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6/10
A great Documentary that has nothing to do with the band or the oscar award winning movie
Jdc1029 January 2003
Warning: Spoilers
-Warning: Contains SPOILERS, Dont Read if you plan to watch the movie-

I enjoyed this documentary. It of course wasn't the best movie i've seen, but it was interesting. It follows two women in Texas competiting with a Beauty Pageant. In my own opinion, I thought Angela should have won over Tara, but she didn't and I am not a judge, so what do I know? To me, Angela was better looking, but she messed up on a couple of questions they asked her for the interview and I dont think the judges liked her ventriloquist act very much even though it seemed difficult to do. Tara was of course, very cute as well, but she only got second place. The movie is very short, about an hour and a half and there are a lot of people interviewed including lots of gay beauty pagent "coaches" and Angela's mom who has a very bad nosejob (Maybe she tried to get her nose to look like her daughters so much and failed miserably)

Good if theres not much on and you want to see what goes on behind a beauty pageant in Texas in 1998.
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Great insight into the South's obsession for glorifying the American Girl
JosephSwaney27 January 2003
While it's not acknowledged outright by the film's producers, this expose into the "professional world" of The Miss America Pageant at the state level appears to have been inspired by the Jon-Bennet tragedy. One cannot help but feel the filmmakers went looking to uncover some maniacal sub-culture obsessed with turning their daughters into walking-talking perfection, with an ultimate goal of receiving a rhinestone tiara and bouquet of roses.

And what better place to look for it than in the deep South, "the heart of the Confederacy"--Texas. True, the startling quotes and surreal situations surrounding this pageant are all the more amusing with Southern accents, but the filmmaker makes no comment that this in fact occurs (to various degrees) in every state of the Union.

Nevertheless, the documentary is a fascinating look at the lengths two young women (and presumably every participant) will go to compete for a new crown--I say "new" because these girls have been doing this since childhood. You learn they move from city to city each year for yet another attempt to shoot for the state title.

Even more intriguing is the professional "coaches" that take on each girl weeks prior to the "big event." From high hair to high-heels, interview dry-runs to food deprivation, they create what they believe a "winner" should be. Strangely, it's men, not other women, who lead these ladies to their goal. Their eyes are ruthless, missing nothing--best of all, they even predict (accurately!) who will win the Texas title even before their girls have competed.

No where in the film, however, does the filmmaker ask these girls to what end all their efforts lead. The coaches point to past-winners who've "married well." Is this the lesson? Are they competing for a future high-income that comes not from themselves, but from some dazzled man? The Miss America Organization tries to stress their pageant is about "empowering" women...but that doesn't come across yet at the state level!
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