Factory Girl

That article so weird! Didn't Edie get the abortion when she was 19? Maybe she did like Dylan but so did a lot of girls back then. Just because they hung out doesn't mean they were lovers, but then again everyone was having sex with everyone back then so who knows. There's not even a picture of Edie and Dylan together which seems weird because both were so famous then and if they were hanging out THAT much you'd think there'd be one picture.
 
MOVIE REVIEW
http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/reviews/cl-et-factory29dec29,0,4285279.story
'Factory Girl'

'Factory Girl' loses its way as bio and pic.

A brisk, superficial treatment of the tragic supernova life of Edie Sedgwick, "Factory Girl" disappoints as both biography and drama. The film charts the "poor little rich girl's" trajectory as decidedly downward from Cambridge art student to Andy Warhol's disposable model/actress/muse and finally to institutionalized drug addict. As a hopped-up ramble through the Pop Art '60s, it's more like "That Girl" on speed than anything else.

Directed by George Hickenlooper from a screenplay by the improbably named Captain Mauzner (story credited to Simon Monjack & Aaron Richard Golub and Mauzner), the movie never gets beyond a psychosexual portrayal of Sedgwick as victim. Fans well-schooled in the lore of Warhol in general and all things Edie in particular will come away with no deeper understanding of the principals while newcomers will wonder what the fuss was all about in the first place.

Sienna Miller stars as the doomed young woman, a debutante from an old New England family who was born in Santa Barbara and raised on a vast horse ranch. She ditches Radcliffe for the siren call of Manhattan with her heart set on a Holly Golightly existence. No sooner does she meets the enigmatic Warhol (played by Guy Pearce) than she's down the veritable rabbit hole, seduced and consumed by the scene centered on the artist's infamous Factory.

The film depicts the Factory as high school with more flamboyant clothes and hair and stronger drugs. Petty jealousies and backbiting create a toxic environment in which the hangers-on vie for Warhol's attention and bask in his reflected brilliance. Sedgwick's immediate ascendance to virtual prom queen portends her equally rapid fall from grace.

Edie and Andy become inseparable, morphing into one thin, platinum-haired being. They're symbolized as outsiders who briefly share the white-hot spotlight, the swan offering her beauty to the ugly duckling who returns the favor by bestowing upon her capital-C cool. Unfortunately, the film never convincingly establishes why they are drawn to one another or meaningfully gets into the ways their mutual needs created a yin-yang synchronicity.

"Factory Girl" really goes astray with the arrival of Billy Quinn (Hayden Christensen), a Bob Dylan-esque rock star set up to be the anti-Andy. Like Pearce, Christensen throws himself into his role, but both are crushed by the sheer iconographic weight of their characters. Warhol and Dylan are too huge to be used as support beams in such a slight film.

The story is structured as a faux romantic struggle between "Dylan" and Warhol for Sedgwick's aesthetic soul, with the options seemingly limited to an opportunist or a vampire. But the real battle for Edie was lost long before in a family that sent its children to a psychiatric facility the way another might have sent them to finishing school.

Warhol, with his Madison Avenue background, excelled at throwing the banal back in the faces of the Establishment and making them like it. Here, the filmmakers take that once subversive notion and reduce it to a public service announcement.

Hickenlooper uses a framing device with scenes of Miller as Sedgwick being interviewed by a therapist, a contrivance that serves little purpose other than to set out and then reiterate the film's themes and provide exposition. The film heavy-handedly drives home its simplistic interpretation of Edie as the abused and abandoned target of a series of childish, manipulative men, with the ultimate blame saved for her family.

Sienna Miller stars as the doomed young woman, a debutante from an old New England family who was born in Santa Barbara and raised on a vast horse ranch. She ditches Radcliffe for the siren call of Manhattan with her heart set on a Holly Golightly existence. No sooner does she meets the enigmatic Warhol (played by Guy Pearce) than she's down the veritable rabbit hole, seduced and consumed by the scene centered on the artist's infamous Factory.

The film depicts the Factory as high school with more flamboyant clothes and hair and stronger drugs. Petty jealousies and backbiting create a toxic environment in which the hangers-on vie for Warhol's attention and bask in his reflected brilliance. Sedgwick's immediate ascendance to virtual prom queen portends her equally rapid fall from grace.

