An Open Secret

2014

Crime / Documentary

3
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 89% · 18 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 76% · 250 ratings
IMDb Rating 7.3/10 10 2495 2.5K

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Plot summary

An investigation into accusations of teenagers being sexually abused within the film industry.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
February 29, 2024 at 07:18 PM

Director

Top cast

Corey Haim as Self
Bryan Singer as Self
720p.WEB
905.1 MB
1280*532
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 38 min
Seeds 12

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by mhnm_g 8 / 10

More Effective than "Quiet on Set"

This was definitely more revealing than the Quiet on Set documentary. Perhaps its because I was too young to be familiar with the news covered in the film. However, it was important to see the stories unfold, understand the connections these men have to each other, and to learn just how negligent the parents were in this situation.

The admission of Michael to his crimes was scary to say the least. After hearing him go on about just how clear it was that abuse was going on, and then to find out he participated in horrible acts was very revealing of how these people think. When asked the question "Are you attracted to young boys?" he responds with "Not, particularly." That felt like a confession to me, especially after hearing him minimize the crimes of a friend while on the phone with his victim. He even says in an interview that kids can choose whether they see abuse as negative and have the option to not let it affect them, implying that abuse itself is a neutral event.

I felt sick hearing those parents describe the story of their son's abuse. From the start, the wife describe herself as "just a baby" when recounting the story of how she at 14 started dating her then 17 future husband. Clearly grooming and predator behavior is normalized in this family. Non consensually sharing his story when he doesn't have the capacity to tell it himself feels like another violation on his behalf. We don't need victim's specific stories to believe them and its irresponsible to feel entitled to people's stories.

This did give very helpful context to understanding the crimes of Brian Peck. But the film does go on to put an unnecessary responsibility on viewers to stop the abuse. There are legal and criminal proceedings that could protect kids, and viewers often don't know of abuse until its too late. There should be continued investigation on all TV networks employing child actors, from entities not associated with the networks(looking at you, Nickelodeon). I think there should also be a law that prevents children from seeing adult coworkers outside of work. Restrict the access they have to these kids, at the very least, since predators are attracted to industries where they have unmonitored access to children.

All in all the film felt important. The sharing of these stories continues to reveal patterns of abuse, and provides education for any parent who may not know what becoming a child actor really entails. The film was also helpful to understand the holes in our legal system.

Reviewed by TheFilmFreak1 7 / 10

Effective, but Tainted

Since the horrific revelations concerning Harvey Weinstein, this documentary has received a significant amount of renewed interest, mostly due to the decision by executive producer Matthew Valentinas to re-release the film on Vimeo after an extremely limited theatrical release in 2014 not long after the scandal broke. Whilst the category of people that are the target of sexual abuse differ between the Weinstein story and this documentary, the incompetence (and potential complicity) of the Hollywood system evident in the abuse is much the same. This gives the already emotionally heavy documentary added weight that was only compounded by the revelations concerning actor Kevin Spacey and the further accusations directed against director Bryan Singer.

Unfortunately a great deal of the coverage it has received since the Vimeo release has been from reactionary conservatives such as Mark Dice and Alex Jones, which has given the film the surface appearance of an exploitation piece designed more to permit Middle America their two minutes of righteous hate for the mean liberals who challenge their senpai Trump than to actually guide the film industry to better things. Producer Gabe Hoffman is to blame for much of this, as it has been his voice on the film's social media platforms that has associated the film's cause with lots of ugly, reactionary right-wing opinions and, worse still, memes. He should learn that people who complain about Hollywood's depravity are more often complaining about Hollywood's hypocrisy in pointing it out in others than decrying the horror of ignoring credible accusations. Furthermore, I find it suspicious that the film fills its run-time ENTIRELY with five stories of male-on-male abuse (one who I think might have even been over 18 when the abuse happened), ignoring the half of the population that has historically had less power in Tinseltown. Could it be that Hoffman wanted to capitalise on the aversion some viewers have towards homosexuals to try and make his pedophilia movie shock viewers more?

Ultimately, however, the film itself is objective and non-sensational whilst retaining a strong sense of the suffering of its five subjects. Evan Henzi, a charming, compassionate teenager who suffered terrible molestation by his talent agent from the age of 12 (and threats of being sued by Hoffman when Henzi complained about certain elements of the documentary), has the most engaging story to tell, whilst Michael Egan III, who a year later was convicted for fraud (and whose accusations against Bryan Singer have essentially been discredited), has the least engaging story, primarily because it is so vague. I attribute the tone and quality of the footage captured solely to Amy J. Berg, an Academy Award winning documentarian renowned for her ability to speak truth to institutions awash with corruption and complacency. Her flare for the subtly dramatic also gives the film something of a tear-jerker ending mixed with a twist for one of the five subjects followed that, if not for the contentious suitability of the subject for a documentary about abuse of underage aspiring actors, is the film's greatest artistic triumph.

Yet Berg is by no means a perfect fit for the material, as her aforementioned focus on depraved institutions results in the film having a lack of focus. It tortuously struggles to find a root cause for the whole problem, but unlike the Catholic Church or the American justice system (both past subjects of hers), Hollywood is not hierarchical enough to be reasonably declared totally apathetic on an institutional level. There's no chain of command that would have had to have known about these complaints, and the film's one attempt to try and blame a consortium of shadow investors for having knowledge of 'pedophile pool parties' is it's biggest research failure. In reality (certainly according to Chris Turcotte, who complained about being grossly misquoted in the film) most of the attending models were likely 18 years plus or one or two years shy, with a small - but nevertheless disturbing - minority of 15 to 13 year olds mixed in, and only three people were ever said to be present whilst these underage boys were skinny-dipping in the pool. The owner of the house where these parties were held, Marc Collins-Rector, is painted as the head of this conspiracy, but about the only co-conspirators the documentary can confidently offer up are his two live-in male concubines, Brock Pierce and Chad Shackley... PEDOWOOD CONFIRMED!! At least we can all agree Collins-Rector is horrible.

Nevertheless, the film does a fine job at demonstrating that there are far too few safe guards against child predation, and far too few professional consequences for those found to have committed gross violations of standards of fundamental human decency. See this film to get a sense of the problem, but don't expect it to give you any clear direction of what action to take next, and against whom.

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