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The Dead Girl
Reviewed by Rich Drees
The morning walk that is a woman’s only respite from her domineering
mother becomes a life changing when she discovers the dead body of a
young woman (Brittney Murphy), beaten and abandoned in a field. Soon
the woman’s death will impact several women, some who knew her, some
whom she never met. A coroner’s assistant (Rose Byrne) wonders if
the woman on her slab is her decade-long missing sister. A battered
wife (Mary Beth Hurt) begins to summon the courage to question her
husband’s multiple days-long disappearances. A mother (Marcia Gay
Harden) seeks absolution for the mistakes of the past.
On a certain
level, The Dead Girl is a mystery movie, but the mystery here
is not who killed Krista. Instead, the mystery is Krista herself,
with each vignette peeling away another onion-like layer of
information about her. But many clues initially that appear to be
one thing are revealed to be something else in the final segment,
which focuses on Krista and her final hours. (In this way, the film
may owe a debt to director David Lynch’s Twin Peaks
television series and subsequent film spin-off.) But in addition to
layers of information about the titular character being revealed
each segment also serves as a character study for the various women
who find themselves either directly or indirectly affected by
Krista’s death. For each woman, the death of Krista is a
transformative experience, spinning their lives off in new
directions.
To discuss the
film’s plot and structure in much more detail would rob it of much
of its impact. What can be mentioned is the uniformly excellent work
the leads bring to the piece. Oft times it is lamented that there
are not enough meaty, dramatic roles for actresses in standard
Hollywood fare, but here, writer/director Karen Moncrieff has
crafted a vehicle that provides a showcase for all her cast, the
lead women especially. While it comes as no surprise that seasoned
vets like Harden, Hurt and Steenburgen deliver outstanding
performances, they in no way overshadow the strong work from younger
actresses Murphy, Byrne and Kerry Washington as one of Krista’s
friends. Moncrieff’s script also addresses the multiple ways women
are preyed upon in society, but manages to do it through the
narrative itself, never stopping the film to preach to the audience.
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