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World Famous Comics: Erin McMurtry The Tracey Fragments
Erin McMurtry The Tracey Fragments
Starring: Ellen Page, Julian Richings, Erin McMurtry, Ari Cohen, Maxwell McCabe-Lokos
Directed By: Bruce McDonald
Average Rating:3.00 out of 5.00 stars
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
Format: Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, NTSC, Widescreen
Label: THINKFILM
Number of Items: 1
Region Code: 1
Release Date: July 08, 2008
Running Time: 77 minutes
Theatrical Release Date: 2007

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The Tracey Fragments
List Price: $27.98
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Amazon's Price: $16.49

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Editorial Comments

Product Description:
Studio: Image Entertainment Release Date: 07/08/2008 Run time: 77 minutes Rating: Nr

Amazon.com:
Teen angst is amped up by a nuanced performance by a pre-Juno Ellen Page in The Tracey Fragments. "Look, the other day, something happened. I came to certain realizations," says Tracey Berkowitz, played with deadpan heartbreak by Page, huddled on a late-night bus near the beginning of the film. "I can't tell you what or you'll end up like me, on this bus, looking for someone." The scene signals a rocky ride, and the film--a portrait of an outcast Canadian teen struggling with bullies, clueless parents, unrequited love, and her place in the world--is wrenching and challenging. Director Bruce McDonald has taken the "fragments" of the title literally, and so the film is presented in several simultaneous screen shots at a time; rarely in its duration is there simply one scene to watch, as though all the different facets of Tracey are playing out at once. Which, of course, they are.

Tracey is hassled at school, dismissed as an "it" for being flat-chested, and treated as invisible by her parents and even her therapist. Only when something dire happens may have been her responsibility does the rest of the world turn its judgmental focus on her. Tracey begins a quest to leave her old life behind and try to redeem herself--find and honor who she really is--in the process. And the film somewhat brutally takes the reader along for the ride. "How do you know what's real and not real when the whole world is inside your head?" Tracey muses on one of the buses she takes into the night. It's as perfect, and painful, a depiction of adolescence as any film in recent memory. --A.T. Hurley


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:3.00 out of 5.00 stars

1 out of 5 starsA Multi-picture Loser
I think the best description I've seen of this movie is that it is like trying to watch a movie in the pieces of a broken mirror. Neither my wife or I liked much about it. There is a lot of teen smoking, sex, violence and incessant use of the 'F-word.' The story of guilt by a sibling for the loss of a younger sibling could have been a great story. However the bad language and the 'cutsiness' of multiple, constantly changing pictures makes it not worth the effort. There are many, much better movies out there to waste one's time on this loser.



5 out of 5 starsExcellent film, fantastic performance, wonderful editing
This is a brilliant film, visually captivating and with a magnificent performance from Ellen Page. Perhaps most interesting is how the mood of the film, helped tremendously by the lighting and color choices for the scenes, perfectly captures the feeling of being a teenager caught up in the intertwined mess of school bullying and family dysfunction, thrust into their own head to fantasize about a way out. Maybe it's too stark and bleak for some viewers. To express the trauma that Tracey is dealing with and reacting to, and how her mind is processing all of it and struggling to assert a self in the midst of it... to present this on screen with such raw feeling is a beautiful, albeit brutal, achievement. I feel very strongly that the artistic choices in how the film is presented, it's broken sense of chronology, the collage and fragmented visuals, the narrative slipping through different forms of memory and blurring between 'fact' and 'fiction', all of it brings the spectator into the psyche of our protagonist, to break down the third person perspective close to experience the story as it unfolds in the mind of Tracey. It probably succeeds as this more than any film I have seen. It is fantastically well done and very stunning.



1 out of 5 starsWhat a WASTE of Ellen Page's talent and presence!
This movie was almost impossible to watch. The already mentioned "multiple split screens", which sometimes numbered around a DOZEN(!!!) make watching this teen angst drama like watching it in numerous rectangular pieces of broken mirror, each with a slightly different time code. ... Ugh!

Ellen Page was great in Juno, and she's at least as good here as the material will allow her to be. However, unless you are on LSD when you watch this movie, the format is likely to REALLY annoy and distract from Ellen's presence, the (deeply fragmented!) story line, and at least some of the scenes.

Art film on Crack, ... filmed in multiple cracks.
Don't waste your time on this one!



1 out of 5 starsEllen, what were you thinking?
Way too confusing a film. Stories of teen angst should not be so deep. Not one single frame shot in the whole film. Too much to follow. Excellent performance by Page as always but it was the wrong choice to do this film.



5 out of 5 starsEllen Page at her finest
This is one of Ellen Page's best performances. If you loved her in any movie, then you should definitely see this one! The truth she brings to the struggle of her character, along with the innovative techniques used to tell the story, make for a performance that leaves you speechless. This movie is like nothing you have seen before.


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