White Girl (2016) Poster

(2016)

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6/10
Who knew sex and drugs could be this boring
ReganRebecca5 February 2017
During the publicity blitz for this movie director and writer Elizabeth Wood made a big deal about how this was based on her real life experiences, how unshocking it was (while simultaneously playing up that their were tons of sex scenes and nudity to play up the shock factor) and how unfair it was that white women like herself were able to dabble in drugs for fun in college, while their Latino and black peers were treated like criminals for far lesser offences. Now all these things led me to expect a much different movie, but watching White Girl I was almost bored by how tame and basic it was and how little it had to say beyond that one message.

Morgan Saylor plays Wood's alter ego Leah. Moving into a cheap apartment in a bad (i.e. predominately Latino) neighbourhood with her friend Katie, Leah is immediately attracted to some young Latino men she sees hanging around her street corner. One night, bored and out of weed she introduces herself to them. When they refuse to sell to her she later meets one of them, named Blue, and invites him up to her apartment. They quickly fall in love and Leah helps him upsell his cocaine at exorbitant prices to her wealthy white friends. Of course this all predictably goes bad and Leah lands in a dangerous situation where she feels compelled to save Blue, who has landed in prison.

The strange thing is how boring and formulaic this all feels. I watched a scene with Morgan Saylor bouncing around in a rave with her top off and all I wondered was when the movie would be over. We watch Leah make manic decision after ridiculous decision always protected by the fact that she is young, middle class and white. But it's hard to feel for a character when she's her own worst enemy and you can see her mistakes coming a million miles away. Another thing is, if Wood was so hell bent on showing how white people have the privilege of getting away with things that their black and brown peers can't telling the story from the perspective of the white girlfriend was a huge mistake.

It's too bad, I really had high hopes for this, but it fell short. A more interesting take on millennial hedonism and race and class in America is Spring Breakers which is over the top and ridiculous in a way that packs more punch than White Girl.
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7/10
Scary, Tense and Wild...And In Some Ways Too Real
spiritof6728 September 2016
Unlike most reviewers I saw this movie with intimate knowledge of street life, and the director got a whole lot right there. And as well, I've known noobs like the lead actress who got themselves into a life about which they knew very little until they were so deep in so fast they couldn't get back out. So with that, I was on my seat edge as our heroine went from precipice to precipice, nearly always avoiding the fall. Without a spoiler alert, she does virtually everything in this film you could to get killed or maimed and the writer/director finds ways for her to fail yet survive.

There's a lot of grit here, from hard parties to transactional activities between employer and employee, and then client and counsel. It was all done very realistically, scarily so in many cases.I would love to know where the writer/director got her adviser on street sales - whoever it was really knew the game. See this movie.But be prepared to be scared, if you know the streets.
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7/10
Not the first of her kind.
ericawyldur10 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This film is difficult to watch for someone who is not in their teens or early 20's anymore. If you were a wild one at this age, it's not hard to see from the opening lines of the movie where the film is headed. Leah is every parents worst nightmare. Having been a nightmare myself it's very difficult to watch her spiral into the dumpster, continuously crawling back out again. She is that friend everyone is sick of babysitting. She seemingly has no limits or lines she will not cross. For this reason, she is taken advantage of by some of the world's dirtiest scumbags. There is, to my surprise, only one rape scene. (unless you count her disgusting boss) It is not overdone and is exactly what happens to women under the influence every single day. I can feel that the film was directed and written by a woman. If you are a woman who has been in any of these scenarios you will feel as if you were right there with Leah. The drinking paired with the sex, drugs, and alcohol all feel true to life. The rape is accurately and realistically played out. The drug dealer, Blue, tells her early on that he doesn't mess with cocaine yet for the duration of the movie he seems to have no problem with her snorting it all away. That part didn't make sense to me. He stated his boundaries surrounding her interest in drugs, outside of MJ, but then he was seemingly okay with it later. Her boss played by, Justin Bartha, was well done. Although a smaller role Bartha played the part well. He is someone in a position of power who constantly plays on her naivety and addiction. It is incredibly grueling to watch. I wanted to turn the movie off half way into it. I'm glad I didn't. If every drama were pleasant to watch, they wouldn't be true to life. White girl is just that. True to the real world and the unfortunate reality that many of us women face in our lifetime. Some reviewers stated how it seems unrealistic that someone would try so hard to free a man they just met from prison. It is not that far fetched when you look at how impulsive all of her other decisions were leading up to this point in the film. It is not an easy watch but it's definitely worth it. I hope to see more of Wood's work in the future.
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7/10
A typical drugged up film of descent, with a final shot that changes everything
kfctwix11 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
It is hard to talk about a film like this, one that is full of tropes, clichés, and ideas that have been done hundreds of times before, to much better effect. Reading the description, I instantly knew what I was in for and what was going to happen in this film. And I wasn't wrong.

