

Three Amys, one bullet, zero chill — the 90s trash-TV singularity you've been craving.
In 1992, a suburban New York teenager named Amy Fisher captured the national media's attention when she shot her lover's wife in the face. This sordid tale of underage sex, aggravated assault, and Joey Buttafuoco managed to spawn not one, not two, but three separate made-for-TV movies. Drew Barrymore, Alyssa Milano and Noëlle Parker all took stabs at portraying the disturbed young lady, yet a true on-screen depiction of Amy Fisher has never emerged - until now. In this Rashomon of found footage film, director Dan Kapelovitz mind-melds the multiple melodramas into one ultimate metadrama mashup.
Editing
Frankensteining three bad movies into accidental genius.
Direction
Kapelovitz weaponizes found footage like a cine-terrorist.

Director
Dan Kapelovitz
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The 1992 'Long Island Lolita' case dominated tabloids for months, with competing networks rushing productions to air within weeks of each other — peak 90s media vulture behavior.
Drew Barrymore's version aired on ABC, Alyssa Milano's on CBS, and Noëlle Parker's on NBC — meaning this film technically unites all three original networks.
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