6.4 /10 1 Votes
67% Cinematography Sergio Armstrong | 6.1/10 IMDb Initial release 29 March 2012 (Chile) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Produced by Juan de Dios LarraínPablo Larraín Written by Marialy RivasCamila GutiérrezMaría José Viera-GalloPedro PeiranoSebastián Sepúlveda Starring Alicia RodríguezFelipe PintoMaría Gracia OmegnaAline Küppenheim Music by Francisca ValenzuelaJaviera Mena Screenplay Marialy Rivas, Pedro Peirano, Camila Gutiérrez, Sebastian Sepulveda, María José Viera-Gallo Cast Alicia Rodríguez, María Gracia Omegna, Aline Küppenheim, Felipe Pinto, Ingrid Isensee Similar Secret Things, Saved!, Bang Gang (A Modern Love Story) |
Young and Wild (Spanish: Joven y alocada) is a 2012 Chilean film directed by Marialy Rivas and co-written by Marialy Rivas, Camila Gutiérrez, María José Viera-Gallo and Pedro Peirano. Starring Alicia Rodríguez and Maria Gracia Omegna, the film tells the story of Daniela, a 17-year-old bisexual girl who writes a blog about the conflicts she experiences between her evangelical Protestant, conservative family and her sexuality. The film was released at the Sundance Film Festival in 2012 where it was awarded the World Cinema Screenwriting Award.
Contents
Young and wild 2014 kompletter film
Plot
Daniela is a 17-year-old girl who lives in Santiago, Chile. Despite her family's deeply held Protestant beliefs, she eagerly explores her sexuality, through both casual sex and a blog, Young and Wild. The blog serves as a place where she questions her church's teachings and documents her sexual adventures, including her first experiences with masturbation, oral sex, and anal sex. As her blog becomes more popular, it attracts comments from people who range from supportive to gossipy to outright propositioning her for sex.
After she is caught having sex with another student, she is expelled from her conservative Christian school. Her mother does not initially react when told the news, and Daniela learns that her beloved aunt, a bohemian who serves as a role-model for her, is being taken to the hospital due to cancer. There, her aunt pleads with Daniela's mother not to send the girl to perform grueling missionary work. Instead, Daniela takes a job at a local Christian television station as a gofer, where she meets coworkers Tomás and Antonia.
Daniela is immediately drawn to Tomás, about whom she begins fantasizing. The two begin dating, though he refuses to engage in premarital sexual activity. Sexually frustrated, Daniela attempts to seduce him and has varying degrees of success. When she complains to Antonia, Antonia invites her to a party, where Daniela briefly performs oral sex on Tomás until he stops her. As she leaves the party, Daniela whispers to Antonia that she came to have sex with both Tomás and her. Shortly after, Antonia and Daniela begin an affair that Daniela documents on her blog.
Daniela's parents come to trust Tomás, whom they allow to stay unsupervised with her. However, Tomás' inhibitions finally break down when Daniela questions whether he is interested in her. The two finally have sex, and Daniela describes on her blog how she feels torn between Antonia and Tomás, both of whom with which she is regularly having sex. Antonia expresses displeasure with their covert relationship, but Daniela is unwilling to commit to only one partner. After her family's prayer apparently foils a robbery, Daniela begins to question both her spirituality and morals.
Daniela surprises both her blog readers and family when she announces that she wishes to be baptized. Her family is excited, and her aunt arranges a baptism at a lake, the same as her aunt's experience. However, Tomás discovers her blog and learns that she has been cheating on him. Furious, he breaks up with her, and her mother angrily chastises Daniela for her behavior. Her aunt dies shortly afterward, leaving Daniela with many questions, ranging from spirituality to relationships. Daniela closes the film with voice-over that quotes Paul the Apostle and says that she has not abandoned the beliefs of her childhood.
Cast
Critical reception
Despite the film's success in winning awards, its critical reception varied. The New York Times expressed dissatisfaction with Alicia Rodríguez's lead performance and criticized the film's "insistently blanched" cinematography. Conversely, several critics commended the depiction of involuntary emotional turmoil that arises from physical relationships. Erik Childress of eFilmCritic writes: "This is a film that respects sex and the emotional consequences that follow once the heat wears off." Todd McCarthy for The Hollywood Reporter said about the film that "the ferocious effort of conservative religions to keep a tight lid on pre-marital sex is as old as history, but seeing it played out in a South American context gives it a new twist, at least onscreen."