These tales of youth are dime a dozen, and this doesn't really bring a whole lot of anything new to the table. It has the typical emotional beats one would expect from a film like this. Girl ends up on wrong side of the tracks. Goes crazy, bad things happen, blah blah.

I know right now it sounds like I am ragging on this but truth is, I quite enjoyed it. At the very least all that I ask from a film is to give me characters I can care about and become interested in. And this film certainly gave me that. I don't really know why, but the way Leah's downward spiral was portrayed was downright hypnotizing at times.

And then there's the ironic ending and final scene, which really elevated this film from a 6 to a 7 for me. Leah's struggle was certainly real, and her journey of addiction that leads to rape among other things, was certainly tumultuous. And yet, nothing really truly devastating ever happened to her. I faulted that to bad writing, but really that's the whole point. After getting out of jail, her boyfriend almost immediately ends up back in custody, for killing in self defense. After all that hard work and trauma Leah subjected herself to, to get him out, and it's all in vain. And Leah herself? Well, nothing happens to her. The final shot is her just sitting in class, life moving on as normal. Which for as simple as it sounds, that scene held A LOT of impact and brought new depth to the whole of the film.

I definitely read it as some commentary on white privilege. Her Latino boyfriend ends up in jail facing many years for just mere possession, whereas the ubiquitous white girl not only possesses, but sells copious amounts of drugs, and she never even once has so much as a finger pointed her way, let alone an arrest.

Maybe I am reading into it too much, but that scene really changed everything for me. I've seen many films like this before, but this was a particularly arresting tale of an archetypal white person who rejects a life of privilege in favor of a hard knock life. Why? Who knows. This film isn't about why. It's about consequences. Or rather, the lack of consequences some people will/won't have to face, due to status and color of skin.
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6/10
The title does explain what you're getting into.
subxerogravity6 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
The movie starts out very real for the most part. It's like a very warped episode of the series Girls, a show I feel was written well because it's honest portrayal of real people, but it's a show that I dislike because I really know those people, and don't like them. That gives me an odd feeling about the characters of White Girl, which include a young college age girl named Leah moving into "the Hood", a place she only witness on a Jay Z album. She walks around with that privilege attitude as she approaches the local Latino drug dealer , who she starts a sexual relationship with. So far the movie is doing a good job at making me unsure what stereotypes I should feel sorriest for.

Then the realness of White Girl becomes more movie like. The trailer shows that realness of a young girl out in the world exploring her wild side, but the movie itself becomes about Leah's drug dealer boyfriend going to jail and Leah trying to get him out using the drugs he left behind. Though what I describe seems like a zany comedy, White Girl is a very intense ride on a downward spiral.

It is funny watching Leah going in over her head as she basically learns how the world she now lives in works. At the same time, the film is filled with these vivid images of violence and sex, but especially sex.

But White Girl is a movie I enjoined watching, It's not the art house cinema I thought it would be, and as it started out to be, turning much more into a much more typical "indi" product that cheapens the experience, at the same time making it far more enjoyable for me.

http://cinemagardens.com/
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4/10
Tf people talking about?
landenmeadors16 July 2020
This movie is terrible. Obviously the ending is the worst part but that doesn't mean the rest is any good. People saying how "real" this movie is but they have no idea what they're talking about. I'm being generous with a 4/10, go watch something else.
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7/10
I would drink nail polish remover if you handed it to me
doxxman56 January 2017
This is an interesting film, one with probably more potential for future greatness than actual rewatch value. The acting is top notch all around, from the two leads who go through many changes to the lawyer who has truly seen it all delivering a chilling speech about black people in jail. A very promising debut from a female director that knows her stuff, from the moment doves fly away when two lovers are reunited or that moment when the camera gets tired of watching the white girl getting taken advantage of too many times and hides from the scene behind a wall before going back to a mirror reflection of said image. While at times playing like a softcore porno a la Game of Thrones and there are too many sex scenes just thrown around, the drama is intact and the WAY that the story is told is very compelling.
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1/10
A Film With No Redeeming Values
twotrybe10 December 2016
So why would a person watch a film with little to no redeeming values? You will ask this question every ten minutes as this film flows deeper and deeper down the sewer line. There are people in this film that you grow to hate and not care for. The female lead exploits her own depravity where you question the basic logic of her behavior. She makes some of the most profound mistakes early on and she keeps making these mistakes throughout the picture. And the theme has been beaten to death and if there was suppose to be any shock value, it was lost in the delivery of the script and the direction.

