Slums of Beverly Hills
Tamara Jenkins wrote and directed this comedy-drama depicting the experience of growing up poor in the 90210 zip code, told from the point of view of Vivian Abramowitz (Natasha Lyonne), a teen who lives a nomadic existence in the outskirts of Beverly Hills with her single, divorced father, Murray (Alan Arkin) and her two young brothers (David Krumholtz, Eli Marienthal). As Murray tries to keep the family in the Beverly Hills school district, the family moves into a one-bedroom apartment in a shabby complex. When sexually liberated Rita (Marisa Tomei), daughter of Murray's brother Mickey (Carl Reiner), checks out of a drug rehab and moves into the apartment, she becomes a "role model" for the young Vivian. Jenkins's semi-autobiographical screenplay was developed and refined during Screenwriters and Filmmakers Labs sessions at the Sundance Institute. Produced by Robert Redford and Michael Nozik, this film was shown in the Directors Fortnight section at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival. more..
Director: Tamara Jenkins
Starring: Natasha Lyonne,Alan Arkin, Marisa Tomei, Jessica Walter, Eli Marienthal
Slums of Beverly Hills has the kind of big heart, strong voice, vivid look, and original sense of humor many young artists -- particularly young female artists -- don't find until they're riper, and some never find at all.
The film, written and directed by Tamara Jenkins, is pitched pretty firmly at that level of ambition: Broadly drawn characters, quick one-liners, squabbling family members, lots of sex.
Jenkins shows an innate gift for lacing laughs with the pain of experience -- Slums is based on her own life.
Writing and directing her first feature, Jenkins mines her life for nug gets everyone can relate to.
Slums of Beverly Hills is less a hard-edged exposé than a mood-shifting satire, though approaching its subject with a wryly ironic touch.
Outstanding Actress in a Feature Film in a Crossover Role
ALMA Awards (1999)
Funniest Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture
American Comedy Awards (1999)
Most Promising Actress
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards (1999)
Best First Feature
Independent Spirit Awards (1999)
Film - Breakout Performance
Teen Choice Awards (1999)
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