About Cherry
A story of a high school girl Angelina, who leaves her toxic parents and moves to San Francisco with her best friend Andrew. She finds a job in a strip club and falls in love with a coke-addictive lawyer. She meets a porn director and starts to join the industry of making porn.
8 March 1960
2 March 1981, San Francisco, California, USA
29 April 1983, Petoskey, Michigan, USA
30 October 1980, USA
22 April 1991, Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina
27 October 1963, Torrance, California, USA
June 20, 1985 in Madison, Wisconsin, USA
4 January 1980, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
7 September 1969, Manhattan, New York, USA
October 05, 2012
So much of About Cherry is meant to titillate and dramatize but never humanize.
October 04, 2012
Generates a sensual world existing on top of the real one, where many people work non-ideal jobs simply to pay the bills.
September 25, 2012
Flimsy and fetishized, it delivers little more than a hackneyed skin flick.
November 11, 2012
almost laughably unsexy
September 20, 2012
The fatal flaw ... is its refusal to examine Angelina's occupation from outside the bubble. You might even call it a recruitment film.
September 04, 2013
When a guilty perv is all a film has to offer by way of a protagonist then it's probably in the best interests of us all if it doesn't exist.
September 20, 2012
Everything here is done badly.
October 04, 2012
Here is a movie that suggests prostitution is something that just sort of happens to you, like Lyme disease.
October 08, 2012
Rather shockingly lacking in dynamic plotting, the film descends into mystifying incomprehensibility in its final reels, showing a lack of understanding of basic human motivations.
September 21, 2012
This is just a slow-moving skin flick broken up by lots of boring discussions about Cherry's future.
September 20, 2012
It has a didactic undercurrent, making its main character into a beautiful blank, ready to blossom under the bright camera lights and to be unabashed in the face of the unenlightened.
October 04, 2012
Dramas about the porn industry range from expressions of puritanical rage to celebrations of open sexuality; this one manages to avoid both extremes, as well as anything else that might make it worth watching.

