Review
A fifteen year old girl navigates a dangerous urban landscape in search of the brother who she has hypnotized into believing he is a dog in director Bruce McDonald's pop-infused, 21st Century variation on The Catcher and the Rye. When the viewer first meets Tracey (Hard Candy's Ellen Page), she is sitting naked in the back of a bus naked with only a flimsy shower curtain to guard her from the elements. Tracey is the broken product of an unstable home; her father (Ari Cohen) regards his children as "accidents," and her catatonic mother (Erin McMurty) only pauses from watching television long enough to light up another cigarette. Upon discovering that a botched hypnosis experiment between Tracey and her younger brother Sonny has left the young boy emotionally transformed into a canine, the decision is made to send Tracey to a psychiatrist. Tormented by her classmates and lost in fantasies about her boyfriend and rock-and-roll savior Billy Zero (Slim Twig), the emotionally complex young woman has become enamored with a new student at school who doesn't even realize she exists. Later, when Sonny disappears, Tracey takes it upon herself to locate her missing sibling and make sure that he finds his way back home. While at first it appears that benevolent rent boy Lance (Maxwell McCabe-Lokos) may be her guiding light through the darkened city streets, Tracey quickly learns that to trust is to place your life in the hands of someone who may sell you out at a moment's notice. Now naked and desperate in the middle of a labyrinthine metropolitan nightmare, Tracey makes it he mission to find Sonny no matter how harrowing her quest may become. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
On the DVD
Behind-the-scenes interview and footage with Bruce McDonald and Ellen Page
Trailer
Winner of the Tracey: Re-fragmented contest, Joel Norn
Short-listed entries from the Tracey: Re-fragmented contest
The Single Frame, a a selection of images on set and behind the scenes by photographer Matt O'Sullivan