American Mistress

American Mistress




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American Mistress
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Noah Baumbach
Scott Rudin
Lila Yacoub
Rodrigo Teixeira
Greta Gerwig


January 24, 2015 ( 2015-01-24 ) ( Sundance )
August 14, 2015 ( 2015-08-14 ) (United States)

Mistress America is a 2015 American comedy film directed by Noah Baumbach . It was written by Baumbach and Greta Gerwig , and stars Gerwig and Lola Kirke . The film was released on August 14, 2015, by Fox Searchlight Pictures .

College freshman Tracy Fishko is having trouble adjusting to college life at Barnard . She eventually meets and befriends a fellow student, Tony, and even develops a crush on him, but when he begins dating another girl called Nicolette, she feels alone again. On her mother's advice, she contacts her soon-to-be stepsister Brooke, who also lives in New York.

Tracy is immediately entranced by Brooke and her lifestyle. After spending a whirlwind night with her, she pens a short story and submits it to her college's prestigious literary magazine. Tracy continues to spend time with Brooke, who reveals her plans for a small and eclectic restaurant called Mom's after her dead mother; the restaurant is being financed by her partner. Upon returning home one night, however, Brooke finds herself locked out of her apartment and discovers that her boyfriend has withdrawn financial support. With massive bills for the restaurant coming due, Brooke visits a psychic with Tracy. Tracy interprets the psychic's words as meaning that Brooke should ask for the money from her former friend Mamie-Claire, with whom she had a falling-out after Mamie-Claire stole her idea for a business and married her former fiancé.

Tracy has Tony drive her and Brooke to Mamie-Claire's home in Connecticut, with Nicolette joining them to make sure that Tony and Tracy are not having an affair. At Mamie-Claire's home, Brooke and the others crash Mamie-Claire's book party, and Brooke pitches her restaurant to Mamie-Claire, hoping she will invest. Mamie-Claire, who confides to Tracy that she did steal Brooke's T-shirt idea to become rich, insists that she will have to talk to her husband, Dylan. While waiting for Dylan's arrival, Brooke takes a call from her father, who informs her that his wedding with Tracy's mother has been called off. When Dylan comes home, rather than dismiss Brooke, he asks her to pitch her restaurant. Brooke stumbles, but Tracy, still enthused by the project, helps her to pitch it. Dylan tells Brooke he will give her the money but insists that, rather than invest in it, he will give it to her to cover the debt she will have from dissolving the business. Seeing that Tracy is upset by this, and also the toxic effect the offer is immediately having on Dylan and Mamie-Claire's relationship, Brooke ultimately refuses the money. Meanwhile, Nicolette, who witnessed Tracy kissing Tony, confronts Tracy about her short story. The entire party reads it, and Brooke becomes offended by the brutal way in which Tracy characterized her. She informs her that they are no longer about to become sisters, as their parents no longer want to marry, and tells Tracy that she will sue. Upset, Tracy, sitting outside the house, takes a hit on the bong that Tony had earlier fashioned from an apple with her initial emblazoned on it, smoking weed that he had presumably stolen from Dylan's freezer.

Tracy's story is accepted by the university's prestigious literary society, and for a while she joins the group. Still finding herself unable to fit in, she decides to start her own literary club, inviting both Tony and Nicolette to apply for membership.

Finding herself alone on Thanksgiving, Tracy goes to Brooke's old apartment and finds her packing her things, about to move to Los Angeles. She learns that Brooke was able to cover her debts, as Mamie-Claire gave her what would have been her share of money from the T-shirt business. Brooke also tells her that she has passed the SAT and that she has been accepted into college and is considering going. Tracy invites Brooke to have Thanksgiving dinner with her. The two eat out at a restaurant, as the film concludes with Tracy, as narrator, musing: "Being a beacon of hope for lesser people is a lonely business."

The film's musical score was composed by Dean Wareham and Britta Phillips , who had previously collaborated with Baumbach on The Squid and the Whale . [3] A soundtrack album was released on August 14, 2015, by Milan Records . [4]

On January 9, 2015, Fox Searchlight Pictures acquired worldwide distribution rights for the film. [5] Mistress America premiered on January 24, 2015, at the Sundance Film Festival , [6] [7] and was released in the United States on August 14, 2015. [8] The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the United States on December 1, 2015. [9]

The film received positive reviews from critics. Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports that 81% of 180 critics gave the film a positive review, with an average rating of 7.35/10. The site's critical consensus reads, " Mistress America brings out the best in collaborators Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig, distilling its star's charm and director's dark wit into a ferociously funny co-written story." [10] On Metacritic , it holds a 75 out of 100 rating based on 42 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [11] Variety ' s review from Sundance read "Greta Gerwig shines in a tailor-made role in her and Noah Baumbach's spirited screwball follow-up to Frances Ha ." [12]

