Not Okay ends up somewhere in a valley between satire and character study. It's not sharp enough to be the former and not realistic enough to be the latter.
Danni does learn from Rowan. She learns that survivor stories come with real stakes, and that there are real people on the other end of hashtags like the one she and Rowan invent, #IAmNotOkay. (There's also an under-explored aspect to the script here about stealing other people's pain, as Danni does to Rowan.) Social media has a habit of dehumanizing people, and it’s nice to get a reminder of that fact in the Insta-Era. But I kept wanting “Not Okay” to be willing to live up to that opening salvo in a way that makes viewers truly uncomfortable. It’s not sharp enough to be the former and not realistic enough to be the latter. There are a lot of claims in “Not Okay” that Danni is unlikable and won’t get a redemption arc, but the script constantly pushes back against the potential for a truly dark satire because it’s almost too empathetic to Danni’s cause. She stumbles through a conversation with her crush Colin (a pretty bland Dylan O’Brien), a co-worker who walks in a constant vape cloud, that ends with her saying she’s going to France. She’s not and can’t afford it. The latest from the director of “ Blame” seeks to explore how social media embraces and even warps survivor stories through the tale of Danni Sanders ( Zoey Deutch), an Insta-Wannabe who digs herself into a deep hole of lies regarding an international tragedy. “Not Okay” jumps back two months to re-introduce Danni as a photo editor at an online mag called Depravity—a clever name for a site I would totally read.
Writer-director Quinn Shephard explains the movies, influencers, and fashion that inspired her Hulu comedy 'Not Okay,' about an Instagram scammer played by ...
I think you're drawn to the films that reflect the way that you process things in the world, and I try my best to process darkness with humor. That being said, a lot of the best examples of satire filmmaking with unlikable protagonists have been men, just because I think there's a real fear around financing and distributing films like this with women at the center. I think you're drawn to the films that reflect the way that you process things in the world, and I try my best to process darkness with humor. I think you're drawn to the films that reflect the way that you process things in the world, and I try my best to process darkness with humor. But Do the Right Thing was a big reference for me, and Network, which is an older film, but has a lot of social commentary in it. It's funny that some critics are saying that it's almost a modern-day horror movie, because I wanted there to be a lot of tension and a lot of visual humor. But Do the Right Thing was a big reference for me, and Network, which is an older film, but has a lot of social commentary in it. As for modern films, I love stuff like Sorry to Bother You, Blindspotting, and The Square, which is a Norwegian film that is one of the best social satires. I think you're drawn to the films that reflect the way that you process things in the world, and I try my best to process darkness with humor. That being said, a lot of the best examples of satire filmmaking with unlikable protagonists have been men, just because I think there's a real fear around financing and distributing films like this with women at the center. That being said, a lot of the best examples of satire filmmaking with unlikable protagonists have been men, just because I think there's a real fear around financing and distributing films like this with women at the center. I really was like, \"I have to immerse myself!\" I spent a lot of time on TikTok. I followed all the Instagram cool girls on this one account so that I could keep sending my costume designer photos and microtrends.
Director/writer Quinn Shephard (Blame) tackles themes of privilege and adopted trauma in Hulu Original movie Not Okay. The film stars Zoey Deutch as Danni ...
“Danni is intentionally both terrible and very relatable,” Shepherd said in an interview with Newsweek. “I think especially for young white women on the internet.” Danni becomes close with the young activist, at first because of her fame, but soon comes to see Rowan as her little sister and best friend. With her story exposed, Danni Sanders becomes the most hated woman on the internet. Not Okay ends with Danni attending one of Rowan’s spoken word performances, intending to apologize. It’s Harper who sees Danni for the fake she is. With Danni’s new celebrity status, however, she has had to defer to her judgment at work. Danni becomes deeply involved with Rowan’s cause to reduce gun violence, but she isn’t self-aware or compassionate enough to see how she’s stealing from her new friend. She shares with her followers that she survived the attack and is safe. Danni creates a fake website for the writers’ retreat, photoshops pictures of herself in Paris, and posts them to Instagram with cutesy sayings about baguettes. She finds a workaround, however, in joining a support group for survivors of shootings and bombings. Through co-opting the trauma of others and pretending to be a bombing survivor, Danni soon gets a taste of the fame and followers she’s always wanted. She adopts a friend in school shooting survivor, Rowan (Mia Isaac) to make her own ‘survivor story’ seem more credible.
The burning desire for fame, and the way people seize upon "causes" often without doing their due diligence, give a meaty foundation to "Not Okay," a dark ...
Shephard breaks the story into chapters, which helps with the pacing of a relatively slim story. But when a terrorist attack happens there, people instantly want to know if she's alright, and instead of coming clean, she spins an increasingly fabulous tale about what she experienced and witnessed, winning new social-media followers and attention from her peers, including the handsome Colin (Dylan O'Brien). Heck, even her mother (Embeth Davidtz) is suddenly nicer. ), an aspiring writer not being taken very seriously at the magazine where she works.
