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Easy A 2010 123movies

Easy A 2010 123movies

A comedy about a good girl a small favor and a big rumorSep. 16, 201093 Min.
Your rating: 0
6 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Easy A 2010 123movies, Full Movie Online – After a little white lie about losing her virginity gets out, a clean cut high school girl sees her life paralleling Hester Prynne’s in “The Scarlet Letter,” which she is currently studying in school – until she decides to use the rumor mill to advance her social and financial standing..
Plot: Olive, an average high school student, sees her below-the-radar existence turn around overnight once she decides to use the school’s gossip grapevine to advance her social standing. Now her classmates are turning against her and the school board is becoming concerned, including her favorite teacher and the distracted guidance counselor. With the support of her hilariously idiosyncratic parents and a little help from a long-time crush, Olive attempts to take on her notorious new identity and crush the rumor mill once and for all.
Smart Tags: #high_school #jealousy #promiscuity #female_protagonist #adultery #christian_fanatic #internet #spreading_a_rumor #rumor #party #girl_slaps_a_girl #teen_sex_comedy #vibrator #stripper #chlamydia #priest #restaurant #cafe #protest #church #infidelity


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Ratings:

7.0/10 Votes: 391,051
85% | RottenTomatoes
72/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 6133 Popularity: 30.629 | TMDB

Reviews:


Pretty far removed from my wheelhouse, but Emma Stone makes for such a great lead, the banter-y dialogue given to the adult roles (most masterfully spoken by Stanley Tucci) is so hilarious, and the story flows so naturally from A to B to C that you can’t stop for long enough to question the flaws while you’re watching it, that there was no way I couldn’t at least give Easy A a passing grade (no pun intended).

_Final rating:★★★ – I personally recommend you give it a go._

Review By: Gimly

When I first saw the trailer of Easy A, I wasn’t particularly intrigued. It looked like just another high school teenage comedy. But then I decided to watch it anyway (mostly because I wanted to know what all the fuss was about), and it turned out to be a very pleasant surprise! Coincidentally, I had just seen Emma Stone for the first time two days ago, when I watched Zombieland, and I thought to myself, “Hey this girl seems kind of cool”. But that still wasn’t an answer as to why right now I can’t read a single magazine without seeing her face somewhere. After seeing Easy A, I finally know. This girl is FUN. She has a great talent for comedy of the driest, most sarcastic kind and a perfect sense of timing. And you’ve got to love that husky voice.

Easy A is about a girl, Olive, who’s a straight A-student with a flawless reputation, until she tells a little white lie to her best friend about how she supposedly lost her virginity to a guy that doesn’t even exist. However, things go awry when this little anecdote spreads like wildfire and all of a sudden she has a reputation of being a hussy. (This plot line demands some suspension of disbelief, because it’s obviously very hard to believe that any group of high school students would be shocked at the thought of one of their peers _*having sex*_, but whatever.) Of course, like with any rumour, it changes constantly depending on who you talk to. So before Olive knows what hit her, everybody in school thinks she slept with every guy around. Now here’s the twist: once it becomes clear that she can use this newfound reputation to her advantage, she does so to the fullest. Simply put: unpopular guys pay her to PRETEND she had sex with them. Obviously, at some point things get out of hand and she has to find a way to fix it all again.

This concept could have been really stupid, if it wasn’t for the great screenplay. It is a tribute to classic 80’s teenage films including, of course, John Hughes, and it also features some great references to The Scarlet Letter and Sylvia Plath. The dialogue is quick and witty, and the characters are all really typical people without being cliché stereotypes. Stanley Tucci is a delight as Olive’s dad, bringing the same kind of dry-as-a-bone humour to the table as his on-screen daughter. Patricia Clarkson is a wonderful actress, and as it turns out, a really funny one as well. All the actors are perfectly cast.

One of the funniest elements in Easy A is a group of Christian students, the ‘Jesus freaks’. The leader of this little group is a girl called Marianne, played by Amanda Bynes. She just can’t stop preaching to Olive about her ‘indecent behaviour’ and the dialogue between the two provides some of the funniest moments throughout the film. Here’s a small foretaste; Marianne: “There’s a higher power that will judge you for your indecency.” Olive: “Tom Cruise?”

Overall, this is mostly a ‘chuckle’ comedy rather than a ‘rolling over the floor laughing’ comedy, though it has some really good LOL moments. And the ‘chuckles’ are widespread.

I would definitely recommend watching Easy A if you’re in the mood for a witty, intelligent comedy about a smart, sassy girl who takes control of her own life and everybody who thinks they have a right to think badly about her.
_(September 2011)_

Review By: DoryDarko
Fun, hip and goofy modern comedy and ’80s comedy homage
Through much of the beginning of “Easy A,” you have to find all the ’80s teen comedy homages fishy. Maybe director Will Gluck and Burt V. Royal are trying to dress up a classic Hughesian formula with modern banter and social media references. Then, somewhere near the halfway point, comes the admission. Olive, played by up-and-comer Emma Stone, confesses she wants her life to have a “Sixteen Candles” or “Breakfast Club” or “Say Anything” moment. Ah, and suddenly this is homage territory — much better. Like the rest of this hip, fun and surprisingly touching comedy, any time “Easy A” wanders down the path of cliché, a killer line or great scene nullifies it.

It all begins and ends with Stone, who can do a little bit of everything, which ought to ensure her a long career. She can do typical teen comedy lead autopilot/earn our sympathy, she can command the improvisation-like tangential dry humor that has defined the comedies of the last five or so years and she can be the sensitive, fragile Molly Ringwald type. Nothing feels forced or unnatural in her performance. She seems to be having fun and milking to goofy nature of Royal’s script.

