Mixtape Info
Set in 1999—a year that now feels like a quaint analog last stand before the digital deluge—the film follows Beverly Moody (a wonderfully earnest Gemma Brooke Allen), a shy, awkward orphan raised by her grandmother (Julie Bowen). After discovering a broken mixtape left by her late parents, Beverly embarks on a mission to decode its tracklist, believing the songs hold the key to understanding the family she never knew.
Mixtape works because it understands that a mixtape isn’t about the songs—it’s about the person you make it for. The film is a lovingly crafted B-side: a little rough around the edges, imperfectly sequenced, but brimming with heart. For anyone who ever believed that the right song at the right moment could change your life, this one’s a keeper. MIXTAPE
Weiss nails the tactile nostalgia. The way Beverly fumbles with a Walkman, the hiss of tape between songs, the frantic act of hitting “record” at the exact right moment—these aren’t just props; they’re emotional beats. The soundtrack (featuring The Muffs, Garbage, and Harvey Danger) doesn’t just coast on “remember this?” vibes; each song serves the character’s internal discovery. Set in 1999—a year that now feels like
In an era of algorithm-driven streaming, the very idea of a mixtape feels almost archaeological. That’s precisely the point of Valerie Weiss’s Mixtape , a sweet-natured Netflix dramedy that uses the ritual of curating songs on a cassette as a bridge between grief, friendship, and the messy chaos of being twelve. The film is a lovingly crafted B-side: a
A warm hug that smells like old plastic and teen spirit.