"Not Okay" with Zoey Deutch hits Hulu, HBO Max has animated VRChat documentary "We Met in Virtual Reality" and more movies to watch at home.
Canfield also introduces themes related to the American frontiersmen’s cruel treatment of the natives — a note of seriousness that, while admirable, conflicts with the film’s overall tone. “Neptune Frost” is unlike any other movie released this year: a gender-bending science-fiction musical set among a band of revolutionary hackers living in a Rwandan village surrounded by electronic waste. The Australian survival thriller “The Reef: Stalked” isn’t a sequel to writer-director Andrew Traucki’s acclaimed 2010 film “The Reef” so much as it’s a new iteration of the same story. The shark’s prey this time are all women: a band of skilled snorkelers that includes two sisters still recovering from a sibling’s recent murder. It’s reassuring in a way to know that even an online utopia is imperfect, and that in the end it only succeeds because of the goodwill and bright ideas of the people who gather there. To her credit, Webster doesn’t shy away from the sex part of this sex comedy. Sally Phillips gives a winning performance as Gina, a 50-year-old who loses her job, then takes advantage of an awkward encounter with a friendly stripper named Tom (Alexander England) to start her own business: hiring out hunky guys to clean houses and, if asked, to provide sexual services. For all the reasonable anxiety we may have about whether we’re spending too much time online, it’d be wrong to deny that many people rely on the virtual world for a sense of community, a creative outlet and a way to safely explore other cultures and alternate identities. Instead, Hunting just roams openly and curiously through brightly colored fantastical realms, meeting some of the sexy human-animal hybrids and whimsically goofy creatures who have found little corners of VRChat where they can go on dates, have outings with friends, take classes … really, do whatever people do in the outside world but with far fewer physical or logistical limitations. But “Not Okay” hits surprisingly hard with its ending, reframing a lot of the preceding 90 minutes from a different and harsher perspective. These shifts in the film between earnestness and anything-for-a-laugh comedy sometimes feel off, allowing the audience to excuse the characters’ bad behavior as silly, not reckless. Zoey Deutch plays Danni Sanders, an aspiring journalist tired of being overlooked by the much cooler colleagues and editors at the New York-based website where she works.
This week, Not Okay, the satirical dark comedy starring Zoey Deutch as a fame-hungry influencer faking her way through a terrorist attack, premieres on Hulu ...
She’s tasked with helping out his business with the help of a charming lawyer. The young adult romance Purple Hearts stars Sofia Carson and Nicholas Galitzine as Cassie and Luke, a struggling songwriter and a troubled Marine who agree to marry each other for the sake of military benefits. Discovering his latent talent as a barber, Richardsson raises money in a last ditch effort to save the salon. brand-new? Here’s a shark movie about four young women on a kayaking trip who — you guessed it — are pursued by a shark. Bergholm tells Polygon that she literally Googled the world’s best specialist in movie animatronics, then reached out to him about working on the film. Zoey Deutch (Vampire Academy) stars in the satirical black comedy Not Okay as Danni, a misguided influencer who fakes a trip to Paris in order to boost her clout.
Writer-director Quinn Shephard's takedown of clout chasers isn't as biting as it should be. not-okay-dylan-obrien-zoey-deutch.
Especially in our social media-consumed world, there’s room for a satire that can lambast the current environment, but Not Okay, unfortunately, isn’t that film. Why should influencers be getting all the attention, when people who have gone through travesties and are fighting to make the world a better place only receive a fraction of the traffic? Shephard’s screenplay also makes some solid points about people trying to be in the limelight, when the focus should be on other people attempting to make a change. Like Danni, the desperation and desire to be something else permeates Not Okay to its core. The problem with Not Okay isn’t that Danni is unlikeable, that’s completely understandable. Danni tries too hard to be liked, which emanates from her every action as an awkward person awkwardly attempting to not be awkward.
'Not Okay movie fails to impress and can be termed a terrible social media satire. The writer-director Quinn Shephard's portrayal is not quite biting and ...
Rowan fights for a change since she survived a school shootout. Parisfor a writer's retreat. Hulu, seems to be a terrible social media satire. It is also what the film felt like. Danni tries very hard to make people like her, which is quite evident from her persona. Quinn Shephardis the writer-director of the film.
'Not Okay,' Quinn Shephard's new movie starring Zoey Deutch and Dylan O'Brien, features influencer-scammer Caroline Calloway in the jump-scare-slash-cameo ...
“I wrote the first draft of the script in 2018, which was peak summer of scam, and I had her in mind as somebody who could do a cameo in the online-cancellation-support-group scene,” writer and director Quinn Shephard said at the movie’s July 28 premiere. When it came to writing her lines in Not Okay, they “collaborated a little bit.” “I definitely went in with some jokes prepared, and we kind of hashed out what she was comfortable saying in terms of self-satire,” Shephard added. These days, Calloway is somewhat offline, but she’s allegedly writing a “very real book,” according to her Instagram bio.
Shephard dreamed of a scene with all sorts of internet-famous scammers, but she got lucky with a big name willing to play herself.
