Calibre
Calibre
| 22 June 2018 (USA)
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Two lifelong friends head up to an isolated Scottish Highlands village for a weekend hunting trip that descends into a never-ending nightmare as they attempt to cover up a horrific hunting accident.

Reviews
Connianatu

How wonderful it is to see this fine actress carry a film and carry it so beautifully.

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Donald Seymour

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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Quiet Muffin

This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.

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Jenni Devyn

Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.

SnoopyStyle

Vaughn (Jack Lowden) and Marcus (Martin McCann) go do some hunting in rural Scotland. Vaughn accidentally shoots a boy. Marcus shoots the father and leads the effort to cover up their crimes. The locals grow suspicious of the two outsiders when their family members are presumed missing.This is solid brutalist B-movie material. The main problem is that I don't find either of the leads appealing and pose no rooting interest for me. The villagers are a bit of Straw Dogs but they are right to be suspicious of these villains. The tension just isn't there since I don't care whether these guys are discovered. It's Matt Palmer's directing/writing theatrical debut. He shows good technical skills. This would be better if Vaughn could be a more appealing character. Tension would be much higher if I actually cared.

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richard-cattell

Really enjoyed this one , had me gripped and I really felt for the two main protagonists. I sometimes approach Netflix originals with dread I've seen a few poor films , but this one was tense , left me with a feeling of unease throughout .

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Lloyd Bayer

The choices we make will ultimately define consequences we must face in the future. Or so, we've been told since a young age. Writer-director Matt Palmer gives that axiom a wicked spin in Calibre, a Netflix release not to be underestimated by its lean length and production budget. Before the film reaches its inevitable and horrifying conclusion, Calibre will have the audience questioning what is right and wrong. Viewers may even find themselves rooting for either the timid and polite Vaughn (Jack Lowden) or the confident and outgoing (Marcus Martin McCann), old friends off to the Sottish highlands for a bit of deer hunting. This would also be their last getaway as bachelors before Vaughn marries his newly pregnant fiancé. Upon arrival at the local tavern, the duo find the locals less than hospitable. At first it's not clear whether the locals don't take kindly to outsiders or they just don't like big city executives flirting with the local women. A night of pub-hopping later, the next morning starts with a hangover and ends with a nightmare that doesn't end.Thus begins Palmer's feature debut until it takes you to its mind-numbing and gripping final thirty minutes. If you survive this, the very last scene will leave you with an icy shiver. Very bad things happen in this film, some of which in quick succession and before we get a chance to digest the gravity of the horror unfolding on screen. While it's not about whether viewers can stomach some of the violence, the question that emerges is in identifying who the real villains are. Getting into more detail would be doing this shocking and edgy thriller a disservice but the two male leads are excellent, each in their own way. Lowden, fresh of the success of Christopher Nolan's war epic Dunkirk, and McCann building on his terrific performance in the 2016 post-apocalyptic thriller The Survivalist, are both exceptional in a simple story of a stag-weekend gone terribly wrong. Even so, they are both matched by strong talent from the likes of Tony Curran and Ian Pirie, playing village locals who are essentially law of the land. Calibre is evidently shot on a low budget but still manages to keep the viewer arrested with a sinking feeling that the worst is yet to come. While the premise of a stag night gone bad, or outsiders having to outsmart suspicious locals have been done many times before, Palmer's story is somehow counter-intuitive to what one would expect. In between balancing our sympathies for the two leads against a situation that gets gruesome by the minute, Palmer deserves the most praise for taking a familiar story and giving it a diabolical yet intentional twist. Neatly embedded in the story are also subtle questions about the disparity of power, wealth, and justice, while offering nothing but a bleak answer as to how and why bad things happen to good people. It isn't a joyous film to recommend and neither is there anything pleasant about the film but if so much can be delivered with so little, then Matt Palmer is the name to look for as the new and upcoming master of the macabre.

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thilan-hewage

Good movie. Bloody story. Good thriller movies ever watched. Fantastic. No any words to say.

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