Some Body Movie Review
Some Body Review

"Some Body" Overview

Rating: R
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Henry BarrialProducer : Henry Barrial,Stephanie Bennett,Geoffrey Pepos
Screenwiter : Henry Barrial,Stephanie Bennett
Starring : Stephanie Bennett,Jeramy Guillory,Billy Ray Gallion,Tom Vitorino,Laura Katz,Sean Michael Allen,Marnie Shelton
In the opening scene of Henry Barrial’s somewhat indulgent video verité feature
Some Body, Sam (Stephanie Bennett) sits in her elementary school classroom
telling a children's story. Although she addresses the camera directly, she
weaves the tale with all the pizzazz of the joke teller at your local bar who
launches into a boring shaggy dog story as soon as he’s had one too many. This
is an unfortunate reflection of things to come in Barrial’s disappointing
document of the emotional growth of a woman in her twenties.
After the uneventful setup, we see Sam at a party – laughing, drinking too
much, maybe even fooling around with a good-looking man. What we don’t see is
that Sam lives with Anthony (Jeramy Guillory), a fey guy who keeps his cool at
the party but lectures her the next morning about her shenanigans. All this
leads to an eventual breakup, giving Sam a chance to move on out and sow her
wild oats.
Except she doesn’t do all that much sowing and her oats just aren’t that wild.
She moves into a Melrose Placeish apartment development (it is L.A., for
Chrissakes) and sleeps with the first guy she sees. Not a big surprise. As
Sam’s story progresses, the depths of her experiences do not, leaving the
audience fairly disinterested. She plays the field, fights with Anthony about
visiting the dog, and gets jealous when Anthony hooks up with a new hottie. It
just feels all-too-standard, and Barrial’s attempts at a faux documentary lack
the entertainment value that they should possess (try Ross McElwee’s real-life
family documentaries to see how entertaining the approach can be).
It doesn’t help that Barrial’s style also lacks depth. Most scenes are filled
with extreme facial close-ups meant to invite investigation, I’m sure, but not
having the emotional strength behind them to mean anything. Barrial also
employs the dreaded, overused slow motion effect, assuming his scenes and
characters carry more weight than they actually do. And when he speeds up the
motion (an admirable try, actually) the result is an amateurish, overzealous
attempt at imparting a frenetic pace. All of this is made worse by Geoffrey
Pepos’s videography, which often looks like the result of your buddy following
you around with his new DV camera. Sure, shooting on video is cheap, but it
also demands an extra responsibility to make your subjects and your project
look good.
The bright spots in Some Body come from the freedom and realism that the actors
contribute. Bennett leads the way, boldly throwing herself into some shameless
predicaments, playing her role with the widely varying emotions that her
situation demands. When her friends discuss her changes and suggest that she’s
a slut, we can see where they’re coming from but we also feel a little
defensive for her.
Sean Michael Allen is another standout, playing a possible relationship
interest for Sam, a guy that gets hooked in by her sexual prowess and then
sticks around. His delivery is the fullest and most accurate of any actor in
the film and when he swoops into an unnecessary, jealous rage when meeting one
of Sam’s one-night-stands, we feel it.
Some Body – and the title’s a little too cool-smart smarmy, by the way – exists
then as an occasionally insightful acting exercise. Because once Barrial gives
us a character like Tony T., a lonely hotshot presented as such a goofy
caricature that he seems like a featured player in a Godfather spoof, we know
he’s just not locked in. Maybe he thinks a guy like that will liven up the
festivities – if so, that's a good hunch because much of the time, Some Body
needs it.
Some bodies.
Reviewer: Norm Schrager



