A confused teenager writes a blog revealing her daily activities and secrets, advised to do so by her high school guidance counselor in lieu of moving on to her first year in college.A confused teenager writes a blog revealing her daily activities and secrets, advised to do so by her high school guidance counselor in lieu of moving on to her first year in college.A confused teenager writes a blog revealing her daily activities and secrets, advised to do so by her high school guidance counselor in lieu of moving on to her first year in college.
- Awards
- 1 win total
- Waiter
- (as Sascha Saballet)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWinner of 'Best Actress' for Britt Robertson at Nashville Film Festival 2014
- GoofsWhen the old guy talks with Katie at the party, he talks about how the Apache desecrated the enemy and what they did to General Custer's cavalry, who, in fact, died at the hands of the Sioux.
- Quotes
Paul Spooner: Dear Miss Kampenfelt, since you expressed a desire today to learn more about adult life, here are ten bitter truths for your reading pleasure. Number one, complete honesty is a complete lie. Two, marriage is sacred only to those who have never been married. Three, money is more integral to happiness than romantic love.
Katie Kampenfelt: Four, every human being is a contradiction. Some hide it better than others. Five, never underestimate the tendency of human beings to act contrary to their own best interests. Six, were it not for the fear of getting caught, most of us would behave like savages. Seven, all sex has consequences, most of them dire.
Joel Seidler: [reading the last three bitter truths] The older you get, the faster time flies until months pass like days. There's no such thing as living happily ever after. Everything gets worse.
- ConnectionsReferences Adam est... Ève (1954)
- SoundtracksMy Christmas Song
Written by Alexandra Nicholas
Performed by Zanny
Robertson is actually in her mid-20s but in this adaptation she plays younger (ie, a teenager, clues are in the script if you listen) and that becomes a cheat of sorts.
The script based on book about how adolescent girls get "confused" by the digital age we live in, has a lot of plot arcs about cheating, so cheating is clearly a theme here, or at least a sub-theme.
The direction follows the vibe of Easy A, or Ferris Bueller, where the young person appears (initially) to be the smartest person in the film (possibly on the planet?) and the constant voice-over only adds to that impression.
I did not read the book. Those reviewers that did say that the lessons and morals from the book do not translate well onto the big screen.
I will concede the point to them.
Robertson, aside from playing younger, is also DDG (drop dead gorgeous) and seems to have gone to the Emma Roberts School of Acting. While she is not a physical match for Roberts, she mugs and struts and double-takes and pouts in the exact same rhythm, so the effect is (see the heading for the review) odd.
The other casting choices are also odd. Big names (Martin Sheen, Justin Long) drop by to play forgettable parts. Very odd.
The technicals are outstanding.
- A_Different_Drummer
- Dec 28, 2014
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Undiscovered Gyrl
- Filming locations
- Colorado Street Bridge, Pasadena, California, USA(Driving to Dan's new house)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $950,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Color