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Even those who remember their teen years fondly know
  that adolescence brings a world of angst to most normal teenagers.
  It includes, but is not limited to, friends, school and pimples.
  If you’re Nikki Reed, though, (the 15-year old star and co-screenwriter
  of Thirteen, co-written and directed by Catherine Hardwicke),
  a couple of worries you might want to add to that list are “critical
  response” and “box office grosses.”
Based on Reed’s own experiences in her native
  LA (though she’s not the ‘bad girl’ she plays in the film), the
  film takes a hard, honest look at the real issues teenagers deal
  with, and how their decisions affect not just themselves, but
  their families. In other words, it’s about as far from American Pie as
  you can get—though Reed admits that she and Hardwicke had originally
  envisioned the piece as a possible comedy.
The way in which Reed’s creative collaboration with Hardwicke
  came about was actually through her dad, art director Seth Reed
  (Minority Report, Auto-Focus). “My father and Catherine
  dated,” she admits—joking that she wished it were a more “exciting” story.
  Though their romance has ended, Hardwicke has remained a close
  friend to the family, and someone Reed has gone to for advice throughout
  the years.
It didn’t take much convincing when Hardwicke
  suggested that maybe Reed could express her emotions artistically.
  She’d always loved to write, and jumped at the chance to spend
  her winter vacation brainstorming ideas and acting out the scenes
  that they had written together. Amazingly, one week was all it
  took to craft the script—and
  gain some Hollywood interest. Premiering at Sundance, the film
  was picked up by Fox Searchlight, and won a directing award for
  Hardwicke, a first-time director but well-known production designer
  (Laurel Canyon, Vanilla Sky).
So on the eve of her debut film’s theatrical
  release, what is it that’s worrying Reed most? “Honestly? Homework! Come on, I’m
  15,” she says with a laugh. MM 
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