DMovies - Your platform for thought-provoking cinema

Edge of Everything

Resolute and unyielding teen moves in with her father and stepmother following her mother's premature death, in this credible tale of grief and rejection - American indie premieres at the 40th Munich Film Festival

QUICK AND DIRTY: LIVE FROM MUNICH

Abby (Sierra MacCormick) is just 14 years of age, and very keen to experience the joys and the tribulations of adolescence. She has short red hair, piercing eyes with heavy eyeliner, red lipstick, and a fiery, confrontational attitude to match her striking looks. She is a girl quickly coming of age, while also grappling with her mother’s recent death (the cause of her untimely passing is never revealed). She lives with her father David (Jason Butler Harner) and his slightly younger girlfriend Leslie (Sabrina Friedman-Seitz), who is pregnant with Abby’s half-sibling. She’s hardly enthusiastic about the new addition to the family: “I’ll be 30 by the time they’re 15”. Vicious jealousy and virulent rejection prevail. She barely interacts with the two adults at home, instead locking herself in her bedroom (either alone or with her friends). Leslie attempts to make amends by inviting Abbie to a musical. But the teen violently refuses the gesture of conciliation, instead accusing her stepmother of stealing her mother’s clothes.

MacCormick gives a terrific performance as an angry and determined teen. She’s wild and energetic, with a latent tenderness that she does not allow to blossom. She avoids direct eye contact with her doting father, who is desperately attempting to forge a bond with his only child. Her shades often conceal her innermost emotions. She has a busy social life, with a closely-knit group of female friends around her age. She is particularly fond of the equally headstrong Caroline (Ryan Simpkins). Together, they dabble with marijuana and experiment cocaine. Abbie is striving to become an independent woman as soon as possible, in what might be interpreted as a vicarious gesture of affection in honour of her late mum. Throwing herself head-on into adulthood becomes the easiest way to overcome her grief. But that’s just speculation. Abby never talks about her feelings, instead leaving her parents, her friends and audiences to guess what her fears, her sentiments and her ambitions might be.

LA-based filmmakers Pablo Feldman and Sophia Sabella’s debut feature is a story familiar to most of us. Who hasn’t met a teenage girl confident that she’s always right, and that she can fight off the entire planet with her own hands? Abby is pursuing her dreams, despite confessing that she has no idea of what she wants to be when she “grows up”)? While neither distinctly subversive nor groundbreaking, Edge of Everything is relatable and enjoyable to watch. That’s because the story is told with the confidence, and the teenage performers are first-rate. These are real young people eager to experience love, sex and drugs (preferably all three at once) for the first time, regardless of the repercussions for their families and their community. They are desperate for emancipation. But their experience isn’t always bright and rosy. The darkness of the youth is emphasised by the film’s shadowy and sombre cinematography.

At a relatively brief 80 minutes, Edge of Everything neither provides easy answers nor offers comfortable closure, as you would normally expect from a more mainstream American movie. Abby does find redemption in a very small accident involving a fish tank in one of the film’s final scenes. That’s when we witness her at her most human, finally letting her guard down. This does not mean, however, that reconciliation with her parents is immediately possible. But at least it’s a start.

Edge of Everything just world premiered at the 40th Munich Film Festival.


By Victor Fraga - 25-06-2023

Victor Fraga is a Brazilian born and London-based journalist and filmmaker with more than 20 years of involvement in the cinema industry and beyond. He is an LGBT writer, and describes himself as a di...

DMovies Poll

Are the Oscars dirty enough for DMovies?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Most Read

Sexual diversity is at the very heart of [Read More...]
Just a few years back, finding a film [Read More...]
Forget Friday the 13th, Paranormal Activity and the [Read More...]
A lot of British people would rather forget [Read More...]
QUICK AND DIRTY: LIVE FROM TALLINN A candidate’s [Read More...]
Pigs might fly. And so Brexit might happen. [Read More...]

Read More

Our dirty questions to Stephanie J. Röst

 

Eoghan Lyng - 25-12-2024

The director of My Boo, a comedy about a ghostly boyfriend, talks to DMovies about old-school movie magic, "normic" suburban life, Sofia Coppola, whether short film is the perfect medium for a character study, and more! [Read More...]

Our dirty questions to the nomad filmmakers

 

Victor Fraga - 21-12-2024

Victor Fraga talks to Kilian Armando Friedrich and Tizian Stromp Zargari, the directors of gently disturbing doc Nuclear Nomads; they describe their experience living in a camper van on a nuclear site, sharing the director's chair, insalubrious and precarious working conditions, and a lot more - as part of ArteKino 2024 [Read More...]

The top 10 dirtiest movies of 2024

 

DMovies' team - 18-12-2024

We asked our writers to pick their dirty favourite movie of the year, and this is the outcome: a list bursting with audacity, passion and stamina, and breaking all the film rules ever made! [Read More...]