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Drop Dead Gorgeous is a 1999 American satirical black comedy mockumentary fantasy film directed by Michael Patrick Jann and starring Kirsten Dunst, Ellen Barkin, Brittany Murphy, Allison Janney, Denise Richards, Kirstie Alley, and Amy Adams in her film debut. It follows the contestants in a beauty pageant called the Sarah Rose Cosmetics Mount Rose American Teen Princess Pageant, held in the small fictional town of Mount Rose, Minnesota, in which various contestants die in suspicious ways.

Plot[]

In 1995, Mount Rose is preparing for its annual beauty pageant, the Sarah Rose Cosmetics Mount Rose American Teen Princess Pageant. Amber Atkins (Kirsten Dunst) is an optimistic teenager who signs up to compete in the pageant so she can follow in the footsteps of her idols, television news reporter Diane Sawyer, and Amber's mother, Annette, a former contestant. Amber works after school applying makeup to corpses at the mortuary, and lives with her mother, Annette Atkins (Ellen Barkin), in a small trailer near their friend Loretta (Allison Janney). This is in stark contrast to fellow contestant Rebecca ("Becky") Leeman (Denise Richards), the daughter of the richest man in town and his wife, Gladys Leeman (Kirstie Alley), who is the head of the pageant organizing committee and a former winner. Various business connections between the Leeman Furniture Store and the judges of the pageant cause many to speculate that the contest will be rigged or fixed.

Many odd events occur around town during the run-up to the pageant, including the death of a contestant, the athletic and competitive Tammy Curry (Brooke Elise Bushman), president of the Lutheran Sisterhood Gun Club, who is killed when her tractor explodes, and the death (ruled a hunting accident) of a boy who Becky liked, but who showed himself partial to Amber. Amber decides to pull out of the pageant after receiving a threatening note and her mother is injured in an explosion at their mobile home, but reconsiders and decides to compete to follow her dreams and make her mother proud. At the dress rehearsal, fellow contestant Jenelle Betz (Sarah Stewart) swaps numbers with Amber. Midway through Janelle's rehearsal performance, a stage light falls and hits her in the head, knocking her unconscious and rendering her deaf. Luckily, Jenelle is a master of American sign language so she claims that despite dropping out of the pageant, she has never been happier.

At the pageant, Amber's dance costume mysteriously goes missing. Amber blames Becky and the two get into a catfight. Gladys Leeman's right-hand woman Iris Clark (Mindy Sterling) and Amber's best friend and fellow contestant Lisa Swenson (Brittany Murphy) pull them apart. Pageant choreographer Chloris Klinghagen (Mary Gillis) then gives Amber a new costume to perform in, however Amber is told by both Iris and Gladys that she can't perform due to her new costume not being approved weeks in advance. Later, Lisa finds Amber crying as the fellow contestants try to console her. After learning about the costume situation, Lisa then drops out of the pageant in order to give her own approved costume to Amber. Amber then performs her tap dance number to a standing ovation. Rebecca sings a cringe-worthy rendition of "Can't Take My Eyes Off Of You" as she dances with a life-size Jesus doll on a crucifix, both amusing and horrifying the audience. During judging, the previous year's winner Mary Johanson (Alexandra Holden) (now hospitalized with anorexia) reprises her talent act (lip-synching "Don't Cry Out Loud") while being pushed around the stage in her hospital wheelchair in a re-enactment of her dance movements. When the winners are announced, cheerleader Leslie Miller (Amy Adams) is named second runner-up, Amber is named first runner-up, with Becky Leeman taking first place.

During the victory parade the next day, Becky is killed in a freak accident when the elaborate swan float (made in Mexico, to save her father money) on which she is riding bursts into flames and explodes. The grief-stricken Gladys flies into a blind rage and admits to having killed Tammy and to being responsible for all the attempts against Amber in the run-up to the pageant, and is immediately arrested. Rebecca's tragic death and Gladys's antics leave Amber as the new pageant winner.

At the State Competition, Amber wins the Minnesota American Teen Princess title by default after all the other contestants fall ill with seafood-related food poisoning, and Amber gets an all-expenses-paid trip to the national Sarah Rose American Teen Princess Pageant. Upon arrival there, Amber and the other state winners are devastated to find that the cosmetics company has been shut down by the IRS for tax evasion. This sends all the contestants except Amber on a rampage, vandalizing and destroying the property.

