![]() ![]() ![]() While Alisa’s story of being a single mother struggling with an eating disorder and Brittany’s youth and fragile composure also make for compelling side stories, Polly is clearly the “Randall McMurphy” sort of character that the audience finds-and is meant to find-alternately dangerous, charming, and frustrating indeed, the New York Times wrote in its review of Thin: She smokes cigarettes where she’s not supposed to on one of her days off she goes to a tattoo parlor and gets inked however, Polly is eventually kicked out of Renfrew because Shelly admits that Polly gave her mood stabilizers. Thin mainly follows the arc of these two women’s stories, as Shelly deals with her body image and the effect her sickness and her mercurial attitude has on her family, while Polly carves out a niche for herself, both in our eyes and in those of the Renfrew staff, as a sort of troublemaker and leader. ![]() Renfrew is presented as a seemingly-endless set of rules that, for Polly and Shelly, are begging to be broken. The film crew of Thin is fairly passive in their filming and telling of these women’s stories, forgoing traditional interviews in favor of a cinema verité style that allows the viewer to judge the situations on screen for themselves. ![]()
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