The central screwball-comedy section set in the Connecticut mansion divided critics. While conceding that the film's ending "resolves things on a basically satisfying, quasi-poignant note," Todd McCarthy in The Hollywood Reporter stated that the "inconsistency of the approach overall, combined with Gerwig's maximum voltage performance, is disconcerting, even off-putting". [13] Amy Nicholson, writing for LA Weekly , praised the casting of the section, and in particular the performance of Heather Lind, but found that the "clumsy" sequence "stops the movie cold". [14] On the other hand, Peter Bradshaw, writing in The Guardian , praised the "outrageously farcical and funny extended sequence." [15] For Nigel Andrews in the Financial Times , the "neo-screwball" sequence exemplified the film's themes of love, art, and betrayal; he called the film "funny, witty, joyous, mischievous and casually profound." [16]



MLA Style Citation:

Villa, Van K. "American Mistress: Who Is She?."
American Mistress: Who Is She? .
15 Nov. 2015 EzineArticles.com.
14 Oct. 2022 < http://ezinearticles.com/?American-­Mistress:-­Who-­Is-­She?&id=9228176 >.


APA Style Citation:

Villa, V. K. (2015, November 15). American Mistress: Who Is She? .
Retrieved October 14, 2022, from http://ezinearticles.com/?American-­Mistress:-­Who-­Is-­She?&id=9228176


Chicago Style Citation:

Villa, Van K. "American Mistress: Who Is She?." American Mistress: Who Is She?
EzineArticles.com . http://ezinearticles.com/?American-­Mistress:-­Who-­Is-­She?&id=9228176


By
Van Kristine M. Villa  |  


Submitted On November 15, 2015

Have you ever experienced that strong desire to be part of something? To the point that you would do anything just to feel that sense of belongingness? American Mistress explores this visceral need from the point of view of a lonely college freshman, who just wants to be part of a literary society. It raises the bar of need higher from the perspective of a 30-year-old jane-of-all-trades who wants to open a restaurant. Mix in an unrealistic plot set in the NYC, a script full of witty lines delivered in too girlish fashion, and an infuriating background music, and you get a coming-of-age dramedy.
The movie introduces us to Tracy Fishko (Lola Kirke) who's bland and flat narration opens the film with this line: She would say things like, "Isn't every story a story of betrayal?" No, I thought. That's not true. But I could never say that. I could only agree with her. It was too much fun to agree with her.
As a 1st year college student in Barnard, she tries very hard to fit in by going to a party even though her roommate warned her it's not for her and by submitting a fiction to the lit society called Mobius. Her efforts are not rewarded as the party turned out to be unwelcoming. She also got rejected by the lit society. She finds solace from her mother who is marrying a guy whose daughter coincidentally also lives in New York. Her mother suggests that she meet up with her soon-to-be sister, Brooke Cardanis (Greta Gerwig), and she might as well do it soon because they will be gathering together for the first time during Thanksgiving.
When they did meet, Tracy was so enamored by Brooke that it inspired her to write another fiction with Brooke as the lead character. She tried to screen for Mobius again by passing this story. For Tracy, Brooke represents the Big Apple - fun, fearless, independent.
Although Tracy feels that Brooke is everything that she is not and that she secretly wants to be, deep inside she knows that Brooke will never amount to anything in life. Tracy at eighteen years-old has an old soul in her in contrast to the thirty year-old Brooke whose devil may care attitude has gotten her nowhere. As Tracy accompanies Brooke in looking for investors that will help her build her restaurant, she learned to be fun and fearless, too.
With these two women as central characters, one may wonder who between the two is the American Mistress. Is it the young and intellectual Tracy whose desires are eclipsed by her fears? Or is it the worldly and irrational Brooke whose well-intentioned dreams escape her because of her senselessness?
"I want the whole deal. I've spent my whole life chasing after things and knocking at doors, and I'm tired of running towards people. I wanna be the place that people come to. I wanna make a home for all the knockers and runners. I'm good at tha t. I'm happy with that. I keep the hearth. That's a word, right? Hearth? - Brooke
Such questions can only be answered by having these female characters come to terms with the possibility of reaching or not reaching their dreams. So did Tracy make it to the lit society? Did Brooke get her restaurant? Did they get that sense of belongingness they so desire?
What they got is the sisterhood that's unique in the plot. And more.
Set in the Big Apple, this 2015 coming-of-age dramedy focuses on two women's desires of wanting to belong.
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