More importantly, the reason “Easy A” is so good is because it never stops being about Olive’s story. A high school nobody, Olive lets her best friend (Alyson Michalka) pressure her into lying about losing her virginity. The simple lie gets overheard by the super-Christian Miss Everybody (Amanda Bynes) and suddenly everyone sees Olive differently, or sees her period. After deciding to embrace the attention as school slut (the story reaches here a bit), Olive then starts to pretend to have sex with guys in need of a reputation boost, which consequently sullies her own.

The only real problem with “Easy A” is that there’s no good reason to believe Stone was this unattractive nobody given her actual attractiveness and the friends she has — and we’re supposed to believe that suddenly everyone is interested in her because she lost her virginity. Gluck tries to spin this into a positive by making it almost comical how everyone is staring at her or waiting in a perfect line for her to come down the hall, but it’s the one scratch in this gem — take it or leave it. The script and humor and situations that arise eventually more than make up for this road bump.

Gluck’s filmmaking is hip and common of modern comedy while the writing is clever and spontaneous. For no logical reason, a scene when Olive’s gay friend Brandon (the one she helps first) comes over, Stone and Patricia Clarkson, who plays her mother, do this quick exchange of pretending they’re in the Old South and a boy has come over and asked for her. Though completely random and a bit forced, they actually work well at making the characters seem more organic, which is the challenge of most comedies, especially those made today.

Clarkson and Stanley Tucci as the parents are the comic relief. When was the last time parents in a teen comedy were genuine comic relief? They walk a fine line between wacko and genuinely caring and loving parents, but it totally works. Two more originally funny parents haven’t existed on film before. Characters such as the aforementioned best friend Rhiannon and Bynes’ are more by-the-book as far as being teen comedy stencils, but like every other small flaw with the film, they’re covered up by all the multi-dimesional and more interesting ones. Worthy of mention are school faculty members played by Thomas Haden Church, Lisa Kudrow and Malcolm MacDowell.

Most intriguing of all is how the film actually succeeds at finding moments of genuine drama. A few well-thought-out and creative plot twists introduce an intelligence seemingly foreign to these kinds of comedies. The key once again comes from staying focused on Olive’s story. The film is structured as a retelling with narration from Olive, so it’s told in a reflective manner, which ultimately keeps it from veering off course. It’s about Olive wrestling with this lie and her feelings about how she wants to be perceived, along with her understandable pity for the boys who request her “services.” High school’s rough and reputation seems to be everything. Some elements of the high-school experience in “Easy A” might be way off, but that’s dead on.

Although it lacks the intangible innocence of the numerous ’80s comedies it references, “Easy A” has a unique and lively spirit of its own and is the best teen comedy (at least featuring a female, finally!) in years. More importantly, it shows that the modern teenage sense of humor and good storytelling don’t have to be mutually exclusive.

~Steven C

Review By: Movie_Muse_Reviews
Okay, but ultimately souless
Saw Easy A tonight. It’s pretty average. It’s a film that had multiple references to classic 80’s Brat Pack flicks, and so that raises it above the standard teen movies. Older audiences will get the 80s references more than the younger ones. There’s quite a few laughs to be had, and some snappy dialogue. The basic idea of the film is good (a re-working of The Scarlett Letter, which the film unashamedly references and possibly over-references).

However, the main problems are ultimately fundamental flaws in the script. Olive (the smoking hot Emma Stone) is too cool. She’s too self- assured, and too smart. It doesn’t have the authenticity of teen life, unlike Mean Girls which had it in spades. Olive wasn’t the cynical outsider the role called for; she was the confident adult narrator. Films that portray the hero coming out stronger at the end work for a reason, but the character was the same throughout.

The end of the film is a love story and fixes everything in only a few scenes, but it’s tacked on, and felt contrived. The core of the film is the ‘Scarlett Letter’ concept, and it’s a clever concept, but it kind of got muddled anywhere outside that. Olive’s character didn’t really suffer any great despair (at least the drew any empathy), so the ending (where she miraculously found love in about 5 minutes) was more a marriage of convenience than one of passion.

Overall, it was a strong film. Very confident, witty and well-paced. At the end though, it was just souless. No real losses or triumphs, no character development. Olive was just as smart and self-confident at the beginning as she was at the end. The audience didn’t cheer Olive through the rough times because there weren’t any that felt rough. We didn’t really care that she hooked up with a decent guy at the end, as that subplot was woefully malnourished and not given any real development time.

Commercially? Okay. Artistically? Disappointing. It could have been the next Clueless or Mean Girls, but kind of wasted it’s potential.

Worth seeing if there’e not much else on, and definitely worth seeing for Emma Stone in tiny blue shorts.

Review By: evan_harvey

Other Information:

Original Title Easy A
Release Date 2010-09-16
Release Year 2010

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 32 min (92 min)
Budget 8000000
Revenue 75026327
Status Released
Rated PG-13
Genre Comedy, Drama, Romance
Director Will Gluck
Writer Bert V. Royal
Actors Emma Stone, Amanda Bynes, Penn Badgley
Country United States
Awards 9 wins & 21 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital, DTS, SDDS
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Panavision Genesis HD Camera, Panavision Primo Lenses
Laboratory ColorWorks, Culver City (CA), USA (digital intermediate), DeLuxe, Hollywood (CA), USA (prints)
Film Length (5 reels)
Negative Format Video (HD)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), HDCAM SR (1080p/24) (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (spherical) (Kodak Vision 2383), D-Cinema

Easy A 2010 123movies
Easy A 2010 123movies
Easy A 2010 123movies
Easy A 2010 123movies
Easy A 2010 123movies
Easy A 2010 123movies
Easy A 2010 123movies
Original title Easy A
TMDb Rating 6.806 6,133 votes

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