Edie and Andy become inseparable, morphing into one thin, platinum-haired being. They're symbolized as outsiders who briefly share the white-hot spotlight, the swan offering her beauty to the ugly duckling who returns the favor by bestowing upon her capital-C cool. Unfortunately, the film never convincingly establishes why they are drawn to one another or meaningfully gets into the ways their mutual needs created a yin-yang synchronicity.

"Factory Girl" really goes astray with the arrival of Billy Quinn (Hayden Christensen), a Bob Dylan-esque rock star set up to be the anti-Andy. Like Pearce, Christensen throws himself into his role, but both are crushed by the sheer iconographic weight of their characters. Warhol and Dylan are too huge to be used as support beams in such a slight film.

The story is structured as a faux romantic struggle between "Dylan" and Warhol for Sedgwick's aesthetic soul, with the options seemingly limited to an opportunist or a vampire. But the real battle for Edie was lost long before in a family that sent its children to a psychiatric facility the way another might have sent them to finishing school.

Warhol, with his Madison Avenue background, excelled at throwing the banal back in the faces of the Establishment and making them like it. Here, the filmmakers take that once subversive notion and reduce it to a public service announcement.

Hickenlooper uses a framing device with scenes of Miller as Sedgwick being interviewed by a therapist, a contrivance that serves little purpose other than to set out and then reiterate the film's themes and provide exposition. The film heavy-handedly drives home its simplistic interpretation of Edie as the abused and abandoned target of a series of childish, manipulative men, with the ultimate blame saved for her family.
 
Yikes! Just saw Factory Girl. HORRIBLE!! If anyone has any questions, feel free to ask...

there were tons of holes in the plot, the costumes and makeup looked cheap, but what really bothered me was Sienna's lack of a neck...her voice continually changes from Briitish to something like Edie's...awful
 
Oh god and the cheesy piano and synthesized music!! aghh! And Jimmy Fallon's wig kept changing, The 60s music they used in the film was completely out of place...awful
 
you are not alone, Emily Marie

Here is a review from IMDB from Jayson Elliot from Manhattan, NY.

The film is cliché after cliché, with two-dimensional characters and a flat, uninspired script. To be fair, Sienna Miller does a wonderful job with the material she's been given. Sadly, it's not a lot to work with.

One of the major flaws in Factory Girl is that there is no character that you can like. I wasn't sure who I was supposed to care about, possibly because no character was ever developed enough to get past their surface. It's hard to portray Andy Warhol in film, after all of the versions that have been done, and his own status as more icon than man. This film only proved the point, by playing him in a way that felt more like a parody than a person.

Over and over again, the film takes the easy road, from its After School Special depiction of drug use to the predictable dialogue, walks through Central Park, even the establishing shot of the Eiffel Tower to show "hey, look, they're in Paris!"

New York looks like a studio set, and the filmmakers give the impression that they aren't even familiar with the city. A cab is told to go to "2nd Avenue and Fifth," where somehow a massive concert is taking place - despite the fact that the address is in the East Village, with only mom & pop stores and small bars in the area.

The casting is nothing if not bizarre. Hayden Christensen as Bob Dylan, sorry, "Billy Quinn," comes off as an opinionated (though incredibly fit and Gentile) jerk with a guitar, Guy Pearce is too attractive for Andy, while Sienna Miller doesn't have Edie's soft beauty.

The greatest crime is that this will be many people's first introduction to Edie Sedgwick, and they will go away with an impression of a simple, disposable girl - with none of her glamour, whose problems can be neatly wrapped up in a few lines about her father. Her entry into Andy's world is nothing more than an entrance to a party, and her fall is just a soap opera decline.

If you have any interest in Edie Sedgwick at all, do yourself a favor and watch Ciao Manhattan, but by all means, avoid Factory Girl.
 