Why should we care about another drug user? Why should we invest in the relationship between her and her boyfriend drug dealer? We've seen this trope too many times to give a damn. The utter stupidity of this girl and the lack of any common sense just screams at you. Every minute that passed by makes you want to just end the film because it gets worse and worse. If this was suppose to be based on true events then I pity the person who's life this was based on because every moment was just so dumb. This was an ugly film where every character was despicable. The boss, the roommate, the boyfriend, the other dope dealers, the cops, the lawyer, there were no characters were you could shine a light on. No one can be this blatantly naive and expect to survive in New York City.
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7/10
Realistic and Disturbing
chicagopoetry4 December 2016
Just saw the movie White Girl. This is one that I'll have to spend some time thinking about. Very controversial, even pornographic at points. Cultures clash in unexpected ways when a couple of white college girls move into a Latino neighborhood and start hanging out with the local drug dealers. Reminiscent of the German film Victoria (it almost seems to be a remake of sorts except not shot all in one take) with a touch of Spring Breakers (if you haven't seen that one don't be fooled by the title, it's pretty horrific), all wrapped up in Project X I suppose. Nothing is romanticized here, especially not the inevitable tragic ending which is the ultimate statement about white privilege.
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1/10
White Girl movie is a waste of time
subodhlasure7 September 2018
There has to be 3 things in movie. 1. entertainment (which is a relative term. It is different for different people) 2. Motivation 3. Lesson There is nothing in this movie. Unnecessary sex scenes and almost prostitution of a probably under-aged girl for money. May be reality in somewhere around the world, but what to learn from it? No sense of positivity in this film. I have really wasted my precious hours in searching for a good(!) film and watching it.
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9/10
A COLLEGE VIEW OF DEJA VU
npandya-0863417 August 2018
This movie may not win awards or having the sizzle of high budget thrillers, but it will bring nostalgia to all of the college alumni about how realistic and truthful this movie is. This movie is not perfect and may push a little too far, but anyone who has been through a trip like this will thoroughly enjoy this movie. :)
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6/10
Depressing But Entertaining
shawnblackman24 June 2018
A young woman falls for a small time drug dealer who ends up in jail facing a long sentence. She has no money but needs 17 000 dollars to get a decent lawyer and pay a dealer back. How far will she go to get it? You have to go long along with the idea that she loves this man (that she just met) so much she'll do however many people it takes to get him out. Most of the film she is snorting coke and having sex but it is necessary for the context of the plot.

This film is gritty and down right depressing but entertaining at the same time. Try and catch this one but be warned (or notified) that there are a few explicit scenes.
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1/10
Protagonist has ZERO redeeming values
piperhook-919737 February 2019
While I understand the intent of showing the girl going bad journey, this film, from beginning to end, reveals the most idiotic, immoral, unaware, dangerous, and disgusting behavior. From beginning to end, the protagonist main character "White Girl" does nothing but put herself in vulnerable positions party after party to a point of date rape, being left at a club in a state of medical need, in a sexual relationship with her boss, drug dealer(s) and more.

I've got as open a mind as the next person, but this film was clearly a misogynist's dream script. To show a woman in a state of dependence and utter helplessness throughout the entire film leaves me wondering...WHAT WAS THE POINT?

I don't like her. I can't imagine any men like her other than the repeated should-be-x-rated sexual escapades. She also looks like a 12 year old, not a 21 year old. Chris Noth has lost my respect ENTIRELY for making this film.

