Thou Shall Not KillFun (1994) Director: Rafael Zelinsky Starring: Renee Humphry, Alicia Witt Comparisons to Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment notwithstanding, Rafael Zelinsky's Fun is a mature, ambitious adaptation of a theme too often mired in the simple minded. Fun explores the minds and actions of two teenage girls (Renee Humphry and Alicia Witt) whose quest for stimulation culminates in the murder of an elderly woman, an act they later claim was "just for fun." The plot unravels through the girls' daily counseling sessions - affectionately dubbed "tea time" - at a juvenile detention center. Interspersed among this documentary-like footage (shot in real time, with black and white film) are vividly colored, achronological flashbacks detailing the pair's torrid, one day relationship and violent climax. What motivates two seemingly ordinary adolescent females to commit such a heinous crime? Zelinsky provides no easy answers, only speculation. However, Fun's ambiguity is in no way a cop-out. Reality dictates that only a multitude of deep-rooted, psychological factors would lead such characters to kill, and Zelinsky pursues many of these. Ultimately, it is Zelinsky's decision not Murder, and the motivations behind it, are not the sole focus of Fun. Zelinsky spends equal time examining the unusual relationship between the film's protagonists, Hillary and Bonnie. Superficially, the characters appear to be total opposites: Hillary, a streetwise, confident leader; Bonnie, a waif-like young girl trapped in a teenager's body. Yet, the two admit bonding in a way best described as "love at first sight." We "get high just on each other's company," Bonnie admits. However, later in the film questions emerge concerning their one-day "love affair." Is their relationship one of friendship or sexual desire? Are Bonnie's tales of her checkered upbringing legitimate or a figment of her elaborate imagination? And, perhaps most importantly, is the cigarette-smoking, tough-talking Hillary really the stronger personality of the two? Many critics have praised the performances of Witt and Humphry; the film won two Jury Awards for "best acting" at its initial Sundance screening. The accolades are well deserved. The pair command the audience's attention with brutal, emotional, and often ad-libbed dialogue. Their performance, combined with Fun's choppy editing and camera work, creates a mood that is strictly non-Hollywood. In fact, the longer Fun continues, the easier it is to forget that you are watching a work of fiction.
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