A teenager is subjected to a campaign of bullying by classmates through a social networking site.A teenager is subjected to a campaign of bullying by classmates through a social networking site.A teenager is subjected to a campaign of bullying by classmates through a social networking site.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 7 nominations total
Jon McLaren
- Scott Ozsik
- (as Jon Mclaren)
Danny Blanco Hall
- Reporter
- (as Danny Blanco-Hall)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe movie's story is at least somewhat inspired by the suicide of Megan Meier, a teenager living in Missouri who committed suicide after a mother, Lori Drew, her daughter, and their then-employee Ashley Grills pretended to be a teenage boy named Josh Evans and bullied her online after pretending to be her friend.
- GoofsTaylor's phone changes throughout the movie. You can tell by the camera lens on the back.
- Quotes
Taylor Hillridge: [attempting suicide by pill overdose] I can't get the cap off!
- ConnectionsFeatured in The New Adventures of Cinematic Venom: Cyberbully (2011) (2017)
- SoundtracksDrift
Written and performed by Emily Osment
Featured review
Yes, cyberbullying is rampant, and yes its continuing to get worse. I don't think anyone disputes that. And yes, one way to draw attention to something like this is by making a movie about it.
Cyberbully plays like an After School Special from the early 90's. The characters are painfully flat and unconvincing, the plot is bland and predictable, and even the drama points made for more effective black comedy than actual drama.
Overall, Cyberbully has an over-dramatic, hysterical tone which almost seems like it could have been made by teenage girls. Maybe that was the intent?
While I appreciate the attempt at making a movie dealing with an increasingly hurtful phenomenon, this movie actually ends up trivializing the very issues it was trying to draw attention to.
A for effort, D- for execution.
Cyberbully plays like an After School Special from the early 90's. The characters are painfully flat and unconvincing, the plot is bland and predictable, and even the drama points made for more effective black comedy than actual drama.
Overall, Cyberbully has an over-dramatic, hysterical tone which almost seems like it could have been made by teenage girls. Maybe that was the intent?
While I appreciate the attempt at making a movie dealing with an increasingly hurtful phenomenon, this movie actually ends up trivializing the very issues it was trying to draw attention to.
A for effort, D- for execution.
- werebuffalo
- Jan 1, 2014
- Permalink
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