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I Think We’re Alone Now Review, Fantastic Fest 2008

I Think We’re Alone Now Review, Fantastic Fest 2008

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
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If distributors came to Fantastic Fest this year looking for the next Timecrimes, and badge holders descended hungry for a peek at the next There Will Be Blood, it’s interesting that one of the most talked about films on the schedule has ended up being not a world premiere, not a surprise preview of an Oscar contender, not an unknown international oddity, and not even, really, a genre film, but a documentary made by an American 25 year-old which has been on the festival circuit for nine months.

And yet, the popularity of I Think We’re Alone Now (otherwise known as The Tiffany Stalker Movie) at Fantastic Fest makes a certain perfect sense, and not just because this audience is accustomed to stories of sexual obsession (usually fictional, usually much gorier). In putting a camera in the faces of two lonely, mentally unwell adults, who are both desperate for the attention but incapable of filtering their stories, director Sean Donnelly has made what could be classified as an exploitation film. But even more appropriate for the venue, it’s an exploitation film tailor-made for anyone familiar with unrequited longing, and it wouldn’t work at all if Donnelly’s genuine care for his subjects didn’t shine through.

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I Think We’re Alone Now. Clip of the Day.

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
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The Playlist points to the trailer for I Think We’re Alone Now, a documentary about stalkers/devoted fans of late 80s teen pop tart Tiffany, which will debut at Slamdance next month. The film centers on two fans, the creepier of whom is seen standing in the front row of a modern-day Tiffany show, despite the fact that the singer apparently got a restraining order against him during her heyday. The whole thing looks extremely creepy, but my favorite part is an exchange at the end, where a normal Tiffany fan has her relationship to Tiffany questioned by the aforementioned creepazoid. Ick.

For more info on the film, including Slamdance screening times, check out its website.