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      • Students and fans of Henry Miller's provocative work and unique writing style may get something out of this bad romance. But for everyone else, it's unenjoyable and cringey on all levels. Funnymen Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg may have produced this sexually inappropriate thriller, but it's not funny, and it's not satire.
      www.commonsensemedia.org/movie-reviews/millers-girl
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  2. Jan 26, 2024 · The debut feature from writer-director-producer Jade Halley Bartlett is dripping with Southern gothic style, as star Jenna Ortega makes clear early in dreamy, self-aware narration that spells out everything.

  3. Jan 24, 2024 · Miller’s Girl’ Review: A Small-Town Teen Learns That Adult Ambition Comes at a Steep Price. Writer-director Jade Halley Bartlett makes a promising debut with a literate but predictable...

  4. Jan 24, 2024 · Miller's Girl is an early gem in the 2024 new movie slate; a psychological thriller that features a great leading pair in Ortega and Freeman and a promising debut from a new director that we should be on the lookout for moving forward.

    • michael.balderston@futurenet.com
  5. A talented young writer (Jenna Ortega) embarks on a creative odyssey when her teacher (Martin Freeman) assigns a project that entangles them both in an increasingly complex web.

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    • Jade Halley Bartlett
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    • Jenna Ortega
  6. Jan 25, 2024 · A work of glaring artifice, “Miller’s Girl,” written and directed by Jade Halley Bartlett, is being touted as a psychological thriller, but it’s too vapid and silly to do much besides ...

  7. Jan 26, 2024 · Upon first glance, Miller’s Girl is a romantic thriller set in a dark academia world that seems entrancing. And in moments, it is. Starring Jenna Ortega as Cairo, a highly intelligent 18-year...

  8. Jan 26, 2024 · The putatively provocative and wannabe-controversial erotic thriller “Miller’s Girl” is a sordid little tale that isn’t nearly as clever and literary as it tries to be, nor is it as deliberately campy as 20th century entries in the genre such as “Wild Things” or even “Poison Ivy.”