You Get Me !EXCLUSIVE!
Tyler is a high school student in love with his girlfriend Alison ("Ali"). One night at a party, Tyler discovers that Ali used to be a heavy partier and would often drink and sleep around. Tyler gets angry and the couple break up. Outside the party, he meets the mysterious Holly. They end up partying and sleeping together. They spend the rest of the weekend bonding and making love in Holly's huge house, with Holly telling Tyler her father died and her stepmother travels a lot. Tyler says that the weekend was special before leaving, seemingly forgetting all about Ali.
You Get Me
Tyler gets back together with Ali the following day and, while at school, notices Holly. Holly reveals that she goes there now and wanted to surprise him. Tyler tries cutting ties with Holly multiple times but he fails each time. Holly starts hanging out with Ali, as well as Ali and Tyler's friends, Gil and Lydia. Lydia soon becomes suspicious of Holly when she discovers Holly's lack of any social media presence. Some time passes and Tyler begins to suspect that Holly is dangerous, especially when meeting her stepmother, Corinne, who reveals that Holly takes medication for a mental disorder. The next day, Holly intentionally causes Lydia to have an extreme allergic reaction after overhearing her telling Ali that she doesn't buy Holly's story and is going to find out what's going on.
Holly later shows up at Tyler's house, telling him that she wants the two of them to get back together. When Tyler rebukes her, Holly tells Ali that she and Tyler slept together. Tyler and Ali meet at the beach, where he confesses everything to her. Ali states that she never wants to talk to him again, before leaving. Holly then proceeds to get Tyler suspended, saying that he assaulted her. While on suspension, Tyler finds out that Holly's real first name is Elizabeth, and then looks her up online and discovers that she violently assaulted another female student over a boy and was committed to a mental institution for a while as a result. That night, Holly kidnaps Ali and then lures Tyler to her house by sending him a picture of an unconscious Ali. Meanwhile, Ali awakens to discover that she has been tied up and bound to a chair in Holly's house. Corinne comes home and finds Ali and attempts to rescue her. However, Holly sneaks up behind Corinne and suffocates her with a plastic bag, killing her.
When Tyler arrives at Holly's house, armed with a fire poker, he discovers Ali unconscious. Ali has been tied mid-air to the ceiling, with her forehead bleeding. Tyler manages to free Ali, and the two escape outside. Before they can get away, Holly stops them at gunpoint. Holly shoots Tyler in the shoulder, and Ali picks up the fire poker and stabs Holly. Later, Holly, still alive, is wheeled into the back of an ambulance and asks the paramedic to never leave her and makes him promise.
In the final scene, Tyler and Allison are at his younger sister, Tiffany's, birthday party. Tyler narrates and says he was looking for a fantasy about love. But he's learned his lesson, and now is focused on the love he has with Allison.
Bella Thorne and Halston Sage were cast as female leads Holly and Ali, respectively in March 2016.[2][3] Taylor John Smith was cast as male lead Tyler in April 2016. Added to the cast at the same time were Nash Grier, Anna Akana, Garcelle Beauvais and Kathryn Morris.[4]
Brian Costello of Common Sense Media calls the film "a mess from beginning to end".[10]Eddie Strait of The Daily Dot says "this film is no fun", and further criticizes the film not only for lacking in originality but also dullness.[11] Felix Vasquez Jr. of Cinema Crazed describes it as "an abysmal entry in to this ridiculous sub-genre" and that although the film aspires to be Fatal Attraction, "it barely registers as a Swimfan clone".[12]
Parents need to know that You Get Me is a horror-thriller movie starring Bella Thorne as an emotionally disturbed stalker. Thorne's character meets her soon-to-be obsession at a party where teens are drinking and smoking pot. She eventually takes him to a dance club, where she peer-pressures him into taking drugs, which leads to a one-night stand (no nudity, but strongly implied). One teen boy tells another of a girl that "she sucked it like a champ." Violence is more on the "thriller" end of the horror movie spectrum than the gory end: A woman is suffocated with a plastic bag, someone is stabbed in the side with a poker, and an implied death is made via a Snapchat-style picture. The only scene with any blood is when a girl gets a bloody nose during a seizure after her smoothie is spiked. Swearing is frequent and includes "f--k" and its variations. Any attempts at thoughtful and nuanced discussion of mental illness, the potential long-term ramifications of casual teen sex, or anything else feel clunky and forced at best.