Illustrating a scenario where women are here purely for men's entertainment, will, sexual conquer, and use as an object vs. human being is a tale which needs to end in this country particularly. Congratulations for yet another patriarchal masterpiece of crap.
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6/10
Clueless in Queens
jkbonner112 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this movie based on a review in a national magazine that gave it three stars out of four, so I was expecting more from it than I got. The acting is OK but I failed to see what exactly was the point of this movie. Certain young women can be very naïve and/or stupid? White girls are what all the boys in the hood want? Drug-fueled people indulge in wild sex? Don't play with fire because you're gonna get burned? Maybe that's it.

The young woman in the movie, Leah (Morgan Saylor), is returning to Queens, NY a few days before college starts to move into an apartment. The movie opens with her and her roommate (India Menuez) moving furniture and settling in. To relax they start smoking marijuana and need more, so Leah looks out the window and spots some young Puerto Rican guys across the street pushing drugs on the side. She goes across the street and asks one of them to sell her some. Very soon she and one of them, Blue (Brian Marc), hit it off. Blue has his own issues but wants to make extra bucks so he can impress his new girl. This spirals out of control. He gets picked up by an undercover cop for selling drugs. Leah gets a lawyer (Chris Noth) to help Blue fight the charges. Soon he's released.

All Leah seems to want to do is party and indulge in drugs with her roommate and the Puerto Ricans. Pretty soon she graduates from marijuana to cocaine and on to alcohol and is opening her mouth, spreading her legs, or bending over to satisfy her boss, her boyfriend, or her attorney. More problems brew. Blue had taken some good coke to sell for one of the upper echelon pushers before being thrown in jail for selling drugs (although no drugs were found on him―Leah has the stash). Leah blows it all partying with her boss and his girl friend while trying to sell it to get the money to pay off the pusher. She passes out and awakens the following morning to find all the money gone. Her boss and the girl friend plead innocent. Un-huh. And if you buy that one, they'll sell you the Brooklyn Bridge.

Meanwhile Blue is now free and proposes marriage to Leah, telling her this feeling is once in a lifetime. Love is blossoming but suddenly the pusher appears out of nowhere screaming he wants his money and viciously attacks Blue and Leah. Blue kills him with a wretch as he is busy molesting Leah. The police arrive at the scene and cart Blue away in a police car. As they start to drive off, handcuffed and in the back seat Blue give Leah a sad look of desperation and hopelessness. As a third-time offender he won't be coming back soon.

Ultimately Leah's bumbling has led her boyfriend Blue to kill a man. As Leah's lawyer (Chris Noth) at one time comments to her, you don't seem to understand how things work around here. I had to laugh at that one. No kidding. You think? The last scene is Leah sitting in a classroom looking completely dazed as though what happened to her in the few days before school was all a bad dream that would somehow blow away. Did she learn any life-lessons from all this? May be a setup for a sequel.

If you are into parties, nightclub-going, loud rap music, like to watch people getting high and having all sorts of sex, this is the movie for you. It does have a lot of frantic action so you probably won't nod off. Ending is a bummer though. All in all the movie borders on banal. Personally I need a little more nourishment out of a movie than this one provided.

6/10 (acting OK)
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6/10
A Midwestern girl comes to New York for college and finds herself experiencing far more than she probably originally planned.
Amari-Sali2 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Trigger Warning(s): Rape

Noted Actor(s): Leah (Morgan Saylor) | Blue (Brian 'Sene' Marc) | Katie (India Menuez)

Review (with Spoilers)

Storyline

What happens when a Midwestern girl, Leah, fresh to NY for her sophomore year of college, meets a local dealer with grand ambitions named Blue? Well, you get an HBO styled movie featuring sex, drugs, and ultimately violence. The type which leaves the white girl, who initiated everything, looking like the victim. Meanwhile, we watch her brown special friend deal with the aftermath of playing with someone who didn't take the lifestyle and industry he is in seriously.

Highlights

It Started Good

I don't know how to fully express it, but things started off good. Leah was this girl from the Midwest who perhaps didn't understand the social etiquette of her new Ridgewood neighborhood, if not New York in general. So, with that, she wasn't afraid to experiment with certain people and things. Hence why she walked right up to dealers across the street and allowed one of them, Blue, to come into her life. But while, at first, there was this intrigue of when it seemed she was in control, she had the upper hand, once her game became her dealing with someone's actual life that she potentially ruined, so was lost what made this movie seem good.