A few years later, Gladys escapes from prison and is sniping from the top of the Mount Rose supermarket, declaring her intent to take revenge on Amber. During the six-hour police standoff, a television reporter doing a live report at the scene is hit by a stray bullet. Amber quickly picks up the reporter's microphone and takes over reporting the story, impressing the news station with her poise and confidence. The film closes with a scene showing Amber as co-anchor of the evening news for Minneapolis–St. Paul television station WAZB-TV, thus living her dream of possibly becoming the next Diane Sawyer.

Cast[]

  • Kirsten Dunst as Amber Atkins
  • Ellen Barkin as Annette Atkins
  • Allison Janney as Loretta
  • Denise Richards as Rebecca Ann "Becky" Leeman
  • Kirstie Alley as Gladys Leeman
  • Sam McMurray as Lester Leeman
  • Mindy Sterling as Iris Clark
  • Brittany Murphy as Lisa Swenson
  • Amy Adams as Leslie Miller
  • Laurie Sinclair as Michelle Johnson
  • Shannon Nelson as Tess Weinhaus
  • Tara Redepenning as Molly Howard
  • Sarah Stewart as Jenelle Betz
  • Alexandra Holden as Mary Johanson
  • Brooke Elise Bushman as Tammy Curry
  • Matt Malloy as John Dough, Judge #1
  • Mike McShane as Harold Vilmes, Judge #2
  • Will Sasso as Hank Vilmes
  • Lona Williams as Jean Kangas, Judge #3
  • John T. Olson as Pat
  • Nora Dunn as Colleen Douglas, State Pageant
  • Mo Gaffney as Terry Macy, State Pageant
  • Adam West as Himself
  • Mary Gillis as Chloris Klinghagen
  • Richard Narita as Mr. Howard
  • Patti Yasutake as Mrs. Howard
  • Seiko Matsuda as Tina/Seiko Howard
  • Amanda Detmer as Miss Minneapolis
  • Thomas Lennon as Documentarian
  • Samantha Harris as Miss Burnsville

Background[]

The movie is set in the fictional town of Mount Rose, Minnesota. The town is based on Rosemount, where the writer, Lona Williams, grew up. The film was originally titled "Dairy Queens" but was changed for legal reasons.

The characters in the movie all sport exaggerated, over the top parodies of Minnesota accents.

The film was shot throughout the Carver County area, mainly in Waconia, Minnesota, although names of real Minnesota communities were shown on the sashes of contestants later in the movie.

News reporter Diane Sawyer is mentioned throughout the film as Kirsten Dunst's character Amber Atkins's idol as Sawyer was a former beauty pageant winner. Amber's other idols include her beauty pageant mother who raised her alone in a trailer park and the previous year's winner who is hospitalized for anorexia. Competing in the beauty pageant for a scholarship is juxtaposed against the opportunities that boys have in leaving "Mount Rose" such as hockey scholarships and prison.

Two Melissa Manchester songs are featured in the film as songs used in the talent portion by contestants. Mary lip-syncs "Don't Cry Out Loud", while Jenelle sings and signs "Through the Eyes of Love". Fanfare for the Common Man is played to introduce the parade for the rigged competition and the plight of Hank. "Are we on Cops again?" is used throughout the movie when the "mockumentary" film crew is spotted. Strauss's "Sunrise" (inspired by Friedrich Nietzsche's Thus Spoke Zarathustra) is played when the Minnesota state pageant is interrupted by the violent illness of the contestants who ate shellfish (all except Amber).

Reception[edit][]

The film received mixed reviews. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 46% based on 69 reviews. The site's consensus states: "Its dark humor sometimes hits, but mostly misses the target." Metacritic gives the film a score of 28% based on reviews from 28 critics, indicating generally unfavorable reviews. Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade "C-" on scale of A to F.

Many critics liked the modern interpretation of the pageant world although just as many people disliked the film as a whole. Allison Janney and Denise Richards in particular received praise for their performances from a number of critics. Dennis Harvey of Variety called the film "a fitfully amusing satire that would have gained a lot of mileage from just a tad more subtlety." Harvey says the writing is not sophisticated enough to pull off the some of the jokes without being condescending. Otherwise he praises the pacing, the performances, and the clever visual casting. Roger Ebert liked the idea of the film, but wrote that the script failed to translate into screenplay and is never quite funny enough, due to subtle miscalculations of production and performance. Jeff Vice of the Deseret News criticized the film for being derivative, comparing it to the 1975 pageant comedy Smile, and also Fargo and the mockumentary Waiting for Guffawing [sic]. Entertainment Weekly gave the film a D grade, and compared the film unfavorably to Smile, and The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom.

