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Mandy (Paula Marcenaro Solinger), an unsuccessful children's book
author, works at a small bookstore, which seems to be the only place in
town that still carries her books ... and one day, Harvey (Jonathan
Stottman), single dad, tuckdriver and wannabe stand-up comedian, stops by
to buy one of her books for his daughter (Kenna Hardin), and Mandy, a
hopeless romantic, makes him ask her to go out with him. The date goes
kind of crazy because first she makes him break into a home to steal a
bottle of champagne, later he's attacked by one of her former lovers
(Spencer Korcz), but ultimately, the two of them have tons of fun and
agree to meet again - and they soon become a couple. But there's
something odd about Mandy, she seems to have a loose grasp on reality, and
sometimes when things don't turn out the way they ought to, she
"makes" them work - using whatever it takes. Like when she's
fired from her job for stealing money and merchandise, she has sex with
one of her colleagues (R. Wayne Hogue jr) and later accuses him of rape
and having forced her to steal what she did. Also above-mentioned former
lover "disappears" during a romantic boat ride, and later even
Mandy's former boss (Chase Dudley) "goes missing", but not
before signing over the store to her ... For Harvey, Mandy's stories
fail to compute after some time, so he hires a private eye (Keith
Nicholson), and he digs up more than Harvey would ever found possible. But
it seems he's caught with Mandy, whether he likes it or not ... Marvelous
Mandy is a darkly enjoyable movie that really doesn't let on what it's
about until you're already sucked in to then twist and turn into
directions not thought possible. So the movie basically opens like a
"magical" romantic comedy about two hapless beings of the
opposite sex searching Mr and Mrs Right, respectively, and finding them in
each other ... to then veer off into something much more sinister, that's
mostly tarnished with that kind of black humour that makes you choke
rather than love. Now add to that the film's colour chart that for the
most part feels a bit off and unreal, a directorial effort that stays away
from spectacle to give the story space to breath, and a great cast, and
you've got yourself a really cool movie! And if this has
gotten you at all interested, the movie's available here on DVD and
Blu-ray: LCFilmsOnline.com
- and on Vimeo on demand at
https://vimeo.com/ondemand/marvelousmandy
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