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Poison Ivy (1992)

Director: Katt Shea Ruben

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Movie review

From Time Out Film Guide

Although marketed as a 'home invasion' thriller in the Single White Female vein - teenage nymphette Ivy (Barrymore) wreaks havoc in the home of rich kid Cooper (Gilbert) by seducing her ex-alcoholic father (Skerritt), supplanting her ailing mother (Ladd), and generally ruining Coop's life - there is more to Poison Ivy than meets the eye. Distanced from the over-heated emotions and events by Coop's naive voice-over narration ('I guess you have to give up certain things when you take on a friendship'), we witness much of what happens at one remove. In this and other ways, Ruben subverts the salacious subject matter, while exploring the dangerously ambiguous relationship between anarchic wild child Ivy and emotionally neglected rich kid Coop (an understated, moody performance from Gilbert). Its willingness to take risks, and its insights into the frailties and confusions of teenage friendships ('She might have been lonelier than I was', reflects Coop at the end), lift the film right out of the rut.

Author: NF 0000-00-00 00:00:00

Time Out Film Guide


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Cast & crew

Director: Katt Shea Ruben

Producer: Andy Ruben

Cast: Drew Barrymore, Sara Gilbert, Tom Skerritt, Cheryl Ladd, Leonardo Di Caprio full cast

Genre(s): Thrillers

Duration: 89 mins




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