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  2. Jun 6, 2003 · "May" is a horror film and something more and deeper, something disturbing and oddly moving. It begins as the story of a strange young woman, it goes for laughs and gets them, it functions as a black comedy, but then it glides past the comedy and slides slowly down into a portrait of madness and sadness.

  3. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › mayMay | Rotten Tomatoes

    Feb 7, 2003 · 70% Tomatometer 71 Reviews 75% Audience Score 25,000+ Ratings Young misfit May (Angela Bettis) endured a difficult childhood because of her lazy eye. And though contact lenses have helped May...

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    • Angela Bettis
    • May (2002) Plot Summary & Movie Synopsis
    • Why Is May Attracted to Adam?
    • What Happened During May’s Date with Adam?
    • How Did May’s Doll Suzie Get destroyed?
    • How Does May Create Amy?
    • May (2002) Movie Themes, Explained

    PROLOGUE

    May opens with a disturbing image of the eponymous character May (Angela Bettis) who is screaming in front of the mirror, clutching her hand over the bloody part of her face where her right eye should be. Interspersed with the body parts of dolls falling down a dark background, we witness a few montages from May’s troubled childhood. Her mother (Merle Kennedy) tells a young May (Chandler Riley Hecht) that she has one lazy eye, but nonetheless, she is going to make her look perfect. A couple o...

    Flash forward to the present, MayDove Canady is a lonely and weird young woman in her mid-twenties who is shy, infantilized, and deprived of human contact. As an adult, she is still surrounded by dolls, and her only friend appears to be Suzie, the doll gifted by her mother, with which she constantly interacts about her day-to-day events. She longs ...

    On their first date, May reveals that she never had a boyfriend before and warns him that she is a little bit “weird.” But he assures her and tells that, “I like weird. I like weird a lot.” Adam invites May to his apartment where he shows off his aspiration to become a filmmaker. During their first kiss, she follows her doll’s crazy instructions on...

    May goes home heartbroken and receives a message from Polly inviting her over. During their conversation, May tells Polly that she is “weird.” Again, like Adam, Polly reassures May that, “I love weird.” May starts a romantic affair with Polly. When she sees blind children playing in the park near the clinic, she inquires about volunteering at the s...

    On Halloween night, May puts on a homemade costume similar to Suzie’s dress, straightens her hair, and puts on white facial powder as well as blood-red lipstick. She buys a large ice cooler hooked on a dolly and goes out to hunt. Adopting a normal and brave personality unlike her stammering child-like conduct, she goes to Polly’s house first. While...

    SOCIAL ALIENATION AND DESIRE FOR COMPANIONSHIP

    The film painstakingly deliberates on the human desire for companionship and the experience of loneliness and alienation in the absence of social connections. As a child, May was permanently ostracized by those around her when she wore an eye patch over her lazy eye to school. Her warped upbringing and the fussiness over her perceived defect left her devoid of friends and in isolation. Suzie, the doll gifted by her mother, was her lone confidante, with whom she communicates without reserve. D...

    THE MYTH OF FRANKENSTEIN’S MONSTER

    May utilizes the myth of Frankenstein’s monster with a gender twist. While Mary Shelley’s groundbreaking novel Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) embodies the concept of unrestrained godlike science, May is the victim of loneliness and her warped perception of companionship. May adapts the classic Frankenstein story and exhibits signs of both the scientist and the monster. We can draw a parallel between the scientist Victor and May as they both collect parts and sew them together...

    QUEST FOR PHYSICAL PERFECTION

    May thematically explores the obsession with bodily perfection and the objectification and dehumanization of the human body that reduces them to their parts. The titular character May sees herself as an assortment of parts due to her amblyopia aka “lazy eye”, a characteristic fixated upon by her mother that defines how May sees herself. A perfectionist and a fusspot, May’s mother was disappointed by May’s perceived imperfection or defect and couldn’t accept any part of her daughter that is le...

  4. May Reviews. All Critics. Top Critics. All Audience. Verified Audience. Kat Hughes THN. A slow-burn psychological thriller with plenty of WTF moments, May is a perfect spin on the...

  5. The film has nice clean cinematography but it's forgettable & there's no style or flair here. With a supposed budget of about $500,000 May is technically very good for a low budget film but thats the best thing you can say about it as it's a touch forgettable. The acting is very good by all involved.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › May_(film)May (film) - Wikipedia

    Critical reception. The film received favorable reviews from critics. Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports that 70% of 69 critics have given the film a positive review, with a rating average of 6.1/10. The site's critical consensus states that it is an "above average slasher flick." [7]

  7. Dec 31, 2015 · May (Movie Review) Spencer's rating: ★ ★ ★ ½ Director: Lucky McKee | Release Date: 2002. By Spencer on December 31st, 2015. Angela Bettis gives what is certainly one of the great horror performances of the last 20 years as the weird, terrifying title character in Lucky McKee’s May, but not everyone else is able to keep up. In the movie ...

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