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Leave your thoughts about Pamela, A Love Story.
| Chicago TribuneNina MetzSo much of Pamela, a love story is about a woman searching for love from men who saw her as a person to be obtained — and then controlled. The best love story might just be the one she develops with herself. |
| San Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalleIf you watch “Pamela, A Love Story,” you will probably discover a few things: that you like Pamela Anderson more than you realized, that she’s probably nicer than you think, that she’s an open book, that her sons are eminently normal and proud of her, and that she has some of the worst taste in men of any woman in public life. (She makes even Liza Minnelli seem lucky in love.) |
| The Associated PressLindsey Bahr[Anderson] is still that open book, disarmingly funny and candid and uncynical, sitting there beautifully makeup free, letting the filmmakers and audience peer into her soul through many pages of journals going back to her childhood. It is a captivating watch, especially for those who never thought much about her at all. |
| Chicago Sun-TimesRichard RoeperIt would seem to be a tall task for director Ryan White (“Good Night Oppy”) to find a fresh way to tell the tale — but thanks in large part to the 55-year-old Anderson’s funny, warm, smart and engaging presence as she literally opens the doors to her home and the pages of her diaries, “Pamela, A Love Story” is a fascinating albeit obviously sympathetic take on Anderson’s life and times. |
| The IndependentJessie ThompsonPamela, A Love Story may not feel particularly revelatory, but its sheer pathos is undeniable. |
| The New York TimesGlenn KennyThe collision of her good-faith lack of inhibition with institutionalized misogyny makes this Canadian’s biography a very disquieting American story. |
| CNNBrian LowryThe result is a humanizing look at a woman often reduced to cartoon caricature, while occasionally feeling too conspicuously like a licensed product. |
| The TelegraphAnita SinghAt times it edges towards the saccharine. The director asks no challenging questions, and the only other people to appear in the film are Anderson’s supportive sons, Brandon and Dylan. |
| Los Angeles TimesNoel MurrayAnderson’s story becomes a tale of perseverance, about a passionate woman still searching for her happy ending. |
| Movie NationRoger MooreIt is very much “A Love Story,” letting Anderson do almost all of the talking. |