Los Angeles Times

Harrowing look at sexual assault

- — Robert Abele

There’s plenty to make one seethe in Bonni Cohen’s and Jon Shenk’s harrowing documentar­y, “Audrie & Daisy,” about the mistreatme­nt a pair of underage girls endured both during and after each was sexually assaulted.

“U have no idea what its [sic] like to be a girl,” Saratoga, Calif., high school sophomore Audrie Pott texted a male classmate the day after he and others violated her when she was unconsciou­s at an alcoholfue­led party. After pictures the boys took of her that night were posted online, Audrie — believing her life was over — killed herself.

Across the country in Maryville, Mo., that same year Daisy Coleman, 14, was left nearly comatose on her front lawn after senior Matt Barnett and his buddies, she alleged, sexually assaulted her when she was drunk and unconsciou­s.

The movie is a sobering look at the minefield teenage girls traverse when it comes to drinking, pressure from porn-addled boys and social media popularity. And it’s not as if the legal system and communitie­s geared toward protecting star athletes and demonizing girls are any better at handling the associated crimes.

Though the pushback Daisy received was plenty ugly — the painful impact is made clear as we watch the resilient, articulate Daisy turn goth before our eyes — and the ill-considered defensiven­ess of an interviewe­d sheriff grates, the movie offers hope in the form of a survivors’ network started by another maligned victim who attempted suicide. “Audrie & Daisy.” Running time: 1 hour, 35 minutes. Not rated. Playing: Laemmle NoHo 7, North Hollywood.

 ?? Netf lix ?? DAISY COLEMAN’S horrific story is a central part of the sexual assault documentar­y “Audrie & Daisy.”
Netf lix DAISY COLEMAN’S horrific story is a central part of the sexual assault documentar­y “Audrie & Daisy.”

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