Personal Velocity is about these three woman who are each faced to make a big decision. In the first story there is Delia(Kyra Sedgwick)who gets constantly beaten up by her abusive husband and even though she loves him she takes her children and leaves him. In the second story there is Greta(Parker Posey)a woman with a successful career and a nice loving husband but she isn't happy and satisfied inside and finds herself constantly cheating on him. Finally, in the third story there is Paula(Fairuza Balk)a woman that has ran away from home and picks up a abused young hitchhiker. Okay, i get it, this story is all about these woman with some kind of problems but what exactly was this movie trying to say to it's audience, trying to teach us? What exactly was the point? The acting though was very powerful and strong by all three actresses. I would give Personal Velocity 6/10
Personal Velocity
2002
Action / Drama / Romance
Personal Velocity
2002
Action / Drama / Romance
Plot summary
In a series of three vignettes, three women in turn struggle to free themselves from the men who restrict their personal freedom.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
November 22, 2020 at 12:46 AM
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What Exactly Was The Point Of This Movie?
Intense and redeeming enough to overcome the awkward fliming and editing
Personal Velocity (2002)
Literally three short movies that have a similar sense of crisis for the leading woman, but which set up mostly contrasts and comparisons. It's dramatic, interesting, sometimes difficult emotional stuff. The intentions are superb, and the acting focused and believable. In all, as a low-budget indie production, this has seriousness and depth.
It also is awkward enough in its filming to keep it from quite taking off, or letting you get fully absorbed. At first the very simple (and often imperfect) camera-work seems like smart stylizing, but then it's clear it's also an issue of making do with limitations. There are even moments that shift to a series of still frames in sequence, which feels like artistic invention until you realize it's not really contributing to the larger feeling of things.
This isn't quite a nitpick, but it does counterbalance the rawness of the acting, rather than enhance it.
The three stories are similar in the sense the woman are forced to survive in relationships, and in worlds, that are often hostile and confusing. And what's great is how they all do, in fact survive. As bad, or as uncertain, as their lives get, there is finally that pulling up by the bootstraps and realizing that better things are possible.
You'll hardly think this is the case in the first of the three stories, as the leading woman is portrayed as very strong and yet brutally weaker than her crazed husband. This shift is so shocking it might make some viewers quit the movie. But there is redemption even in this story. And in the second story, which is partly about greed and ambition, the tone changes dramatically, moving from a very poor to a very rich situation. The third story crosses other lines and solidifies the larger intention of the movie as a set of comparable, if unrelated, scenarios.
It's good stuff, and you want mostly to see the director (and screenwriter) Rebecca Miller (who also did "Regarding Henry") continue to make really interesting movies.