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The Girlfriend Experience

  1. #1 Daniel B. Clendenin
    September 10th, 2010 at 12:12 am

    Review by Daniel B. Clendenin for The Girlfriend Experience
    Rating:
    The need to love and be loved, to know and be known, suggests director Steven Soderbergh (Bubble), is so deeply and powerfully embedded in human nature that we will do almost anything to get it. We will even pay for it, whether to a therapist, to a personal trainer like Chris, or to a $2,000 an hour “escort” girl like Chelsea who provides sex, of course, but mainly therapy to very wealthy but deeply lonely men. Mainly they talk to Chelsea, about all the things you’d talk about in a “real” relationship. She pretends to offer that and they believe they receive it, and woe to both parties when they drop their guard and transgress business boundaries to reveal themselves to each other as real human beings rather than as partners in a transaction. Since human love is one of the few things you can’t buy, Chelsea and her clients seek something they can’t get and forfeit their closest approximations in what they already have.

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  2. #2 C. J. Kennedy
    September 10th, 2010 at 12:13 am

    Review by C. J. Kennedy for The Girlfriend Experience
    Rating:
    If you like Soderbergh’s more challenging, smaller scale, experimental work, you’ll find a lot to love about The Girlfriend Experience. If you’re just showing up for porn star Sasha Grey, save yourself the 10 bucks unless you really want to see the girl act. She actually delivers a natural, credible performance as an escort who isn’t nearly as sophisticated as she thinks she is.

    Told in a fractured, back and forth manner, the narrative is slight and challenging, but the jumbled chronology galvanizes your focus on what’s happening. This isn’t just the story of a call girl, it’s really about loneliness, disconnectedness and the commodification of everything in the modern world, including love.

    Soderbergh is often a detached filmmaker, but this is one of his most emotionally resonant pictures since Solaris. The feeling is subtle, but it’s there.

    This is also one of the most beautifully photographed films of the year.

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  3. #3 chmwood
    September 10th, 2010 at 12:47 am

    Review by chmwood for The Girlfriend Experience
    Rating:
    Maybe Amazon should have a spoon rating for the movies in its on-demand service. It seems as though most people who have reviewed this film wanted to be spoonfed a story of some type…or maybe the spicy material wasn’t as Kleenex-box worthy as they had hoped.

    Whatever the case, don’t listen to them if you like movies that let you look into someone else’s life. GFE is like a Cassavetes film, without all of the yelling. Oh, and it’s brilliant.

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  4. #4 Chris Pandolfi
    September 10th, 2010 at 12:58 am

    Review by Chris Pandolfi for The Girlfriend Experience
    Rating:
    The sole intent of a business is to provide a commodity for the consumer. A young escort named Chelsea (Sasha Grey) is herself a commodity for rich men who, for all intents and purposes, want the same basic thing: Companionship. Some want to go to the movies. Many want to wine and dine her at pricey restaurants. Sex can be involved, but according to what we’re shown, Chelsea’s clients are much more interested in airing their financial grievances and persuading her to vote in specific ways during the 2008 Presidential campaign. They also seem quite fascinated with the idea of discovering the “real” Chelsea, which is probably why they often ask her so many questions about what she does for a living. But is it possible to “know” her? As she says, “If they wanted to know the real me, they wouldn’t be paying.” For an escort, it’s not about reality, but about creating the illusion of reality.

    Steven Soderbergh’s “The Girlfriend Experience” operates on complex but relatable notions of humanity, specifically how money can be such a motivating factor. Neither Chelsea nor her clients delude themselves into believing that theirs is a lasting relationship. Indeed, her cool attitude and monotone voice make it clear that it’s all about making a transaction and nothing more. She claims to be an escort in a committed relationship, but judging by the way she regards her boyfriend of a year and a half, Chris (Chris Santos), the idea is open for debate; Chris is a personal trainer, and like Chelsea, he wants to be successful at what he does. Do they love each other? Who knows? They live together, but there’s never a moment of passion or even basic friendliness. Even when they argue, there’s no conviction in what they say to one another.

    There may, in fact, be only one client she’s willing to pursue at a more personal level. He’s not like the others. He actually listens. He’s miles apart from the operator of an escort reviewing website, who was willing to write her a good review in exchange for sex. Chris doesn’t exactly fit into this scenario, which is ironic since he’s her actual boyfriend while her clients are merely paying to pretend to be her boyfriend. They pay for a Girlfriend Experience while Chris gets it for free. Then again, maybe he doesn’t; he’s offered the chance to join a group of friends for a guys-only weekend in Las Vegas, and considering his relationship with Chelsea, it’s easy to understand why he decides to go.

    What this movie does so well is reveal character without making it obvious. It’s not so much in the dialogue but in the actions and subtle mannerisms. Chelsea, thin and tall with long dark hair, is both beautiful and irresistibly mysterious. She’s dedicated and competitive, and we occasionally watch her take notes about her latest date–what she wore, who the clients were, what they did, what they said, etc. More to the point, she knows how to make herself seem interesting to the opposite sex, and she’s darn good at making them feel important. She will listen to them talk, and she will respond when appropriate. She will do these things because providing a Girlfriend Experience is her job.

