Monday, November 21, 2011

Megan is Missing



(2011) ***1/2

A statement at the beginning of Meghan is Missing informs us that 14-year-old Meghan and her best friend, 13-year-old Amy, disappeared in 2007. The film pieces together their disappearance through the use of Web Cam, cell phones, and home videos.



Meghan is a promiscuous, popular party girl and Amy is the exact opposite. Although it is never clear why Meghan would spend any time with her socially withdrawn, button down friend, somehow their relationship works. We learn that Meghan was sexually abused as a child, which most likely accounts for her risky behavior. Eventually she begins speaking to an unseen man online named “Josh” and later informs Amy that she is going to meet up with Josh at a party. Amy never sees Meghan again. After following clues that might help explain what happened to Meghan, she too disappears.



Meghan is Missing is unsettling for a number of reasons. Although I haven’t been a teenager in a long time I was, quite frankly, shocked by the film’s explicit depiction of teenage conversations and behavior. This is not the teenage world I recall. From drugs and alcohol to oral sex, these teens scared me. The director takes his time setting up the characters and showing us the daily lives of teens as they navigate through the sometimes harsh world of high school. Once Meghan begins speaking to Josh the film takes a sinister turn and her fate (and later Amy’s) is chilling and depressing. If some of the language was toned down a bit Meghan is Missing could be shown in high schools as a cautionary tale about stranger danger. The final 20 minutes are a gut-punch.

4 comments:

Octopunk said...

And another one! Do you get a ffootie news letter or something?

That's very interesting what you say about our teen world vs. the current one. I think perhaps our teenage years contained similar scary stuff, but it wasn't so broad. I never did any drugs in high school, and rarely drank, but I did know people who had serious booze, weed and coke problems -- however I only found out about the drug ones after the fact (sometimes years after the fact).

I think the option to live a sheltered teen life, where you're not even aware of that stuff, isn't really on the table these days. Or maybe the total nerds do grow up innocent, what do I know?

Jordan said...

This sounds very interesting.

Catfreeek said...

Just added this to my queue, real type predators are always the scariest to me.

Johnny Sweatpants said...

Damn JPX, you watched at least a dozen found footage movies this year and gave positive reviews to the majority of them. You're slowly convincing me that this genre worth taking a look at. This one and Grave Encounters both look great!

Malevolent

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