Great movie! If you want to be entertained and have a few good laughs, see this movie. The music is also very good,
View Morea film so unique, intoxicating and bizarre that it not only demands another viewing, but is also forgivable as a satirical comedy where the jokes eventually take the back seat.
View MoreIt is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.
View MoreThis movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows
View MoreAt the beginning of the movie, the Squeegie kid/ kid-nappers, were trying to flee some rival Squeegie kids / or Squeegie enforcers. That would have been a more interesting story than this one.I'm always down for a taught psychological suspenseful thriller. And any film cover that has a woman tied to a chair while another woman holds the rope, well I'm down for some lesbo S&M (BOUND) bondage as well as the next guy. Howeva this film had none of the afore-mentioned in it. Yes it was well written well acted well shot, but boring. Hhe hostage 'helsinki thang" well if you've seen "DOG DAY AFTERNOON" you know how Captives identify with their Captors. The big chunk of of RED-WOOD RED-NECK HILL-BILLY MAN-MEAT, that shows-up specifically to confront the girl that cut him and robbed him the other night. Well I've gone thru worse than that for a piece of "strange". I'd call that robbing, fore-play. real pros, play in pain. The problem is the three main characters or boring, they're boring some violent drug addicted teens trying to flee the city, kidnap some rich woman in a committed lesbian relationship, and hold her hostage. There is no "COME TO Jesus MOMENT" no daring retrospective or stories of hustling or abuse. It's just a boring movie a well-done but boring movie.
View MoreCassandra Nicolaou is a writer and director with a talent for exploring the inner lives of her characters. Much of what she creates is on the surface: an equal part lies beneath the facade and reveals personal histories through the looks in eyes and the silences she encourages form her actors.Affluent mid-thirties Sarah (the very fine Michelle Nolden) is off from the city for a rendezvous with her lover Sam, complete with special grocery shopping and wine cases to supply them for a little getaway in their isolated mountain cabin in the woods. But when traffic snarls slows her luxury vehicle to a stop and her temper is frayed, two street kids approach, pull the squeegee scam and when rejected by Sarah, they sulk on the sidewalk and Sarah, remorseful for her behavior to them, offers them money. They accept the money and jump into the car, brandishing weapons, and treat Sarah like a hostage, instructing her to drive them out of the city. Desperate but cool, Sarah receives a cellphone call from Sam, indicating the remote cabin meeting - and the atmosphere changes. Now the girl, Jenna (the beautiful and talented Katharine Isabelle) and the boy, Jackson (Kett Turton, another fine young actor) are in complete control, and the three head to the cabin. Once in the picturesque cabin by a lake Jenna and Jackson tie Sarah to a chair and go about trying to find all possible cash and goods to steal from Sarah.The 'kidnapping' gradually unveils secrets on the part of all three and slowly the trio, isolated and after attempted escapes by Sarah, begin to bond. The events then fall pall mall, video tapes of Sarah's private life reveal an aspect Jenna never suspected yet longs to understand and experience, Sarah and Jackson play a cat and mouse game that includes a degree of intimacy, an 'intruder' appears with dire consequences, and the film tumbles to a painful ending for each of the trio (now duo).The film begins and ends with a voice over stating 'There are two kinds of people in the world: those who need to be rescued, and those who want to rescue.' And the plot in retrospect examines that statement thoroughly. Writer/director Nicolaou has the integrity to incorporate gender identities, childhood needs and adoption policies, and the differences in reference points between those with money and those on the street in subtle ways, careful to not make judgments but to only reveal similarities. The cast is very good and if the script is a bit repetitive in phrases over used, that is the way young people communicate and to script it otherwise would make the dialogue false. This is a fine little thriller, more for the mind but also for the physical violence aficionados. For this viewer, this is an underrated movie.
View MoreI wanted to see this movie all the time but had no chance to get it! Just because Katharine Isabelle is in it, it was a "must see" for me! I wasn't really expecting anything from this movie but it was actually pretty damn good.I don't really wanna tell you much about the story but it's about Jenna (Katharine Isabelle) and Jackson (Kett Turton) who kidnap a woman (Michelle Nolden). They go to the woman's little house in the forest and tie her up and then the fun begins...It has some really intense and moving scenes. The acting was really good from all the actors. Katharine was so superb like in every movie, i mean she really fit in Jenna's role. Way to go Canada!
View MoreExcellent acting all around and some good dialog can't quite save this film from some ridiculous, implausible plot twists.****SPOILER WARNING**** Basic question: If a strange girl cut you on the cheek with a switchblade and robbed you, would you go--ON YOUR OWN--to her house the next day to confront her about it, ignore her boyfriend glaring at you with an axe in his hand and saying "Who the f**k are you," and then push past the boyfriend, turning your back on him? ****END OF SPOILER**** I mean, there does come a point where characters have to behave in a SOMEWHAT plausible manner, and this scene just flat out ruined the film for me.But I was impressed with the VERY fine acting from the entire cast (comprised of only five actors).
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