The Virgin Suicides review

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Sofia Coppola had no ambitions to follow in daddy Francis' footsteps until she read Jeffrey Eugenides' cult novel The Virgin Suicides and decided she had to pen a script. It's not surprising that the subject matter struck a chord with her own teen years - a famous dad and a fledgling acting career cut short after a hapless turn in his Godfather III.

All is forgiven, however, because Coppola's directorial debut is a damn sight better than anything her dad has done for years. The Virgin Suicides is essentially an arthouse teen flick, but is far more truthful about the turmoil of adolescence than, say, She's All That. Instead of simple erotic enigmas, the Lisbon girls are believable teenagers, which makes their tragic decline all the more affecting.

A teen film with a difference, Coppola's debut explores the dark side of adolescence with wit and delicacy. Beautifully shot and acted, it creates a disturbingly erotic atmosphere that more than compensates for the plot's thinness.

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