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Incredible New Christian Singer
and Songwriter

Evie Haskell
www.eviehaskell.com
Sample Music:
www.myspace.com/
eviehaskell
Contemporary Worship in the
Style of Chris Tomlin
Supporters of
Christian Hot Spot:

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Omega Solutions Group
Cast and Crew:

Featuring:
Hilary Duff, Haylie Duff, Anjelica Huston, Brent
Spiner, Lukas Haas, Maria Conchita Alonso

Director:
Martha Coolidge

Producer:
Susan Duff, David Faigenblum, Milton Kim, Eve
LaDue, Mark Morgan, Guy Oseary, Tim Wesley

Distributor:
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
Movie: Material Girls
2 of 4 Stars

Rated PG for Language and Crude Humor

Reviewer:  Susan Quirk
The saying, “you can never be too rich or too
thin,” must be a favorite of the makers of
Material Girls. Ultra-thin glamour sisters Tanzie
(Hilary Duff) and Ava (Haylie Duff) are the heirs
of Marchetta cosmetics, a wildly successful
cosmetic company founded by their late father.
Their involvement in the company (and
apparently this movie) seems to be an excuse
to wear an excessive amount of makeup and
scandalous outfits showcased in endless
forums.
When acting CEO of Marchetta Cosmetics,
Tommy (Brent Spiner) suggests selling the
company to rival cosmetic tycoon, Fabriella
(Angelica Huston) following reports of faulty
ingredients causing gruesome facial rashes,
the girls are cut off from their charge accounts
and left to sort things out. Extreme wealth and
acclaimed beauty certainly has not bestowed
any intelligence or common sense on the
sisters as evidenced in scenes where they
fumble around burning their house down and
trying to figure out how to ride a bus.
When they are welcomed into the house of their
former housekeeper (Maria Conchita Alonzo),
they are surprised to learn that she has two
small children that she has been separated
from because they have not yet been allowed
to immigrate. This revelation is the only moment
of anything remotely interesting or story worthy
in the entire film.
The Bible is clear on the issue of money and
style: “Do not lay up for yourselves treasures
upon earth, where moth and rust destroy, and
where thieves break in and steal. But lay up for
yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither
moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves do
not break in or steal” (Matthew 6:19-20) and “Is
not life more than food, and the body than
clothing?” (Matthew 6:25).
We expect the riches-to-rags and back-to-
riches storyline to provide an opportunity for
characters to develop and change perspective,
shatter some stereotypes, or at least gain some
depth, but our material girls, Tanzie and Ava,
seem to gain validation of their supposed
superiority being white, rich and skinny in
America. While snooping around the corporate
offices of Marchetta Cosmetics, the girls
disguise themselves as janitors. They speak
with exaggerated Hispanic accents and Tanzie
has fixed her hair in a Latina style and wears
tacky black lip liner. In addition, when the girls
visit a former client who lives in a moderate
middleclass neighborhood, the woman has
fifteen cats in her dirty house. Again, on the city
bus after fearing “people pee on bus seats”
sure enough, the passengers are filthy, stinking
creatures. References are made about people
that eat Dominoes Pizza as being “white trash,”
and a public unemployment clerk is obese and
sneezing everywhere, thus Tanzie and Avia
confirm that poor people are gross and
beneath them.
For a PG-rated film geared toward girls aged
ten to tweens, the content of this film was not
only extremely inane, but also very
inappropriate. There are club scenes with
alcohol, a stereotypical gay character, tight
cleavage-baring outfits, freak dancing, and too
numerous to count exclamations of “Oh my
God,” an exclamation of “sh*t happens,” a joke
about Prozac, a strange reference to Marilyn
Manson, and the phrase “screwier than
Courtney Love.” Most offensive of all was a
played-out scene where Tanzie wears an
extremely low cut and pushed up outfit and
repeatedly bends over seductively in front of
the male attendant to gain entrance to a news
studio.
This movie teaches young girls that using their
sexuality is the only way to get what they want.
Tanzie is arrested and assumed a prostitute, as
well she should be. Her time in jail includes a
disturbing scene with real detained prostitutes
who begin to paw at her.
Skin-tight, bra revealing clothing was the
standard uniform for ultra thin Tanzie and Ava. I
cannot help but wonder how many teenaged
girls in the audience who experienced pre-
pubescence pudginess along with Miss Duff in
her “Lizzy McGuire” days will think “Uh oh” when
they go home and look in the mirror.
There is nothing material in Material Girls and
very few laughs. Teen girls want a good story,
characters they care about, and a touch of
romance. Material Girls is a vacuous film, that
almost makes a Mary Kate and Ashley video
appear academic in comparison.
Violence: None / Profanity: Mild / Sex/Nudity:
Mild
Incredible New Christian Singer and
Songwriter

Evie Haskell
www.eviehaskell.com
Sample Music:
www.myspace.com/
eviehaskell
Contemporary Worship in the Style
of Chris Tomlin

Vote for Evie Haskell
on Indie Heaven
Indie Heaven
Netflix, Inc.
Supporters of
Christian Hot Spot:

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The Redmond Athletic Club
Balloon Flowers
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Radio Show Classics
Omega Solutions Group
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