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Thirteen (2003) | User Rating
 (103 votes) | Critic Rating
 (14 reviews) |
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• Quotes (36) • Plot Description • Soundtrack • Wallpapers • Shooting Locations • Popularity
Directed by Catherine Hardwicke Written by Catherine Hardwicke, Nikki Reed Cast Holly Hunter, Evan Rachel Wood, Nikki Reed, Jeremy Sisto, Brady Corbet [more] Release Date • USA: Aug 22, 2003 • UK: 5 Dec 2003 DVD Release Date • R1: Jan 27, 2004 • R2: 27 Jan 2004
Budget $2,000,000
Official Website:
Thirteen Website
MPAA Rating Rated R for drug use, self destructive violence, language and sexuality - all involving young teens.
Running Time 1 hour, 40 minutes
Country USA, UK
Studio Antidote Film, Michael London Prods., Venice Surf Club, Working Title Films
More info on IMDb.com
Other Titles • Thirteen
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Review of Thirteen (2003) by Susan GrangerSusan Granger's review of "Thirteen" (Fox Searchlight Films)
This slice-of-life look at contemporary 13 year-olds is far more shocking
than any horror film in recent years. While you may cringe at the girls' angst
and anger, along with their sex, drugs and shoplifting, co-writer/director
Catherine Hardwicke and her teen collaborator Nikki Reed score in tackling
dangerous issues that need to be discussed openly within each family. It all
revolves around peer acceptance and what a desperately geeky adolescent will do
to achieve it.
The story begins as two drug-dazed seventh-graders play a brutal game of
"Hit Me." Tracy (Evan Rachel Ward) is the vulnerable, insecure, self-mutilating
daughter of a hard-working, recovering-alcoholic single mom (Holly Hunter), and
Evie (Nikki Reed) is her sassy, seductive, socially sought-after and,
therefore, cool best-friend. That they both come from dysfunctional families is
a given but the ease with which one corrupts the other is appalling. Neither
has a moral base on which to build any resistance to debauchery, and Elliot
Davis's hand-held, digital camerawork with its quick cuts reflects their wild,
rebellious lifestyle and unpredictable hysteria. Equally horrifying is their
deft manipulation of adults, including parents, guardians and teachers, who see
them spiraling out of control but are unable, or unwilling, to stop it. On the
Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, "Thirteen" is an uncompromising, harrowing 9.
It's what Catherine Hardwicke calls "cinematherapy," based on psychiatrist Karl
Menninger's idea of bibliotherapy, or sharing experiential activities. Problem
is: the parents and teens who will see this bleak film together are probably
not the families who need it the most. Nevertheless, theaters should pass out
brochures from DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) with every ticket.
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X-RT-RatingText: 9/10
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