Ask Me Anything (film) explained

Ask Me Anything
Director:Allison Burnett
Screenplay:Allison Burnett
Music:Jon Ehrlich
Cinematography:Patrice Lucien Cochet
Editing:Adam Lichtenstein
Distributor:Phase 4 Films
Runtime:100 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$950,000
Gross:$48,710[1]

Ask Me Anything is a 2014 American drama film written and directed by Allison Burnett,[2] based on his novel Undiscovered Gyrl.[3] The film stars Britt Robertson, Justin Long, Martin Sheen, Christian Slater, Robert Patrick, and Max Carver.[4]

Ask Me Anything had its world premiere at the Nashville Film Festival, before it was released on December 19, 2014, by Phase 4 Films theatrically and via video on demand and other online platforms. The film was released on DVD March 3, 2015.

Plot

Katie Kampenfelt is an 18-year-old girl, a funny, free-spirited, lost soul who decides to take a year off before attending college. Her guidance counselor suggests she chronicle her feelings and experiences in a diary or blog.

Katie keeps her anonymous blog, called 'Undiscovered Gyrl', regularly updated with mostly sexual adventures. Initially it's primarily with a 30+ y.o. film guy with a girlfriend, Dan, and with her teenaged boyfriend, Rory. She gets a well-paid job in a book shop with Glen, but her mother makes her quit when her partner discovers through contacts in the police that he is a registered sex offender.

Although aware of Dan's impending move, he goes without saying goodbye or arranging for them to stay in contact. Her one girl friend, Jade, calls her up after being away awhile in Greece, and they go dancing.

Katie gets a new job as a nanny for Paul, a Tufts alum who'd interviewed her for admissions, to look after his newborn. It pays well and includes a car. His wife Margaret shows her everything, and by the end of the week she meets Paul again as he's been away for work.

Five weeks after Dan moved, Katie gets ahold of him with Jade's help. After they have full on intercourse, he reveals he's engaged to Martine. Upset upon returning home, Katie finds Rory waiting for her with her mom and her partner Mark. He confronts her, demanding answers as he's been there for over an hour. When Katie tells Rory she's in love with the older Dan, his rage provokes Mark to throw him out.

On New Year's eve, when Katie is told her mom is engaged, she calls Rory only to find out he's now with Jade. She finally calls to meet up with Joel, a guy who tutored her in high school, for dinner. He is also taking a sabbatical, but for his mental health.

Affie, Katie's father's partner, calls in hysterics in the middle of the night, as he's had a serious fall. Going to the hospital, they are not sure if he'll recover. Sure enough, he dies. Distraught, Katie seeks out Dan and comes face-to-face with Martine and leaves quickly as she's flustered.

When Katie shows Joel a note which Paul gave her, he thinks it is an obvious come on. From stories she tells him about how a neighbor interacted with her when she was six, he says it's obvious she's been molested so he convinces her to see a shrink.

Within a short time, Katie has sex for the last time with Dan, the first time with 43 y.o. Paul, Joel leaves her an angry voicemail and Rory calls her a whore when she tells him she's pregnant. Her narrative begins to turn dark, particularly after the pregnancy. Joel has been hospitalized for trying to end it all. Visiting her dad's, after receiving some of his belongings from Affie, she bursts into uncontrolable sobs.

Katie tells Glenn, her former boss, some of her dark secrets. He tells her the truth about why he was in the sex offender registry. Glenn offers her a place to live and, if she chooses to keep it, to raise her baby as his own. When she gets home, she adds this to her blog, saying that moving out will be the beginning of her adult life, and the right time to stop blogging.

We learn that Katie's real name is Amy Grantham, and that just minutes after that last blog post, she received a short phone call from a blocked number. She left the house in her car a few minutes later, and was never seen again.

We briefly see the real versions of the people whom "Katie" had blogged about, many confirming that somebut not allof her sexual escapades had truly happened. It is also revealed that other details had been fictionally improved in her blog, such as her best friend really being a homeless drug addict rather than the well off "Jade" that "Katie" had blogged about, or that the baby's father, while still an older man, worked in a video store rather than being a film school professor.

The film ends with Amy’s mother, Carol Grantham, writing the truth on Amy’s blog and imploring the thousands of readers for any knowledge as to where Amy might be.

Reception

Gary Goldstein, of the Los Angeles Times, felt that it "begins with a snarky, bubble-gum vibe that gives way to something far deeper and more meaningful” that "all beautifully paid off in the movie's haunting coda."[5] Mike Reyes of CinemaBlend felt that it failed "to even surpass TV-movie standards", and that it failed "to earn that twist and the fall out, which leaves this ending flapping in the wind".[6]

Ask Me Anything premiered at the Nashville Film Festival where it received a Best Actress award for Britt Robertson as well as the award for Best Music in a Feature Film.[7]

In December 2015, Ask Me Anything ranked number one on Taste of Cinema's 30 Underappreciated 21st Century American Movies Worth Your Time.[8]

Home media

The film was released to video on demand as well as other online platforms on December 19, 2014. The DVD was released March 3, 2015.[9]

Soundtrack

Director Allison Burnett held a contest asking for undiscovered female singers, age 21 and under, to submit songs for the soundtrack.[10] Approximately one hundred songs were submitted, with fourteen showing up on the official soundtrack released to iTunes and other online distributors.[11]

Sequel

December 2021. A direct sequel, titled Another Girl, was released in 2021. The film focuses on a woman who read Katie’s book and reaches out to her wanting to know what happened, only to find out that there is an even bigger mystery around Katie’s disappearance. The film is also directed by the same director.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ask Me Anything (2015) – Financial Information. The Numbers. 24 December 2016.
  2. Web site: CANNES: Britt Robertson's Thriller 'Ask Me Anything' Gets U.S. Distribution (EXCLUSIVE). Variety. May 19, 2014.
  3. Web site: 'Undiscovered Gyrl' by Allison Burnett. Veronique de. Turenne. August 12, 2009. . September 6, 2021. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20181005164423/http://articles.latimes.com/2009/aug/12/entertainment/et-book12. 2018-10-05.
  4. Web site: Christian Slater, Justin Long Join 'Undiscovered Gyrl' (Exclusive). Borys Kit. . January 7, 2013.
  5. Web site: Review 'Ask Me Anything' answers teen questions deftly by Gary Goldstein. LA Times. December 21, 2014.
  6. Web site: Ask Me Anything . Mike . Reyes . December 23, 2014 . . February 5, 2022.
  7. Web site: 2014 COMPETITION AWARD WINNERS « Nashville Film Festival Nashville Film Festival. Nashville Film Festival.
  8. Web site: 30 Underappreciated 21st Century American Movies Worth Your Time. December 15, 2015. tasteofcinema.com.
  9. Web site: December 19, 2014 . Ask Me Anything . .
  10. Web site: Music from the film – Dusty Wright's Culture Catch. Dusty Wright's Culture Catch. January 27, 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150218054736/http://culturecatch.com/dusty/music-from-undiscovered-gyrl. February 18, 2015. dead.
  11. Web site: iTunes – Music – Ask Me Anything (Official Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Various Artists. iTunes. December 19, 2014.