07 Apr 2015 ● English ● 1 hr 50 mins
Cast: Adrian Gorbaliuk, Hailey Heisick
Crew: Rob Villano (Director), Rob Villano (Director of Photography), Jeryl Orsino (Music Director)
Release Dates: 07 Apr 2015 (United States)
Tagline: The Life and Death of Jayne Mansfield
This film is heavy duty drama! The life of a fifties ICON and Woman ahead of her time is not an easy story to tell in under 2 hours time. It also isn't easy to tell in an independent film when the timeline featured is 1955-1967! the story line is very personal to me so it is very hard to be unbiased. The actress who played Jayne Mansfield, Hailey Heisick is Amazing. Although she is not a ringer for her she possesses physical attributes and has definitely done her homework with voice inflection and mannerisms.
Adrian Gorbaliuk the actor who portrays Mickey Hargitay is amazing probably better than he even thinks! He possesses real innocents that Mickey held without even trying to. His accent and physical traits were spot on. Actor Mike Funk who plays Jayne's third husband was perfect as the antagonistic loud mouth New Yorker who everyone hated. Mr. funk plays the shit out of him to perfection. Other great smaller performances Patti Ivy as Jayne's mother, T.J. McNeil as 60's weirdo poet Jan Cremer and the Kooky Susan Capicotto as Jayne's best friend Columnist May Mann.
This is not a feel good film. It is sad, it is about addiction and disappointment but it's done very well on a budget! I recommend it highly!
Undertaking a production like this without a huge budget was one hell of a risk. In the right ( Or wrong ) hands set design alone could literally eat up the modest budget for a larger production, never mind it's impact on an Indie one. Never the less, director Rob Villano decided to attempt what could have been a hazardous production using writer Frank Ferruccio's book as the base for the screenplay. The results are a mixed bag at times. Diamonds To Dust flirts with greatness at times, slums it... and then rebounds back to the top. In terms of sheer entertainment this turbulent biopic easily holds it's own; but it could have been so much more.
The problems with Diamonds To Dust begin straight after the intro credit roll. In a nutshell? The coloring and filters. I totally understand the impulse to color this film like it was made many, many years ago. A film that takes place in the 1950s and 60s? Sounds like a great idea in theory. Theory doesn't always work in the real world though. The coloring just kept taking me straight out of the film but not as much as the filters and vignettes. At times the mixing of the darker colors and vignettes made it a real pain in the ass to watch and take in the film. Thankfully, the filters ease up as the movie goes on and eventually, your eyes adjust to the poor coloring choices. The other aspect which kept concerning me was the inconsistency of the actors. At times, the acting was brilliant and completely engaging all around the board! Other times it came across as scripted, hollow and without feeling. Sometimes this happened scene to scene! For the most part, Hailey Heisick did a great job in the lead role, allowing you to forget for a time it was an actress you were watching, playing a part. Most of the inconsistent performances came from the supporting parts. Again, no one person really stood out because the acting was so up and down. I have no doubt that the talent was all there, it just felt like it wasn't completely utilized at times. The lack of focus and direction at these points in the film really hurt what was overall a great production.
In the end, we have an above average film that at times showed total signs of greatness. Without the issues I wrote about above this could easily have been one of the few to earn a perfect rating! It's all there! As Diamonds To Dust sits right now, we've got an entertaining piece of Independent art that blew away my expectations and I was glad to have watched. This is a real, not watered down biopic of a strong woman navigating her way through the era of men, booze and movies! Although not as perfect as it could have been, Diamonds To Dust has enough gumption and grit to satisfy history buffs and anyone craving a good story.
-MC