On The Fence

HBO Styled Depth & Drama

When it comes to branding, HBO (who doesn't have an association with this movie) I think consistently allows their creators to use sex and drugs to mask underdeveloped characters and weak stories. Essentially, things become more about shock value through passionate sex and jaw-dropping violence to keep you hooked. That is essentially what you get with White Girl.

Leah's quest to be free after living in Oklahoma City leads you not so much on a journey of self-discovery, or even growth, but one sensationalist act after another. Be it watching her, and various other people, do lines of drugs, one after another. Loads of sex. Some with friends, romantic partners, and of course rape for when a movie starts to get really dull and you think your audience is getting complacent, you have to throw in someone breaking the lead's trust. Thus throwing the viewer into disarray as they try to figure why said character crossed that line.

Yet, none of that is ever explained. In fact, all we know, in total, is Leah is a writing and media arts major. We don't know why she decided to become one, what she wants to do with her life, or even why she acts as rash as she does. In a way, with the name drop of a Midwestern city, it is like you are to naturally assume she is a small town girl coming to the big apple and letting her freak flag fly. Which, to me, was kind of lazy in terms of storytelling.

For while it is slightly hinted by Katie that maybe Leah was like this before they came to New York to be roommates for school, it isn't made official. So, among watching Leah spend time with Blue, try to help Blue out of a situation she set in motion, and then see her struggle to do so, it is like we barely get to know this person before us. She is just a girl, one easily replaceable, going through a lot of messed up stuff.

Overall: Mixed (Home Viewing)

This is the type of film in which you have to clap it up for the marketing department. They made something so simple, which pretty much is like a soft-core porn with a bit more focus on story and professional actors, seem like it could really be something more. They get props for that. However, to whoever reads this, know this film isn't worth getting excited about. Not one of the actors really shine and while it perhaps had potential at first, that light got blown out as soon as Saylor was forced to bear the weight of the movie on her shoulders.
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4/10
More bad than good...
barbell_2830 June 2019
I will start my short review by sayin Morgan Saylor as the main character was a terrible choice. Sorry she is annoying to watch and not a very convincing actress (watch her smoke or kiss it is horrendous) , i felt like i was watching Degrassi High at times. The movie is supposed to be thought provoking but is not due to her continuously making stupid choices and putting herself into bad situations. Anyways....the movie is not good, but give it a try if you are bored some sunday afternoon. Come give it a try at Degrassi High! Haha
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7/10
Morgan Saylor Steals the Film
dldillardjr31 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I watched White Girl not knowing what the plot was and not expecting a whole lot since I started the movie by accident around 1:00am. Typical plot, Mid western girl moves to big city where recreational drug use and drinking escalates to heavy drug use/dealing, hard partying, and gets caught up in a situation she seemingly can't get out of.

The progressive spiral downward of Saylor's character was done fairly well. Blue's character could have been developed a bit better, and the dynamic between Kelly and Leah was just bizarre. I'd have like to know more on why Leah acted the way she did aside from being young just not giving a damn about what she was doing. I mean, within the first 20 minutes of the film, Leah is asking for weed from a stranger/dealer on the street, has her underwear to her ankles and gives her boss oral in his office her first day of work, has said dealer and his friends in her home a day after they met and has sex in an ally with the dealer the same night.

Seriously?

To me, Saylor's performance was outstanding as her character's struggles with decision making and drug use escalation was very believable. Noth's final scene with Saylor is difficult to watch, but could be predicted, you just sort of hope it wouldn't. For a young actress she did a nice job in scenes not easy to perform.

Overall a decent movie with some good individual performances held back by a script that didn't connect all of the dots and develop it's main characters completely. If viewers can stick it out to the end knowing something crazy will eventually happen it's worth a watch.
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5/10
I just didn't grab me
katiej-3544128 September 2020
I just could not connect with this film. There is no message, no "learning curve" or "lesson learned" or saving grace and I don't like that. It was brutal, and confronting and and the downward spiral of the female lead was sickening and pointless. I get that this is while happens in real life, and this perhaps is where the film was lost on me... I'm a privileged white girl who now at 35 years of age has managed to keep my nose completely clean because I made good choices. I get that this is the downward spiral of so many, who either get caught up or deliberately put themselves in those situations. I found it really really hard to watch and considered turning it off halfway through but pushed through, I feel like I've wasted 2 hours and got no enjoyment whatsoever out of it - and the film hasn't really made a point or has a purpose for me. This review will probably upset a few people and going of majority of the reviews, I have a completely different opinion on the film to many others...
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7/10
Watt
kosmasp21 July 2021
I did not mean this to mean "White all the time" - but rather Wild all the time! And this may remind you of the "Patt" by Eddie Murphy. In this case it also could be Satt - which would stand for intercourse. Because this white girl right here, is riding high - multiple puns intended.

