Cam (film)

Cam is a 2018 American psychological horror film directed by Daniel Goldhaber and written by Isa Mazzei from a story by Goldhaber, Mazzei and Isabelle Link-Levy. The story is partially drawn from writer Mazzei's own experience working as a camgirl. The film is the first feature film for both Goldhaber and Mazzei.[2]

Cam
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDaniel Goldhaber
Produced by
  • Isabelle Link-Levy
  • Adam Hendricks
  • John H. Lang
  • Greg Gilreath
Screenplay by
  • Isa Mazzei
Story by
  • Daniel Goldhaber
  • Isa Mazzei
  • Isabelle Link-Levy
Starring
Music byGavin Brivik
CinematographyKatelin Arizmendi
Edited byDaniel Garber
Production
company
Distributed byNetflix
Release date
  • July 18, 2018 (2018-07-18) (Fantasia)
  • November 16, 2018 (2018-11-16) (United States)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1 million[1]

It stars Madeline Brewer, Patch Darragh, Melora Walters, Devin Druid and Michael Dempsey. It is a co-production between Divide/Conquer, Blumhouse Productions and Gunpowder & Sky.

The film premiered at the Fantasia International Film Festival on July 18, 2018,[3] and was released on November 16, 2018, by Netflix. It received a largely positive reception from critics, who praised Brewer's performance, atmosphere and direction.

Plot

Alice Ackerman works as a camgirl online, broadcasting live shows from a studio she has set up in her home under the name "Lola_Lola". She is obsessed with her rank on the site, hoping to be number 1. Her mother is unaware of her career, believing that she works in web development. In one show, Alice simulates suicide on camera by pretending to slit her throat and using fake blood. This earns her large tips and increased popularity. She video chats with Barney, a big tipper and a loyal audience, and he suggests they meet while he is in town. Alice writes down the date and location before Barney suddenly logs off.

In her next show, Alice finally hits the top 50, but barely has a chance to celebrate before her rank starts dropping due to a rival cam girl, Princess_X. Soon, Alice notices that "Lola" is currently streaming even though she is not online. She contacts the site's customer service but they assure her that playing old shows is impossible. Alice is locked out of her account so she logs in to a spare account to watch the show. The "Lola" on-screen responds to Alice's chats, proving that the show is indeed live. The woman on the broadcast looks and acts exactly like the real Alice. Alice's account is banned for attempting to warn viewers of the doppelganger so she creates a new one.

Meanwhile, her younger brother Jordan's friends see a stream by the fake Lola while attending Jordan's birthday party, which they then show him. He gets into a fight with his friend who called Alice a porn star, before confronting Alice in front of their mother and the other guests. Her secret exposed, Alice panics and leaves. The Lola double, meanwhile, stages elaborate shows with more effects, like simulating suicide by gunshot, bringing her rank up. At first, Alice suspects Princess_X is behind this but she is not. She contacts the police but they refuse to help. With no hope, she sees that a cam girl named Baby is advertising an upcoming live show with "Lola" and attempts to get into contact with the girl. During her meeting with Barney, Alice is able to glean from him information about Baby's location. She excuses herself to the bathroom to further investigate on her phone, and "Lola" goes live. Barney sees it and confronts Alice, accusing her of lying about her identity before assaulting her. Alice narrowly manages to escape.

Alice finds Baby's real name, Hannah Darin. She then finds out that Hannah Darin died in a car crash months ago. The fact that Baby is still broadcasting live means that whatever created the Lola copy also made one of Baby. Alice watches Lola and Baby's live show and identifies other cam girls she believes to be replicas. She notices that all of them have "Tinker" as their top friend and goes to confront him. He tells her he knows about the replicas, but that he is not behind them. He goes to the bathroom to have a private cam session with Lola. Enraged, Alice also interacts with Lola, who does not recognize that Alice is identical to her.

Alice goes home and uses her vanity mirror, camera, and television to create an image which shows both her and the double. Viewers chalk up the two Lolas to special effects. Alice challenges Lola to a contest where they must imitate each other and whoever the viewers think does the best wins. If Alice wins, she gets to ask anything of Lola. The two compete by performing increasingly violent acts on themselves, culminating in Alice breaking her own nose. Alice is declared the winner and she demands Lola's account password. She then deletes Lola's account just as it reaches the number 1 rank.

Sometime later, she prepares to start a live show under a new account, with her now supportive mother assisting. The film ends as she starts all over again with a new identity.

Cast

Production

Screenwriter Isa Mazzei, a former cam girl herself, originally wanted to create a documentary film about cam girls. She decided that a documentary was not the best medium, telling Vice, "I felt like often, for people that I talk to about camming, no matter how much I would explain it or show it to them, they still didn't fully get it." She decided a horror film would be a better way to present the story.[4]

Much of the story was drawn from Mazzei's own experience as a cam girl. The story element of Lola having her image stolen came from Mazzei having her camming videos pirated and reposted without crediting her.[4] Alice's interactions with the police officers are taken from Mazzei and other sex workers' experiences of being dismissed and hit on when reaching out for help. According to Mazzei, the question one of the police officers asks her, "What's the weirdest thing you've ever had to do?", was actually asked of her by several Hollywood executives in meetings once they learned that she had previously worked as a cam model.[4]

Mazzei and director Daniel Goldhaber had been friends since high school, and he had previously directed some of her pornographic videos. Goldhaber's directing credits had previously only been shorts and student films.[2]

The film was shot over 20 days.[2] Principal photography on the film began on March 27, 2017. The film wrapped on April 23, 2017.[5]

The film has a joint opening credit "A Film by Isa Mazzei & Daniel Goldhaber", in place of the traditional opening credit which only credits the director. According to Mazzei and Goldhaber this was done as "a rebuke to director-oriented auteurship".[2]

Release

The film had its world premiere at the Fantasia International Film Festival on July 18, 2018.[6] Shortly after, Netflix acquired distribution rights to the film.[7] It was released on November 16, 2018.[8]

Reception

Critical response

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 93% based on 95 reviews, with an average rating of 7.15/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Smart and suspenseful, CAM is a techno-thriller that's far more than the sum of its salacious parts -- and an outstanding showcase for Madeline Brewer in the leading role."[9] Metacritic reports a weighted average score 71 out of 100, based on 17 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[10]

Accolades

Award Date of Ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
Brooklyn Horror Film Festival October 23, 2018 Best Actress - Head Trip Competition Madeline Brewer Won [11]
Best Production Design - Head Trip Competition Emma Rose Mead Won
Audience Choice Award Cam Won
Fantasia International Film Festival July 24, 2018 New Flesh Award for Best Feature Film Daniel Goldhaber Won [12]
Cheval Noir Award for Best Screenplay Isa Mazzei Won [12]
Philadelphia Film Festival October 30, 2018 Archie Award for Best Feature Film Daniel Goldhaber Nominated [13]
gollark: <@700434270157668514> no.
gollark: That could be kept or changed I guess.
gollark: Time measurement is a social construct. It can be changed to exclude the existence of 03:42 PM.
gollark: Also, imperial units, really?
gollark: Hmm, if I redefine time so that 3:42 PM never actually occurs can I become immortal?

References

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