    The challenge for the audience is to discover this while working through the film’s experimental style. Scenes are played out of sequence. The structure doesn’t have a traditional beginning, middle, and end. The dialogue seems almost entirely adlibbed, which is to say that there are a lot of interruptions and moments of hesitation. It was shot with a RedOne camera, which gives the whole thing the look and feel of a documentary. And yet, once the pieces fall into place, we realize that it’s been telling us a deceptively simple story, not one of love or happiness but of basic human nature. We go through life knowing we’re good at something, and at a certain point, we must provide our services with the rest of the world for a fee. Sasha Grey is the perfect actress to convey this message, given her background in pornography, another business that makes money by creating illusions.

    Movies in general are about creating illusions, just as much as they are about providing them to audiences. “The Girlfriend Experience” understands this, which is why I was able to buy into the illusion. It’s an unconventional but highly intriguing slice of life about people, not merely a story about characters. We’re being asked to watch, and I don’t mean we have to keep our eyes on the screen–we really have to watch everything that’s going on, from the way shots are set up to what the shots are supposed to reveal. We have to pay close attention to what everyone is saying, not merely because it’s important but also because what they say sounds as natural as actual conversing. We have to invest in Chelsea despite the fact that she presents only what her clients want her present. Like the men in her life, we try to discover the “real” her while knowing all too well that such a thing isn’t possible. The pleasure of her company isn’t personal. It’s strictly business.

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  5. #5 Joshua Miller
    September 10th, 2010 at 1:16 am

    Review by Joshua Miller for The Girlfriend Experience
    Rating:
    Steven Soderbergh is an experimental director who’s not afraid to take chances. He’s directed mainstream movies and then he’s dappled in the more obscure, independent cinema. The Girlfriend Experience is a film that falls into the latter category that is (oddly enough) written by David Levien and Brian Koppelman who together penned the script for another Soderbergh film…Ocean’s Thirteen. Strange, right? Most of Soderbergh’s independent efforts fly under the radar, but this one got a little more attention than usual because of his decision to cast the young, controversial adult-film star Sasha Grey in the lead role.

    Grey plays a high-class escort who gives her clients “the girlfriend experience,” which is the one thing separating her from a hooker. Sometimes, with her clients, sex will not even be involved and instead she will simply go to dinner with them and listen to them talk…And get paid quite a bit for it. Later, she’ll recount exactly what occurred with the client. Nothing about the plot of this film is linear and Grey isn’t the only character in the film, but identifying the role others play in the overall scheme of the movie is nearly impossible.

    The film basically begins with characters having endless conversations about how bad the economy is and when these conversations do eventually cease, people talk to Grey about her job and what it requires of her. Like the talk about the economy, this is equally uninteresting and uninformative. A few people have actually applauded this film for it’s statement about the economy or it’s study of Grey’s character, but make no mistake about it…This is not a character study nor an inside look into the world of high-paid escorts. It comes off like the script was written by two people who had heard of escorts but didn’t know much about them and tried to strain the limit of their knowledge about the subject.

    I really didn’t get the feeling that this was a social commentary either, no matter how much it tried to seem to be. Any social statement Soderbergh and/or the writers were trying to make is lost anyway and the film seems dated mere months after its release.

    Now, people have complained about Sasha Grey’s performance. I can neither praise nor criticize her performance as this role does not require much talent or acting ability. She is not given a character with emotional depth and, as such, is not required to convey much emotion. Truthfully, more of her emotions are probably on display in her other “films.” She says her dialogue convincingly and that’s really all her character is given is (meaningless) dialogue. In that sense, she’s not bad…Soderbergh clearly saw something in her because it’s clear she wasn’t cast because of her previous “performances.” While Grey does have some brief nudity in the 79-minute film and a very brief nude scene after the credits, you can see more of Grey by typing in her name on google without the safe search on.

    I honestly expected to like The Girlfriend Experience. I read all the poor reviews of it and heard how “boring” it is and I typically find something admirable about it. Just because a film is boring doesn’t mean it’s NOT a good film…The Girlfriend Experience isn’t incredibly boring, but it’s NOT a good film. This film evoked no emotional response from me and is so bland and dull; it doesn’t even inspire enough energy to express hatred for it. I mean, it’s a film with hollow, empty characters and strange, inexplicably amateurish cinematography. It doesn’t succeed as a parable of today’s economic crisis and it certainly doesn’t succeed as entertainment. It’s a film so absent of admirable qualities, it’s a wonder that Soderbergh didn’t have his name removed from the credits.

    I won’t flat-out say “I hate this movie” for one reason…The Girlfriend Experience is one of those rare movies that fails on so many levels, you won’t even express any severe distaste for it simply because you’ll have completely forgotten you’ve watched it a few hours later.

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