“It was always an idea to have Caroline in it, because right when I was writing the story, it was about to be the summer of scam,” Shephard said. It’s pretty horrible to be a woman who the entire internet piles on and rips apart for making some mistakes. Shephard soon met with Calloway for a revealing evening in which they discussed Calloway’s experience, how it’s reflected in Shephard’s film, and the general ickiness of internet culture. “We got drunk and talked about the internet. “The idea initially was that the support group was full of people who had gotten online shamed and canceled,” Shephard told IndieWire during a recent interview. Although not as well known as scammer brethren like Anna Delvey, Elizabeth Holmes, or Martin Shrekli, Calloway is infamous to a certain class of the very online who are also the kind of people who will enjoy Shephard’s (very smart) film.
The actress spoke to Insider about portraying a lonely, misguided character named Danni in Quinn Shephard's satirical film, now streaming on Hulu.
"We were just slaphappy," she said. "Quinn and I both have confessed to each other that this movie has made us spend more time online as a result of wanting to stay on, understand what's going on, and trends and this and that," she said. Deutch also recalled filming that scene during one of the hottest days in New York City in 2021. When a series of terrorist attacks happen in the City of Lights around the time that she was believed to be in France, Danni rises to fame. "I spoke to quite a lot of those canceled people," Deutch said. "We felt scammed by them.
Zoey Deutch's Drama film, "Not Okay" deals with a social media addict who is shallow, uncompassionate, and desperate for attention.
It was Rowan who had the final word, and Danni had to fade away in the background. She announced that she would be performing a piece that she had recently written, and as it turned out, it was about Danni. She criticized Danni through her poetry, expressing how she had snatched the advice Rowan had once given her and turned it into a trending hashtag. She decided to join the survivors’ group that her mother had recommended to her to gather information for her article. Danni was fired from her job, and she went back to live with her parents at their lavish house. Danni knew that she could not let an article expose her; she had to be in control, and a public apology seemed to be the only option. The sound of the firecrackers left Rowan traumatized since she could associate the sound with the shootout. Danni did not flinch away from the attention she got as a result of the attack. When Danni was left alone after making out with Colin, she realized how the man she dreamt of hooking up with was far from perfect. She learned there had been a string of terrorist attacks in Paris, and the Arc was also a target. She wanted to be a writer, but she neither had the passion nor the skills for it. She lived in her dingy apartment in Bushwick and posted pictures of the scrumptious food she was having in Paris. She obsessively worked day and night to keep her followers engaged, but one night she posted a picture of the Arc de Triomphe and fell asleep. The fact that she is unaware of her privilege makes her all the more the perfect anti-heroine.
The charismatic actor talks about her willingness to "go big," and what she bought with those NCIS residuals.
And I just love Ruben and I just had the best time. The feeling I have when people bring up that movie is—when the premiere ended in Sundance and I was a wreck, I hadn’t slept in four days, I was so nervous. And it was a wild shoot, we shot it in Toronto. I have so much love for that movie and for Tanya and for Brian [Sacca], the writer. So I have a lot of love for Ry Russo-Young, the director, she’s the best. And I auditioned once when the movie was at MGM and they didn’t cast me. Had I not had that experience with Vampire Academy, I don’t know if I would have the confidence to be like, Yeah, I want to do this. And it made me feel that much more prepared and capable for if I had the opportunity to audition for a superhero movie. Because I was playing someone that was so uncomfortable all the time. This feels like that person.” And those are always the moments I really try my hardest to be aware and grateful for. It’s not to say that I’m not auditioning constantly for these bigger movies that I do want. So anyway, I think she saw that in me and she invited me into that process. And you can also take that to a really vulnerable and humble place.
The new Hulu movie, “Not Okay” begins with a title card warning us that the film contains “flashing lights, themes of trauma and an unlikeable female ...
To gain more clout, Danni DMs teen gun reform activist-turned-Instagram celebrity Rowan (Mia Isaac) on the premise of wanting to use their traumas — one ...
And I think that's the problem with a lot of people in our society, a lot of people aren't even aware of the fact that they are not good people. “Rowan is a leader, and she's the person that a lot of people go to for help and for guidance,” Isaac says. And I do believe that there is growth at the end of the movie.” “I want to believe that people can learn and people can grow. An apology can actually still very selfish, it's a decision and goal steeped in Danni’s own need to prove to herself that she’s grown and changed, even if she really hasn’t. The apology would be for her and her alone. Which is why when Danni leaves the auditorium, unable to make her final apology to Rowan, it's the realization that Rowan doesn’t need or want an apology, and the acknowledgment that Danni doesn't get to decide whether she deserves that grace. "And applauded you as you boasted, gave you a platform that floated you right up to the top. This is the Rowan we meet at the beginning of the film and the one that Danni first encounters. Even by doing that, that is learning something in and of itself.” “I've been friends with many Dannis. I've been the Rowan to many peoples’ Danni.” Of course, both the audience and Danni know that her experience is complete BS. A month after the truth comes out about Danni’s deception, her former BFF Rowan takes the stage at a school variety show, delivering a powerful spoken word monologue about Danni and finally speaking her truth.