Perfect Sisters (2014) TRUE CRIME MOVIE REVIEW – FREE ON NETFLIX AND HULU
s premeditated murder ever justified? Director Stan M Brooks and writer Fab Filippo pose that question in PERFECT SISTERS (2014). The film tells the true story of two teens who committed matricide in Canada on January 18, 2003. It’s an adaptation of Bob Mitchell’s book, THE CLASS PROJECT: HOW TO KILL A MOTHER: THE TRUE STORY OF CANADA’S INFAMOUS BATHTUB GIRLS.
Beth (Georgie Henley) and Sandra Anderson (Abigail Breslin) are two
sisters who rely completely on one another, while trying to shield their
little brother Bobby (Caleb/Braden Pederson) from the chaos around
them. The girls’ father Walter (Chris Sigurdson) is completely out of
the picture, and their mother Linda (Mira Sorvino) is a basket-case.
Despite having three children, she spends her days as an unproductive
alcoholic who constantly breaks promises and self-destructs.
As the movie opens, Linda is driving Beth, Sandra and Bobby to a new
apartment. They had just been evicted from their previous place, but
Linda swears she’s on the right track.
She gets a job, and Sandra believing her mother to be at work goes to
a Parent/Teacher conference for Bobby. Later she finds out Linda was
out partying. As a result of missing shifts and not coming in, Linda
loses her job. She claims she was laid-off and asks her sister for
cash, and grows angry when she refuses to give any more money. The
girls plan on getting evicted once again, but to their initial joy, they
find out Linda met someone who is going to pay the rent.
Linda’s boyfriend, Steve Bowman (James Russo) is far from the prize
they were hoping for. He’s also an alcoholic. He’s abusive and tries
to force himself on Beth whenever they’re alone.
Beth calls social services, where the agent says they can’t help, but
to keep a journal of any abuse or neglect. They reach out to their
father Walter (Chris Sigurdson) who callously reminds them he has
another family and brings up their attitude as youngsters. The girls
are stuck, but they still don’t want their mother dead.
In fact, when Linda cuts her wrists in effort to end it, Sandra runs
to her aid and saves her life. It isn’t until Steve lashes out and
strikes Bobby with all his might, right in front of Linda, that the
girls decide something must be done.
They begin plotting her murder and in the beginning, it’s more of a
joke than anything else. Beth’s boyfriend Justin (Jeffrey Ballard) and
popular girl Ashley (Zoe Belkin) join the sisters in coming up with
different suggestions. It isn’t long before most of the school knows,
but none of them say anything, and instead just offer words of
encouragement. Even when the girls make it known that they are serious,
no one goes to the police.
After they go through with it, Beth does her best to keep Sandra from
descending into a downward spiral. Sandra, unable to deal with what
happened, gets drunk, tells people at parties, and even attempts to take
her own life.
One of the teens, Sandra blabs to goes to the cops and tells all. It
is then that the sisters are put at the mercy of the court.
PERFECT SISTERS is an intense drama with excellent actors across the
board. It’s impossible not to sympathize with Sandra and Beth. They
tried to do everything right. They asked for help from the adults in
their lives. They were straight A students. They protected their
younger brother from the hell that surrounded them. There was just no
way out.
Being young, they thought they’d get the insurance money and be set
for life. When the severity and reality hit them, it impacted each one
differently.
It’s a very sad film. Sorvino portrays Linda as a pathetic, selfish
and deadbeat mom. I think everyone knows someone like Linda. She’s the
kind of woman who craves pity, feels entitled, always fails, but blames
the world rather than herself. She’s the kind of woman who drifts from
one abusive relationship to another and drags her kids along for the
collision course. She’s the kind of woman you want to shake and say,
“Smarten the fuck up and take care of your goddamn kids!” She’s the
kind of woman that makes you want to smack the sense into the friends
and family who enabler her, look the other way while give her the pity
and undeserved praise she demands. Sorvino knocked it out of the park.
Typically, I love the characters she plays. When I think of her, I
think quirky and fun. Here, I simply loathed her.
There were times throughout when Beth and Sandra would imagine a
better version of their mother and even in those scenes Sorvino was
great. Having to convincingly portray the same essential characters in
contrasting ways within the same film, is no easy feat, but Sorvino was
exceptionally remarkable showcasing both the imaginary Linda with the
real one.
Both Georgie Henley and Abigail Breslin were sensational in their
roles, as well. Beth, being a goth kid and has an equally goth
boyfriend could have fell into caricature mode, but instead Henley
weaved a deeper story than the appearance let on. It was Henley’s
demeanor and mannerisms that revealed Beth’s fear, strength, sadness,
and hopelessness. She wasn’t just the run-of-the-mill Marilyn Manson
fan who dyed her hair black and wrote poetry about loneliness in her
basement (a.e. every goth character in every 90s-00s movie). Instead,
with Beth her appearance was organic and really spoke to her angst that
went far beyond the normal teenage bullshit.
Breslin’s performance was equally sympathetic. She revealed Sandra
to be someone who desperately wanted an idyllic life, but didn’t think
she deserved it. She did her best to keep everything on track and
really wanted to believe in Linda. Though both girls lived in the
imaginary world at times, Sandra was more attached to it. Even after
the murder, she tried to believe it was just make-believe and when she
had to face reality, she couldn’t take it. She delved into sex and
drugs and a deep depression that she hid behind a fake smile as her eyes
fought away tears of regret.
I’m not sure how close this film was to the actual case. Canadian
law will never release the real names of Beth and Sandra due to their
age when the crime was committed. There is a small update at the end
providing information as to where the sisters are now, but little is
revealed. Through a quick perusal, I do know that the mother was an
alcoholic and that the downfall of the girls was their big mouths. If
their home-life was as bad as portrayed, I don’t think they should’ve
served time in anything other than a psychiatric facility.
Putting yourself in the shoes of either girl and remembering how it
was to be a teenager, I wonder if I’m alone in this type of thinking.
I’m not saying what they did was right, but the girls were trapped, they
wanted to protect their younger brother, and they tried to get out
numerous times to no avail.
Had their father, child services, or their aunt stood up and said,
“NO MORE” and offered shelter to these girls, Linda would still be
drinking herself to death instead of being killed by two young teens who
will live with the somewhat unwarranted guilt for the rest of their
lives.
Whatever your opinion, this certainly is a film worth watching. It’s
free on NETFLIX and HULU. If you have neither, rent it on Amazon. I
also suggest watching it with a friend as it can lead to a lot of
interesting discussions and debates.
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