Helen
Pitch Man
About the Job
The role is Helen, Shelly's mother. She's recruited — somewhat against her will — to make a testimonial in her son's hair-loss infomercial, and what starts as a fumbling product demo becomes the film's most honest scene. Helen is sharp, unsentimental, and constitutionally incapable of saying what she's told. The comedy comes from exactly that — her refusal to perform — and the scene quietly turns on a single, devastating line of maternal clarity. Helen has the rare ability to hold warmth and honesty in the same breath — never saccharine, always real. She's the only person in Shelly's world who sees him clearly. About film: The film follows a validation-hungry salesman who reinvents himself amid the '90s infomercial boom — until his carefully crafted persona begins to unravel. It's told entirely through discarded infomercial outtakes, shot on period analog cameras. It's a SAG micro budget tragicomedy — satirical, intentionally minimal, and grounded in real feeling.
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