Factory Girl is on youtube! Just seach Sienna miller and there are about 50 short clips. From what i can tell it still sucks like i imagined. Sienna's voice is different in every clip and i don't get the point the movie is making. It doesn't get any part of Edie across. It seems like they are changing almost everything about her life. The worst part is when she talks to her dad on the phone, it sounds so ridiculous!
 
babydoll1125 said:
Factory Girl is on youtube! Just seach Sienna miller and there are about 50 short clips. From what i can tell it still sucks like i imagined. Sienna's voice is different in every clip and i don't get the point the movie is making. It doesn't get any part of Edie across. It seems like they are changing almost everything about her life. The worst part is when she talks to her dad on the phone, it sounds so ridiculous!

Thanks for the info BabyDoll :wub:
 
I thought Andy was with Ultra Violet when he met Edie :unsure: Maybe she was just at the party, did the movie show her at all? It was a very small clip of the movie where Andy met her so I couldn't tell.


here is part of her book 'Famous for 15 Minutes' p. 205 where she mentions it


Andy takes me to a party at East Fifty-ninth Street penthouse of Lester Persky, a successful producer of commercials, who is a compulsive party giver....That night we meet Edie Sedgwick. I am struck by her dazzling beauty. "Glamour she inhales, glamour she exhales. The word 'glamour' is coined for her." I say to Andy.


Before the evening is over, Andy asks her to come by the Factory the next day. He speaks the routine phrase: "We'll put you in a movie."
 
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This movie seems to get everything wrong! I especially hate the part where she meets Andy, the dialouge is so cheesy!

emily marie, i was confised by the smoking thing, too. I wonder how this person got all those clips. It's very strange. I have a feeling that they'll be taken down soon so everyone should watch them quickly!
 
i just want this movie to be buried and forgotten forever. Release it early for an oscar??? Jesus I don't know who they were kidding. It's okay for a lifetime movie but beyond that....
 
I was excited at first, but now I'm just dreading this movie... :doh:
 
emily marie said:
Liberty Bell have you seen the full film? It's awful X/
I just can't bring myself to see FG. What it has 'invented' without merit, regarding Edie and my grandparents, is simply unbearable. A couple of my cousins attempted a viewing and walked out mid-film in floods of tears. Hollywoodification of Edie leaves me cold as it is everything she HATED!! Commercialization of mystique, rewriting history, taking advantage of people, no no no. There is nothing artful or intriguing in FG, not one moment of Edie's graceful style, wild sense of freedom and individual expression, or fun, as far as I've been told. That the FG producers couldn't possibly understand or interpret Edie's life-art does not surprise me in the least - they are all so deplorably mainstream, created by the superficiality so rampant in our 'culture'. I understand that there is no underlying message or meaning in the film, so what's the point? Money. Money and smut. Money and snuff film. Garbage, at best.

I'll wait for Melissa Painter and David Weisman to complete their documentary instead.

I will post pics of some family members when I sync up my new computer today. I can only post non-living members, though. As usual, I need to protect those of us who live outside the public eye.
 
babydoll1125 said:
BAHAHA! for those of you who were wondering if Mary-Kate Olsen was in the film, here is the clip.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBDLiHFfuCA

I guess this is a BIG part for her, being her first movie without Ashley. I don't think this movie will count...


oh no! poor Mary-Kate... she should have been more in the movie... that era suits her in some kind of way...
 
fairyx said:
oh no! poor Mary-Kate... she should have been more in the movie... that era suits her in some kind of way...

She was standing in the background right? :unsure:
 
emily marie said:
Yikes! Just saw Factory Girl. HORRIBLE!! If anyone has any questions, feel free to ask...

there were tons of holes in the plot, the costumes and makeup looked cheap, but what really bothered me was Sienna's lack of a neck...her voice continually changes from Briitish to something like Edie's...awful

From watching the clips, I always thought Guy Pearce's makeup is simply hideous, but he seems to do a good Andy, no? Sienna's accent has always bothered me. I can't make up my mind whether to see the movie or just keep watching YouTube clips.;)
 
Its too bad this movie sounds terrible. It could have been so good if done right. I won't even bother seeing it.
 
Ugh... Ugh... Ugh. I really love youtube. And I'm desperate to see FG. But it seems so wrong for that mo vie to be leaked this way.. I dont know, it's just dumb. They'll shut down youtube because of stupid people like that. Its just unnecessary... IMO.
 

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