"Blush" (a.k.a., "Imaginary Order") showcased some snappy dialogue and creative situations in the life of the protagonist Cathy, who may be best described as a desperate housewife.
It is a constant struggle for Cathy to interface with her daughter Tara and her husband Matthew. The scenes early in the film had crackling humor as Cathy seeks to extricate herself from a variety of predicaments. Everything seems to go wrong in her basic human interactions.
When she housesits for her sister, her main task is to care for the cat, and the cat dies. She then becomes engaged in a bizarre relationship with the sister's neighbor, Gemma Jean. Then, an even more reckless relationship begins between Cathy and Gemma Jean's son Xander. Before she realizes it, Cathy has become a pill-popping version of Mrs. Robinson.
Just when the style seemed to be heading into pure farce, the tone shifted, and the film began to take itself too seriously. In the home stretch, Cathy tries to piece her life back together with only marginal success.
There might have been a more uplifting sense to "Blush" if Cathy could have lightened up about the foibles in her life. Instead, she turned inward with few results other than falling into a narcissism that merited pity more than the empathy.
Plot summary
The sexual, psychological, and moral unraveling of an obsessive-compulsive suburban mom.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
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Top cast
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Desperate Housewife
My New Best Friend
Cathy (Wendi McLendon-Covey ) has a very orderly life as a compulsive person. When she cat sits for her sister, she meets the new neighbors and her whole world goes to pieces. The drama and tension become thick.
I didn't like any of the characters. The plot dragged whenever Xander was in it. There were far too many scenes of moody teens who say "nothing" or take long pauses of silence. Okay, we get the picture. Teens are not entertaining.
Guide: F-word. No sex or nudity.
Very compelling :: American Beauty comparison
Hi all - I just watched this movie and really liked it. Each character is very developed and interesting. McLendon-Covey is compelling and very relatable. I'm curious if anyone else noticed similarities to American Beauty? It's almost as if this story is the American Beauty storyline told from a totally different (but equally as interesting) perspective.