Cult status[]

The film has gained new fans with time and is regarded as a cult film. In 2011, Allison Janney stated that she is approached by more fans of this film than for her Emmy-winning tenure on The West Wing.

In July 2019, the movie was released for streaming for the first time on Hulu, which was "met with a host of celebratory tweets, particularly among women and queer people, who have long recognised it as a cult classic", according to The Independent's Adam White. The 20th anniversary of the movie's release on July 23 attracted a slew of retrospective praise from the likes of The Independent, The Guardian, Teen Vogue, The New Yorker and E! News. The New Yorker's Jia Tolentino credited the movie's "transformation" from a flop to a "venerated artifact of Y2K camp" to its slow discovery on VHS and DVD by teenage girls who identified with its truthfulness and particular brand of dark humor. Tolentino summed up the movie as "...offensive, for sure—completely awful, really, and possibly deadly. It is also irreplaceable, hilarious, surprisingly tender, and lavishly, magnificently absurd." The Guardian praised the film's "vicious indecency", describing it as "...trashy, wonderful, endlessly quotable, and...20 years ahead of its time."

Adam White from The Independent praised the movie's radical departure from lighthearted teen movies of the late 1990s, stating that it "was made for a generation of freaks and outsiders, whose ambitions, oddities, queerness and poverty were otherwise ignored by anything similarly mainstream or funny." He added that it was "acidic and truthful about beauty, class and ambition, satirised all-American moralism and blew up Denise Richards, then fresh from Wild Things, as she rode a giant paper-maché swan." Alex Zaragoza of Teen Vogue echoed other reviews in praising the movie's appeal to outsiders and misfits, and departing from the teen rom-com tropes of other movies released that year like 10 Things I Hate About You and She's All That. Zaragoza stated that the girls in Drop Dead Gorgeous "don't yearn to land their respective dream boy...they're too busy trying not to get clapped by a crazed mother-daughter duo... and striving to break out of the confines of their small town." He further described it as a "wild, absurdly portrayed story that's fundamentally about small-town struggles and overcoming the adversity of being born into a class that lacks opportunities to ultimately earn the life you've dreamed of for yourself. It's unabashed weirdness and mockumentary-style filmmaking made it an immediate cult classic..."

Soundtrack[]

Drop Dead Gorgeous:

Motion Picture Soundtrack

Soundtrack album by

Various Artists

Released July 13, 1999
Genre Soundtrack
Label Sire
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic
No. Title Performer Length
1. "400 Calories" (dialogue) Alexandra Holden (Mary Johanson) 0:21
2. "Number One" Lifeboy 2:56
3. "She" Sunday Suit 2:50
4. "Two Months Late" (dialogue) Amy Adams (Leslie Miller) and Thomas Lennon (the Documentarian) 0:19
5. "Love Is All Around" (Theme from The Mary Tyler Moore Show) Joan Jett 2:20
6. "Pressure Man" The Feelers 4:29
7. "FAQ" (dialogue) Michael McShane & Will Sasso (Harold & Hank Vilmes) 0:10
8. "Young Americans" (David Bowie cover) Everything 3:40
9. "Beautiful Dreamer" Mandy Barnett 3:42
10. "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting" Elton John 4:50
11. "Number One" (dialogue) Janney (Loretta) and Kirsten Dunst (Amber Atkins) 0:17
12. "Girl That's Hip" Tim Carroll 3:13
13. "Lost Picasso" Hot Sauce Johnson 3:16
14. "Boat Show" (dialogue) Kirstie Alley (Gladys Leeman) 0:09
15. "Ballad of a Teenage Queen" Dale Watson 2:26
16. "Counting" Skirt 2:30
17. "Watch You Sleep" The Nevers 5:23
18. "Confessions" Mark Mothersbaugh 2:37
19. "Beauty Pageant Biz" (dialogue) Nora Dunn (Colleen Douglas) 0:22
20. "Devil's Triangle" Primitive Radio Gods 2:06
21. "9mm" (dialogue) Denise Richards (Rebecca Ann Leeman) 0:16
22. "Can't Take My Eyes Off You" Denise Richards (Rebecca Ann Leeman) 2:02
23. "Last Laugh" (dialogue) Brittany Murphy (Lisa Swenson) 0:21
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