Frankie, Maniac Woman Movie Review by Matt Boiselle
Frankie, Maniac Woman – directed by Pierre Tsigaridis, written by Dina Silva and Pierre Tsigaridis and starring Dina Silva, Stefanie Estes and Jordan DeBarge
Synopsis: An aspiring L.A. singer confronts childhood trauma, internalized misogyny and industry fat-shaming until she violently breaks.
Take a look back at many of the genre’s more lime-lighted whackadoos – they’re violent, they’re savage in nature, but most of all is they’re human (well, most anyway) – the end result of who or what they’ve become is the result of years of being built up, whether it be internal or circumstantial by surroundings. If there’s trauma there to a formulating extent, then you can more than likely wait until the catastrophic ingredients have mixed, then wait for the corrosive eventuality of it all.
In “Frankie, Maniac Woman” directed by Pierre Tsigaridis, the image of a woman who has been bullied from pillar to post is on full display, and let me be honest – the audience shows up just as the pin has been pulled on this grenade – only question that remains is “what direction will it go off once it’s been lobbed?” Starring here is Dina Silva (who also produce and co-wrote) as Frankie, a budding musician struggling against the landslide of potential stars in the crowded, muddled talent pool that is Los Angeles. Her presence is one that has been wrought with inner turmoil and self-loathing, all originating from an abusive relationship with her neglectful mother, and brimming in their own seething juices until the present time. Her initial victim offing is not necessarily in the negative sense as it was more of a defense mechanism, but it does act as the ignition switch getting flipped on a murder-machine, and that’s when the maniacal personality takes over in earnest.
Frankie is going to take every negative comment, thought or action against her and hone it into one of the sharpest blades you’ve ever imagined and use it (in excess) on those who have wronged her – it’s a cautionary tale for those who think a bullying attitude is an entertaining premise…boy, are you wrong. The physical and mental scars weigh profoundly upon Frankie’s shoulders like a lead-blanket, and she becomes more and more unhinged as the film moves along – completely unrepentant in her downward spiral of etched brutality. Tsigaridis’ directorial style enhances an already dizzying display of compounded grief and trauma, and delivers it in a comprehensive package, with both color and b&w formats to assist in the story’s transmission. Silva earns the gold skull her here with her performance – shuttling back and forth between reticent and barbaric isn’t the easiest of migration in psyche, but she pulls it off excellently and seamless to boot.
Overall, “Frankie, Maniac Woman” isn’t going to knock viewers for a loop, considering how many other “victims into violence” products have come down the assembly line before it, but with a solid lead-performance and the strong message behind it the film deserves the right to be mentioned – make sure to give this one a go when it pops up near you.
The film will release in select theaters on April 24th, 2026
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