Good low budget indie flickReviewed by Nicoletta Carlone, 2008-01-29
This movie is about a boutique owner named Holly who is trying
desperately the boutique she has owned for ten years open. She has
one weekend to make a huge amount of money and puts on a huge
mother's day sale as an attempt to do this.
You can tell right away this movie is low budget, but that adds to
its charm. It is filmed in away that it seems like we are there
with the characters. Most the the actors and actresses and the
setting seems like just another boutique in LA, one that I have
gone into a thousand times, and actors and actresses look like the
normal people I see around this town. None of them are well known,
which adds more of a realness to the production. The story is good,
a little choppy, leaving a little to be desired, but good.
The thing that kind of irked me about this movie was the camera
work, the camera is very shakey and tends to spin around, making me
feel seasick. This was only a couple times in the movie, but I
could have done with out it.
Sweet, low-budget ladies' comedyReviewed by Brendan M. Howard, 2007-01-20
Jaglom and his oft-times writing partner and starlet, Victoria
Foyt, have crafted a thoughtful look at the appeal of clothes
shopping for women and the emotional holes they're often trying to
fill with the right dress and the right pair of shoes.
Co-writer Foyt stars as Holly G., dressmaker and owner of a
Southern California clothing boutique. Amidst occasional breaks for
the many actresses and extras to share poignantly and humorously
their relationship with shopping, Holly herself winds up in a
horrible Mother's Day weekend that no amount of customer purchases
seem to fix. Her irresponsible boyfriend (Davison) has squandered
her past few months' rent, and now Foyt and her daughter could be
out of a shop and out of a home. Holly even tries the Mafia to get
her rent money together by Monday, when her landlady's set to boot
her.
It's not true to life, but it's true to a good Hollywood
comedy.
As a male, I completely missed that this low-budget, charming
little comedy's biggest draw could be the
grandmother-mother-daughter story, which grows from a small part of
the plot to a big one. I found myself wrapped up in listening to
women talk about how shopping for clothes makes them feel. I think
maybe I understood a little bit of what the ladies are getting out
of just the right look for just the right day.
Morrow shows up as a good-hearted 3-o'clock-shadow-sporting love
interest for Holly G. My wife was reminded how cute he was.