But while that may sound like a fun ride ... and it could be described as this at the beginning ... there is a lot of hardships ... and a lot of trauma and hurt! So while this may excite some viewers in certain scenes, I would not call this entertainment - not even close to.

This is about a young girl losing her grip and touch with reality and life itself ... even if at moments she may think she lives it to the fullest ... a drama, that you may find annoying and the main character obnoxious ... but maybe you can see the troubled individual and feel for her and the bad decisions she is making ... and some others are making for her too ...
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5/10
White Girl is about being white. And being a girl.
markgj7528 December 2016
Thematically, White Girl is exactly what it says on the tin, it's about race, and about gender. It's an attempt at outlining the main character's naivety and her ability to come out of it unscathed as a result of her privilege. An idea that, if it wasn't already obvious enough, Elizabeth Wood beats us over the head with in the scene where Leah has dinner with the lawyer.

White Girl is unapologetically feminist, and being directed by a woman, it gets a lot of this right, Leah isn't a trope, she's not a stereotype, she's a naive young girl who makes a lot of really, really terrible decisions. But while this is the basis of her character, the protagonist, as well as the rest of the people in this film, are only explored on a surface level. Meaning that it's difficult to care about what they do, or what happens to them. Especially Leah, who knows that as a pretty white girl, there's a lot that she can get away with, and come out unharmed. And we know that too.

Not only is White Girl difficult to get pulled in to as a result of its lack of a real sense of consequence, it also seems to push us away with its sloppy attempt at shock cinema. Every other scene is someone snorting coke, getting their tits out, or puking their guts up (is there anyone in this movie who doesn't do drugs?) Some of the comments on sexuality, especially female sexuality are interesting, and there's clearly a lot to say here about the male gaze and the danger of that towards young women, but then the gratuitous sex scenes never stop in an attempt to shock us, and we lose interest.

As a drug dealer drama, and a comment on race, Wood hits all of the tropes that we'd expect. Many of the characters are stereotypes, and the writing for the male drug dealers sounds like it was written by my dad, guessing how he things a drug dealer probably talks. The attempts at making the love interest more of a love interest and less of a sex interest were hilarious at times, this movie just couldn't get the dialogue right for those characters at all, it was awkward as hell.

White Girl was summed up for me when Doug from The Hangover got cocaine snorted off his dick.

4.5/10
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10/10
Too real
Riley904 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Wow. Saw this on Netflix the other day and it blew my mind, purely because it paints a vividly real portrait of white privilege, U.S. racial stereotypes and adolescent recklessness/naivety.

I'd best describe White Girl as Thirteen meets Kids meets Crazy/Beautiful. It's gritty, confronting and never shies away from giving the viewer a realistic portrayal of how the actions of a careless white girl can cause collateral damage to a community, all the while riding the wave of privilege.

This is Elizabeth Wood's first feature film, which is made even more impressive when I learned it's semi-autobiographical. She doesn't shy away from projecting Leah in a negative light and her character is far from admirable, highlighting Elizabeth's dedication to her craft above all else. (Btw, this is coming from a feminist's perspective – I'm mentioning this because I've seen White Girl labeled as misogynistic, which I don't think is the case at all.)

Leah is intentionally flawed and difficult to read. For the bulk of the film she's thinking about her own self interests first and foremost, whether it's getting her next hit, fetishizing her hot drug dealer neighbor Blue, recklessly losing $24k in drug money or blurring the lines with her boss at a magazine internship.

That being said, Leah's not completely soulless and does make attempts to redeem herself by helping to get Blue out of jail and on one occasion makes a fleeting attempt to return drugs to Blue's supplier. It's just not enough for you to sympathize for her character. Saylor's portrayal of Leah wasn't anything ground breaking, but at the same time I don't think it needed to be. All she had to highlight was that doll faced white girls can be dangerous too, and she does that effectively.

Brian Marc on the other hand blew me away! Like Wood, he has relatively few film projects under his belt but his performance in White Girl is well up there with the seasoned elite. The stare he gives in his final scene is everything. Brian's performance helps viewers realize he's not playing some wannabe G fu**boy drug dealer, he's playing someone far more vulnerable than that.

