William Vince
Composer: Christophe Beck
Studio: MGM/UA
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Reviews for Saved!
While poking fun at religion is nothing new, this sharp send-up wears its weird and sinister nature proudly on its sleeve.
The idea is inspired and the enthusiasm evident in every aspect of story and performance.
It’s a shame the closing moral about a more pragmatic, inclusive approach to spirituality is conveyed with such a heavy hand.
This teen satire set in a Christian high school is an admirable attempt to acknowledge the powerful influence of religion in contemporary American youth culture.
Brian Dannelly's movie waltzes across the floor of high school comedies like a new kid out to prove he's in a class of his own.
Writer/director Brian Dannelly takes a witty but deadly approach to the pitfalls of using a narrow set of rules to decide what God’s will is exactly
After two comically inventive scenes, it quickly turns soft and flat.
Though the picture runs out of steam, with a familiar somewhat contrived ending, it remains uplifting and appealing.
Bears the unmistakable stamp of authenticity, even at its most outrageous.
[The filmmakers] miss an opportunity to make a much subtler and more interesting case.
Faith takes a hip, raised-eyebrow beating in this biting yet surprisingly earnest dark comedy.
I sat through this film with a perma-smile, and just thinking about it still makes me laugh.
It's a relevant, irreverent and emotionally honest film that suggests it's OK to laugh in church, at least every now and then.
while it offers some hilariously scathing commentary on the inherent dangers of hypocrisy . . . above all the film preaches a message of tolerance to both sides of the fence.
Saved! tries to turn religious devotion, contradictions, and iconography into a rip-roaring satire, but it fails to be at all interesting and, most damningly, it is deeply unfunny.
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