In YOU GET ME, Tyler (Taylor John Smith) and Alison (Halston Sage) are in the midst of a seemingly perfect summer teen romance. All of that changes when they go to a party and an ex of Alison informs Tyler of Alison's wayward recent past, which infuriates Tyler, because Alison had told Tyler that she wanted to wait until their relationship developed further before having sex, and Tyler believes Alison lied to him about her character. An argument ensues, and during the very brief window in which they break up, Tyler meets Holly (Bella Thorne), someone he has never seen before. Holly seems sympathetic to what Tyler is dealing with and offers to drive him away from the party. Instead of taking him home, they go to a dance club, where Holly persuades Tyler to get high on Molly. When Tyler wakes up the next day, he wakes up in a strange house, and realizes he had a one-night stand with Holly. He thinks he leaves Holly on good terms, and then gets back together with Alison after she explains how she's trying to turn her life around. Tyler believes that all of this is behind him until school starts up again and he sees Holly, who tells him that she has now transferred to his high school. She quickly befriends Alison and Tyler's other friends, but it becomes obvious to Tyler that Holly is obsessed with him and will stop at nothing to pick up where they left off last summer. Now Tyler must decide if he should tell Alison the truth about the one-night stand, and he must also figure out just who this Holly is, a teen who is shockingly nowhere to be found on social media or anyplace else on the internet.
This movie is a mess from beginning to end. For starters, there are plot holes large enough to sail an aircraft carrier through. The lapses in common sense even in the warped logic of the movie are confounding and not suspenseful in the typical horror movie way where the audience feels compelled to yell, "Don't open that door!" when a murder seems imminent. Despite the attempts to realistically convey drinking and drug use among teens at parties, as well as issues like "slut shaming," casual sex versus waiting until a couple is ready, and growing up relatively poor in an otherwise affluent community, it's hard to imagine most teens -- especially teens who contend with these issues in real life -- identifying with the characters in any meaningful way. The issues feel shoehorned in, in an attempt to make characters who otherwise ooze privilege, beauty, and easy access to pristine beaches somehow as human as the rest of us.
Even forgetting all that for a moment, the storyline is so similar to so many other "stalker" movies already released that it's hard to fathom why this was made in the first place. While it seems plausible that the actors, who are at least trying to bring something to the table, could have delivered something better with a few more takes and a few more rewrites, it appears the filmmakers were more concerned with the style of getting the swimming pool lights just the right pastel shade, or the electronic dance music cued up in just the right moment. And right before it seems You Get Me might have the courage to deal honestly with mental illness in teenagers, it chickens out and just establishes that Bella Thorne's character isn't just "cray" but certifiably so. Such cavalier dismissal and exploitation of mental illness is as good an indication as any of how lazy and half-baked this movie is, and it seems like it's only intended to be fodder for late-teen frat-bros to ogle Thorne while thinking sexist thoughts about the "crazy women" they've met at their own parties.
Visit our Get Transcript frequently asked questions (FAQs) for more information. If you're trying to get a transcript to complete FAFSA, refer to tax Information for student financial aid applications.
Note: Transcripts partially mask your personally identifiable information for protection. Financial data will remain fully visible to allow for tax preparation, tax representation or income verification. Learn more at About Tax Transcripts. If you need a photocopy of your return, submit Form 4506.
Two years ago, I made a commitment to do something that made me profoundly uncomfortable. I had just finished writing my first book, and I promised my publisher that I would reach out to bestselling authors and senior leaders, asking them to read my book and consider endorsing it.
I knew their quotes would go a long way toward attracting readers. But as someone who generally prefers to be on the giving side of exchanges, rather than the asking and receiving end, I knew it was time to pick up some new tips. I began seeking advice, scouring the research evidence, and test-driving what I learned in my quest to capture the attention of busy people.
Anyone can get ME/CFS. While most common in people between 40 and 60 years old, the illness affects children, adolescents, and adults of all ages. Among adults, women are affected more often than men. Whites are diagnosed more than other races and ethnicities. But many people with ME/CFS have not been diagnosed, especially among minorities. 041b061a72