It gives me no great pleasure to write this review.
About Cherry is the directorial debut of Stephen Elliot, author of the novel Happy Baby and the superb memoir, The Adderall Diaries. How I didn't realize this until after I had almost finished writing this review is beyond me. I was checking something against the press materials and there it was, staring me in the face. Stephen Elliot, the director of About Cherry... is also the author of seven books.
Fuck. I'm a big fan of Stephen's, and this is a pretty negative review. I am also the editor of a literary website, which means we run in some of the same internet circles. Would I have toned things down had I realized sooner he was the director? Now that I think about it, I might have foregone writing a review altogether. But since I had already committed to it, and had in fact already written it, I figured that for integrity's sake, there was no turning back.
About Cherry is about Cherry, Angelina soon to be nee, and her small circle of friends and family, tangentially. She's played competently by Ashley Hinshaw, a pretty actress I've never heard of before, with support from veteran actors Heather Graham, Lili Taylor, and James "Alien" Franco.
Cherry leaves home barely legal, letting out for the hedonistic paradise of San Francisco (somehow still considered such in the modern day 'reality' of this film), where the lack of familial proximity and a career in porn are the answers to all her problems -- her problems being an alcoholic mother and an angry stepfather, who, it is subtly intimated, might maybe have untoward ideas regarding her body. Maybe.
Here's where you'd expect a Dante-like descent into the seedy underbelly of the porn industry, but no. Cherry's got 99 problems (well, more like two or three) but porn ain't one. No cautionary tale of the sex industry this. Because Cherry works in the most vanilla, female friendly adult film environment ever conceived. In fact, it is almost exclusively populated by women. It got me to wondering -- was this a fantastical utopia, or did it have a real world analog? Stephen Elliot happens to be a former sex worker who has ties to the S&M scene. Lorelei Lee, his co-writer on the screenplay, is a pornographic performer. So it stands to reason they are familiar with the lifestyle. In addition, much of About Cherry was shot in the San Francisco Armory, home of Kink.com. I went to their website and saw nothing as genteel as what is portrayed in the film. So I'm not sure if this is an accurate depiction of a small niche within the industry or a complete cinematic whitewash.
Not only is this the cute, fluffy kitten version of porn (and that is NOT meant to sound dirty), but Cherry's involvement in the industry only serves to better her situation in life. Sure, it costs her the love of her fancy-pants lawyer boyfriend (played by James Franco), but guess what? He was a drug addict and wound up being a world-class jerk, so no big loss. Their relationship provides the requisite conflict, but no real impediment to her emotional journey (because there really isn't one).
The impact is also lessened by the fact that Franco has about 10 minutes of actual screen time. He washes over us in a charismatic wave, wins Cherry's trust, and immediately offers her a line of coke. This should be a harbinger of the descent not taken, or at least ring some warning bells that Prince Charming isn't all he seems, but no, this ominous moment is glossed over and -- cue the emotionally manipulative music -- we are suddenly witness to a young couple falling in love. Pretty much next time we see the boyfriend, he's calling her a whore.
Then there's the rest of the supporting characters. They're all window dressing, outliers, there to flesh out an idea into a film. Cherry's mother? No resolution in that relationship. She just shows up, drunkenly guilts her daughter into giving her money, and then leaves. Cherry's best friend who has a crush on her? He is such a milquetoast, I wanted to slap his face like Cher and yell, "Snap out of it!" Seriously, just pathetic. And where does Cherry get off getting mad about him getting off to her? You KNOW dude is obsessed with you, yet you still sleep next to him in your underwear and let him get his cuddle on. He's right. You really do treat him like a pet.
And what about Cherry's poor younger sister? Remember that angry stepfather who might maybe have untoward ideas, just maybe? Remember that scene where he hovers over the two of them while they are sleeping? Selfishly abandoning that little girl to an alcoholic mother is one thing, but abandoning her to an angry stepfather who might maybe have untoward ideas about young girls? That's fucked. Which is fine, if it adds to Cherry's character arc, but it doesn't, because again, she doesn't really have one. There's no resolution to that aspect of the story, either. Way to leave us hanging on the sister molesting.
There's really no resolution to anything. Like I said, Cherry doesn't have much of a character arc. She starts in one place and ends in another, traveling a straight line between them, emotionally. Why does she end up where she ends up? Is it out of necessity? Convenience? Is it because of love? The ending is too flat to give us any real indication.
So what is About Cherry actually about, then? What's the point? It isn't a cautionary tale about the porn industry. It isn't about a young woman's descent. It isn't about how she triumphs against adversity and rescues her sister from a horrible life of maybe-just-maybe sexual abuse. And it certainly has nothing complex to say about feminism, pornography, and the dichotomy of sex work. It's a non-narrative. It's inert. Which is a shame, because Elliot is a really good storyteller. I'm not saying the film is an unwatchable mess. I'm not even saying Elliot has no business behind the camera. I just wish he had taken some real risks with the material, risks I know he's capable of, because he's taken them in his writing.
About Cherry is now available on VOD & Digital Platforms. It opens in theaters September 21.
Joshua Chaplinsky is the Managing Editor for LitReactor.com. He also writes for ChuckPalahniuk.net. He was a guitarist in the band SpeedSpeedSpeed, and is the poison pen behind thejamminjabber, although he's not so sure he should admit it.