An ensemble of it girls party hard and fail to thrill in Find Your Friends
Izabel Pakzad's debut isn't just a bad thriller, but a rape revenge movie with distastefully muddled politics.
Photo: Shudder
In an interview with Variety ahead of the Fantasia world premiere of Find Your Friends, the directorial debut from Izabel Pakzad, she revealed that one of the film’s tensest moments was inspired by an experience she had as a recent college grad. On the road back to Los Angeles after a debauched girls’ trip in Joshua Tree, Pakzad and a friend found themselves pursued by a man driving a large truck. The vehicle gave chase at over 100 MPH, and a lack of cell reception meant that Pakzad and her friend were unable to call authorities. Eventually, the speed demon relented, but a sickening thought lingered as the women continued to drive down the dark, desolate desert roads: What would have happened if he’d caught them?
Now 30, the writer-director works through this traumatic encounter in Find Your Friends, which features an ensemble of veritable “it girls”—some with more acting chops than others—who end up in a chillingly similar situation. Well, save for the fact that these girls actually do come face to face with misogynistic evil. As a faithful entry in the revenge horror canon, the film doesn’t let the men who target the rowdy party girls get away with their transgressions scot-free. Even so, the politics of Find Your Friends quickly become muddled by a very public aspect of Pakzad’s life: her longtime relationship with James Franco, whom she publicly supported even as multiple women, mostly his acting students, brought forth allegations of sexual exploitation. The scandal practically killed Franco’s career (and resulted in his on- and off-screen bud Seth Rogen cutting ties), but his and Pakzad’s relationship never seemed to sour. (Indeed, he even appeared on a recent Find Your Friends red carpet.)