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Love, especially
unrequited and unspoken love makes us do some rather perverse things.
Sometimes it will bring about a dark side within us and force us to
confront it without our knowledge, and leave us oblivious to all logic
and reason. Thus is the hook of Garcia’s utterly morbid and unsettling
short drama. Very much in the vein of “The Weight of Water,” Gillian is
a humble and rather meek woman who suddenly finds her soul mate one day
at work. Rather unassuming at first, she sparks a conversation with her
co-worker Jerry, and the two engage in a conversation about art that
instantly brings her to the brink of sheer euphoric bliss which is
crushed under the weight of Jerry’s confession that he has a girlfriend
he’s about to marry.
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Riley Rose
gives a fantastic performance as this young artist who finds
herself broken in two once she finds her double and
discovers he can never belong to her, and we witness the
instant deterioration of all her senses upon this discovery,
which Rose delivers with utter finesse. Her transformation
from a quiet office worker to a tragic obsessed artist is
breathtaking, and she rapidly becomes a threatening presence
with an instantaneous breakdown we never see, but know is
occurring. |
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Though a little under
ten minutes Garcia alludes to the background of Gillian, as this young
girl constantly heartbroken and disappointed, who has her world
corrupted by a man she can never have and the woman she knows will never
step aside to let her have him. She knows the woman Jerry loves is every
bit her superior even though she shares no common interest as Gillian
does with Jerry, and this brings about an awfully erratic reaction that
leads to one of the more disturbing climaxes in a short film I’ve seen
in a while. “A Portrait of Envy” is the view of obsession and passion
and the dangerous things we’re capable of in the heat of these raw
emotions.
Simplistic and yet long lasting in its originality and disturbing
finale, "A Portrait of Envy" is a wonderful and well acted little drama
thriller that works thanks to the writing, tight direction, and stand
out performance from Riley Rose.

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