Teeth backdrop
Teeth poster

TEETH

2008 US HMDB
January 18, 2008

Dawn is an active member of her high-school chastity club but, when she meets Tobey, nature takes its course, and the pair answer the call. They suddenly learn she is a living example of the vagina dentata myth, when the encounter takes a grisly turn.

Cast

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Crew

Production: Joyce Pierpoline (Producer)
Screenplay: Mitchell Lichtenstein (Writer)
Music: Robert Miller (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Wolfgang Held (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Giuliano Giacomelli
Dawn is a sweet girl in full development phase, rich in healthy principles and a supporter at school of the movement in favor of premarital chastity. Like all her peers, she has entered the phase where she gradually begins to discover her body and feel the first changes brought by the adolescent age. One day, however, after concluding with drastic results what should have been her first sexual experience but which turned into a rape, Dawn will make a terrible discovery about her body: her vagina has its own will and is "equipped" with sharp teeth. Acclaimed and awarded at the Sundance Film Festival, "Teeth" is an unusual 2007 film directed by Mitchell Lichtenstein. It is a film capable of playing very skillfully with genres, succeeding in merging in a single and admirable work typical elements of the horror and dramatic genres, without disdaining, at the right moment, some small winks to comedy (more precisely speaking of black comedy). What most strikes in a film of the caliber of "Teeth" is undoubtedly the innovative and bizarre story that serves as the basis for the plot, a highly over-the-top story that could give rise to hasty prejudices pushing the viewer to form a wrong idea of the film, thinking that it is a carefree movie that makes demoralizing and large-scale humor its daily bread. Wrong! However absurd it may seem, Lichtenstein's film has a very serious creative vein and is therefore absolutely not classifiable or reducible to the adjective "trash"! The idea of the "vagina dentata", although it constitutes the innovative element of the film, cannot be properly considered original since it draws inspiration from various myths and legends from the folklore of even distant areas (such as the northwest coast of North America and Southeast Asia) that resorted, and still resort today, to this figure to symbolize the multiple risks of contracting diseases through sexual intercourse. But this Latin locution, "vagina dentata" precisely, finds its greatest fame in the famous psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud who used this figure to represent in an emblematic way what is the anxiety of castration inherent in man. The film brings this figure back into vogue by appealing, for the most part, to the landscape of horror productions, thus highlighting scenes that are sometimes shocking and difficult to digest visually, but thanks to an effective screenplay, it does not appear to be a simple horror film but is capable of offering much more following the appreciable choice to deepen and give depth to the frustration of the young protagonist, a girl who has just entered the adult world and wants to discover her body and satisfy her first libidinous desires. Unfortunately for her, but especially for her partners, she will not be able to satisfy these needs due to a dangerous anomaly of her body that turns her, against her will, into a dangerous killer at the moment when sexual intercourse is consummated. In addition to an admirable screenplay capable of arousing interest, deepening characters and situations without ever falling into the predictable or worse still into the banal, the direction of Mitchell Lichtenstein (more famous as an actor and here for the first time tackling a feature film) is also praiseworthy, which turns out to be sober, effective, little experimental and more inclined towards classic tones but certainly suitable for the spirit and dynamism of the work. But beyond demonstrating a good craftsman, Lichtenstein also demonstrates being a true fan of the genre capable of offering, on multiple occasions, interesting contributions to the science fiction cinema typical of the 1950s, that cinema that entertained itself by staging fantastic giant monsters, often the result of excessive exposure to radiation, ready to symbolize themselves, in a post-cold war era, the most relevant fears of man. Thumbs up also for the cast, mostly made up of young, little-known actors but all particularly convincing and in their roles; among them, special mention goes to the protagonist Jess Weixler (Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival 2007 as the female protagonist), suitable in the role of frustrated and melancholic Dawn and capable, in addition to moving with great ease and naturalness in front of the camera, of giving excellent depth to her character. Dawn, in fact, in her apparent formal simplicity, turns out to be a very deep and complex character capable of redeeming the female figure within the horror genre. Lichtenstein, on more than one occasion, has stated that he hates films in which the female sex identifies with the "weaker sex" and in which women, stereotyped to the extreme, end up being simply the victims of the situation. In "Teeth" none of this happens and Lichtenstein, with his Dawn, stages a kind of "heroine", a character capable of capturing in a singular way the empathy of the viewer and capable, despite her nature, of configuring herself as a model with which the viewer (predominantly female, obviously) would like to identify. As mentioned previously, although the film tries to blend multiple genres, what seems to attract the most attention is the horror genre and thus, the director, to give more "vivacity" to the scene, does not spare us a handful of brutal, bloody and borderline scenes and between eviscerations, mutilations and human members given to dogs, the film will appear as a succulent dish even for the most sadistic horror fan. In short, "Teeth" is not only a film to keep an eye on but a film capable of approaching perfection: brutal, cruel, excessive but at the same time sad and reflective. Such courageous and carefree films in the treatment of certain delicate themes like this one are not seen often; it is not excluded that over time, through a fair and deserved word of mouth, "Teeth" may become a true cult of the genre. Film of rare beauty. Unmissable.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (2)

John Chard

John Chard

6 /10

Girls have a natural modesty.

Teeth is based around the myth of vagina dentate, where it was believed that in some ladies a set of teeth were hiding away in their vagina. The lady in question here is Dawn O’Keefe (Jess Wexler), a comely virgin, teenage spokesperson for Christian abstinence, from a very young age it was clear something was not right.

A great and interesting premise is never truly fulfilled for maximum potential here, but with slices of dark humour, some cringe inducing prosthetic gore and a bold performance from Wexler, Mitchell Lichtenstein’s film safely keeps its head above mediocrity.

The makers are dallying with a number of unsubtle themes, from female empowerment to the fear of sex in general, and of course the perils of letting shallow hormones dictate the teenage mandate. There’s even dashes of obsession, religio slights and a meditation on grief that earths the electricity buzzing about the hormonal place.

Thankfully, Lichtenstein keeps away from I Spit On Your Grave territory, finding a nice balance for Dawn, she is a character bombarded with a myriad of emotional conflicts, but hysteria does not dominate her make-up, and she’s never cartoonish either. View it more as a genre splicer than outright horror and better rewards await the interested observer. 6/10

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

6 /10

"Dawn" (Jess Wiexler) is your pure as the driven snow American girl who has sworn a vow of chastity until her wedding night. That might not happen for a few years but at the moment the prime candidate is her fellow virgin "Tobey" (Hale Appleman). With their teenage hormones raging, can they hold out? Well a trip to the lake for some swimming then a blanket-huddle in cave afterwards would suggest not - though almost immediately poor old "Tobey" wishes he'd kept his pants on and she is heading to the doctor to find out just what happened. When the doctor also ends up on the operating table we are faced with the indisputable truth. She has been landed with an ancient Egyptian or Persian or Roman curse that is going to make sex a very dangerous thing for the bloke! Rather entertainingly, though, she decides that this could actually be put to good use - and her obnoxious brother "Brad" (John Hensley) might just get a taste of her newly found medicine. Aside from watching it with your legs crossed - regardless of which sex you are - this is mildly entertaining in a squirmy sort of fashion. Weixler is clearly having some fun and it's nice to see the men doing all the hysterical screaming for a change. I doubt I'd ever bother watching it again, but I didn't hate it, and neither did the dog!

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