The Hollywood Reporter by Caryn James
The best that can be said about When I’m a Moth is that it is not lurid, although it does seem pointless.
United States, Canada · 2019
1h 31m
Director Magdalena Zyzak, Zachary Cotler
Starring Addison Timlin, TJ Kayama, Toshiji Takeshima
Genre Drama
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An "un-biopic" of the young Hilary Rodham set in 1969, during the unverifiable weeks her autobiography has her working at an Alaskan salmon cannery. A parable about America, political narratives, and the absence of free will.
The Hollywood Reporter by Caryn James
The best that can be said about When I’m a Moth is that it is not lurid, although it does seem pointless.
Every so often, a motion picture comes around that’s so dreadful you wonder what prompted anyone to want to waste their time making it and your time watching it to such a degree. When I’m a Moth holds that dubious distinction.
Timlin bears a good-enough resemblance, and gives as much of a rounded performance as she can. But this conception provides no insight into any real HRC, past or present, and seems trite even as a fictionalized act of hostility toward whatever she represents to the filmmakers. Which is, in a word, murky.
Timlin is terrific, showing us a wonk and political animal in the making — focused, unintimidated and kind of fearless, a young woman traveling solo to the roughest corner of the country for smelly, disgusting work with the hardened souls who perform it.
A reluctant vampire and a suicidal teenager concoct a plan.