Steven Soderbergh has never been afraid to show a bit of diversity with his filmmaking. He can go from such mainstream, high-profile fare as Out of Sight and the Ocean's series, and then take a step back into the land of the small, intimate and independent with the likes of Che, Bubble, and Solaris. His latest, The Girlfriend Experience, is another case of the latter, a film that continues to show that Soderbergh can almost masterfully go from being one type of filmmaker to another without a hitch. It's just a shame, then, that it lacks the enjoyability and intellectual stimulation that we have come to expect from Soderbergh, whatever mode he is in.
The Girlfriend Experience stars adult film star sensation, Sasha Grey, as high-class escort, Chelsea, who thinks she has her life balanced. But it soon becomes very clear that leading the kind of professional life she does is going to intimately affect everything she does, including having a bearing on her non-work related relationships and how other people see her.
The Girlfriend Experience is undoubtedly a creatively complex film, one that strides along at entirely its own pace, never stopping for trite, needless sentimentality. This is evident right across Soderbergh's body of directorial work, even in the star-studded Ocean's series. But while that may make an interesting film on a technical level, one to be admired because of its almost vehement determination not to be anything resembling run-of-the-mill fare, in terms of enjoyment it is sorely lacking.
The structure of the film feels fractured and broken, jumping about from place to place, day to day, time to time, never really giving the audience much clues beyond its main character saying things like, "I had dinner with him last night.." amongst the almost endless everyday conversations which make up the majority of the film. Clearly the latter isn't the doing of Soderbergh himself (at least not directly), as he holds a directing but not a writing credit on the film. But it is nonetheless he who has chosen to structure the film in such a frustratingly all-over-the-place-way, alienating the viewer to the point of not even being to empathize with its main character in pretty much any way.







Article comments
1 - Bryan
The things you disliked about the film were exactly some of the things I loved. I had the feeling of some of Godard's earlier work, right down to the discussion of politics & current events.
Though I can't fault you for not appreciating the distanced tone. It's certainly not for everyone. I am glad though that unlike some reviewers you managed to distinguish between a deliberately flat performance and unintentionally flat acting when discussing Sasha Grey's role!
2 - Ross Miller
@Bryan,
Thanks for your comments. You're right, it's definitely not a movie for everyone, and I've often found that things some people point out as weaknesses in a certain movie actually are things I like. It's all subjective. I appreciated the subjects that made up the conversations in TGE, but just the way they were presented just didn't click with me for whatever reason.
And yes, Grey's performance was definitely controlled and entirely on purpose i.e. not as a result of bad acting.
Thanks again for the comments, bud. Feel free to check out my other reviews from the festival!
3 - curieux
Movies often portray sex-workers, but their customers remain well hidden ? faceless and nameless. "As a filmmaker, I simply wanted to reveal what is hidden - the john". So says Pietrobruno ? the director of GFE: GIRLFRIEND EXPERIENCE. An entertaining peek into the world of prostitution from the client?s point of view, Pietrobruno?s GFE: GIRLFRIEND EXPERIENCE follows a man obsessed with prostitutes who discovers that love is a lot more expensive than sex.