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Glitter Movie Review
Glitter Review
MUSIC TO YOUR SNEERS
Carey can carry a tune, but 'Glitter' proves she can't carry a movie

"GLITTER" Overview

100 minutes | Rated: PG-13
Opened: Friday, September 21, 2001
Cast and Crew
Directed by Vondie Curtis HallStarring Mariah Carey, Max Beesley, Terrence Howard, Ann Magnuson, Tia Texada, Da Brat, Valarie Pettiford, Eric Benét, Dorian Harewood, Grant Nickalls
The rise to fame of Billie Frank -- the struggling songstress played by ear-piercing pop diva Mariah Carey in the witless showbiz fairytale "Glitter" -- is so absurdly easy you'd think you're supposed to hate her for it.
After a quickie boo-hoo introduction in which young Billie is abandoned by her bar-singer ghetto mom for no adequately explored reason and put in an orphanage, director Vondie Curtis Hall ("Gridlock'd") fast-forwards to a nightclub scene in 1983 (symbolized by the occasional butt-ugly costume). There our girl, now all grown up curvy, gets offered a gig as a backup singer to a tone-deaf rising star, solely based on the way she wiggles her booty.
During the ensuing recording session, the pimp-daddy producer (Terrence Howard, "Angel Eyes") turns up Billie's microphone and substitutes her voice for his star's. In the next scene an influential DJ called "Dice" (some scruffy-handsome English actor named Max Beesley spouting the most laughable white-boy street lingo ever spoken with a straight face) hears the tape, hears Billie sing, realizes who the real talent is and offers to make her famous.
After that, a record deal, a sold-out concert at Madison Square Garden and a last-reel reunion with her long-lost mother are little more than formalities. This predictable, cheesy, rose-colored music industry yarn is so hollow that Carey's blood-curdling high-register warble practically echoes around the theater for the movie's entire run time.
Carey has no weight as an actress. She can speak her lines without looking entirely foolish, but she's utterly flavorless emotionally and garners so little sympathy that the audience at the preview screening I attended (consisting of target-demographic Top 40-listeners) laughed hard and long at many of the picture's tender moments.
We're supposed to feel sorry for Billie because Dice pushes her around, becoming controlling and jealous. But it's hard to get behind a girl who has so little backbone. Then only a few scenes later they break up and we're supposed to root for them getting back together during a montage sequence featuring each of them composing sad love songs.
We're supposed to feel sorry for Dice, too, because he foolishly agreed to pay $100,000 to the producer who had Billie singing back-up. When he refuses pony up after she's made it, the guy gets violent. Aww, poor lying, possessive, contract-breaking, homeboy-wannabe disc jockey.
If either of these characters could be taken seriously, some of these moments might not play so unintentionally funny. But Carey and Beesley give two of the least convincing -- albeit overly sincere -- performances of the year.
Director Hall serves up montage after montage to keep the movie's pace at an acceptable clip, and he shows other signs that he's doing the best with the material he has to work with. But nobody could overcome the enormous drag of Carey's acting and the disingenuous, disintegrating script by Kate Lanier, who must have burned all her "A" material for rock'n'roll scripts in the Tina Turner bio "What's Love Got To Do With It?"
Review (c) Rob Blackwelder
Glitter was awesome. Some chicks are just jealous of mariah's hot body and
success. Then these people talk bulls**t because thay have problems of their
own or their are ugly which means they are jealous. Anyway, the movie is about
mariah's life.The movie's a bit different because in real life her dad's black
and her mom's white. The movie is the opposite. It also shows how her career
came to a start. People diss this movie which means they diss mariah's life.
She's gone through so much s**t and these people just make her life miserable.
Show some respect because you wouldn't like to be left by your parents. And i
understand that people have to do their job and review movies honestly, but
this movie wasn't bad at all. And it deserves way more than 1 star. Mariah is
without doubt the best singer in the world and as for movies, she acted just as
any other actress would have. Mariah rocks! much love, "Rocko" (Jeff)
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