What Leah sees as meaningless fun, Blue sees as a form of stability and something serious. Leah has zero responsibilities whereas Blue deals as a means to support his family and to escape his circumstance. She sees sex, while he sees a future. Leah encourages him to be as wild and reckless as she is but fails to foresee how her preferential treatment in the justice system means she comes out unscathed while Blue winds up in jail.

The last five minutes really encapsulate this. Leah might be forever traumatized by the events that took place that summer but she gets to continue on with her life like nothing happened. Meanwhile, Blue will no doubt be reminded every living day as he (likely) serves out a murder sentence that didn't need to happen, had it not been for Leah's careless, selfish actions.

The scariest thing about this movie is its realness.
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6/10
A film of despair it looks at desperate times despite a wild culture of a fun party life.
blanbrn29 September 2016
"White Girl" is one of those little independent movies that most in the mainstream don't see still if you do you see it's a showcase of a culture of despair and carefree lifestyle that in the end is a doom and dead way for all involved. Set in New York city it involves the life and times of a college girl named Leah(Morgan Saylor)and this young lady is a free spirit who's a bisexual colored bra wearing college party girl who enjoys wild time after time. And after meeting a guy who she feels for the world of drugs consumes and overtakes their life and way of living and the entire culture involves getting help and getting out of trouble. Leah's only hope is now the legal route in the hands of an attorney named George(veteran actor Chris Noth from "Sex and the City")still it may prove to be to late. This film really has a message of showing that the wild life of sex and drugs is to often meet with despair and desperation despite having love and hope.
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3/10
This starts and ends with terrible choices involving massive amounts of drugs and sex.
cgvsluis22 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I read a lot of reviews who spoke about the realism of this film...I hope that isn't true because if it is then we are in for a world of hurt if young people are doing this many drugs and having this much meaningless and unprotected sex. I say that having worked in a level one trauma center in a major city for years!

The film is about Leah who moves into "the hood" in New York with her roommate Katie. Both girls are college students doing internships over the summer. They are also doing whatever drugs are available and seem to be ok having sex with whoever...including leadership at their intern jobs. During a party in their new apartment they run out of drugs and Leah approaches a member of the street corner dealers named Blue. Eventually Blue and Leah strike up a sexual relationship and Blue starts to dream big which eventually leads to his arrest. Leah tries to raise money to hire a lawyer to get Blue out of jail by selling his stash of drugs...

This is a terrible spiral downward which started from an already low point (Leah was doing drugs and sec before meeting Blue). It was like watching a train wreck and didn't seem to have any redeeming value.

The one high point in the film was at the very end when there was the contrast of the lived through trauma and all of the "happy-go-lucky" college kids going back to class after their summer break. I think this was supposed to point out the gross unfairness of where the two main characters end up, hence the title "white girl". But I hate to break it to everyone...that girl is never going to have a normal or even a good life, even if she manages to make it through college. Her life is so tainted by the life choices she made and she will forever be mentally damaged because of them.
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Crap
ersbel5 October 2018
One can never get a good movie with a bad script. Add mediocre acting and things are going to get worse. Average camera is not going to help. And so on. It's down and down and even more down.

The characters are flat. The stories are flat. Sex? Sure. Boring. Sex is just a way to add viewership. Only to dump the moralist story: this is what happens when girls want to have fun. No. The vagina was meant to take babies out. Naughty girls get in trouble and than are raped. See? Girls should be pure. Find a middle class home in a middle class neighborhood and raise healthy children through the most recent parenting fads.
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7/10
A star in the making
PaxtonMalloy26 April 2020
I found the movie on Netflix due to hidden category "independent drama" which I love and I was pleasantly surprised. It is very gritty and dark and you kind of experience the movie through the eyes of the main character as she stumbles from party to another and from one mess into another.

But honestly no one would remember this movie if it wasn't for Morgan Saylor. She plays her heart out. Maybe because such a small movie is not widely recognized but for me this should have been an Oscar nomination. Morgan is able to get lost in a scene in the good way. She is willing to not be pretty, willing to take chances, to be provocative, vulnerable all at the same time. She steals the show in every scene even though I want to point out that Brian Marc even though he is much less screentime does a fine job.
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