IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,7/10
11.124
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ein Vigilant hilft Opfern, ihren häuslichen Tätern zu entkommen.Ein Vigilant hilft Opfern, ihren häuslichen Tätern zu entkommen.Ein Vigilant hilft Opfern, ihren häuslichen Tätern zu entkommen.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 3 Nominierungen insgesamt
Paige Rhea Allison
- Junkie Mom
- (as Paige Rhea)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
I disagree with a couple of the reviews regarding pacing. I think the movie shows what abused women (and in some cases kids and men) go through. You live in silence. You're afraid to tell people. And you have to move carefully around the abuser. That, I think, is what this movie is trying to portray. It's not as straightforward as some reviewers have mentioned. And Olivia Wilde is amazing in this!
Olivia Wilde is excellent and the supporting cast are spot on. Direction, score and dialogue all work exceedingly well. I'm surprised at the low rating, one assumes the subject matter is not for the masses. Yes the tales, anguish etc are harrowing and you feel for them as any sane minded person would. However this is still a tale of fiction and does feel so in places, if our heroine had used more obvious means of correction then the story would have been more effective.
This film started out interesting, then went to a really weird and random place. It became violent and tedious. The story dissolved, and it was just Olivia Wilde having panic attack after panic attack. Her acting was great on a few parts, but she didn't have much to work with as far as the script goes. Don't waste your time on this.
I'm looking out the window,
and the trucks won't stop coming.
Anyone saw "John Doe: Vigilante"? No? I hope you're not going to waste your time on that one. Just put that intention aside and watch the movie "A vigilante" instead. The latter is much better, much more intense and at times awfully brutal and cruel to see. Highly recommended. The most disturbing is the fact that in reality, many people are the victims of physical and psychological abuse within a family circle. People who are mistreated daily in an inhumane manner and who can't find a way out of these miserable circumstances. And strange but true, most victims have an immense sense of guilt and sometimes can't bring themselves to turning their back on the abuser.
Sadie (Olivia "Life itself" Wilde) is a female version of Joaquin Phoenix in "You were never really here". Victims call her and first say an agreed phrase and then state their personal details and home situation. And Sadie doesn't let any grass grow under her feet. In no time she appears at the door of the person concerned and she takes care of the situation. The first fragment she makes it clear to an abusive businessman how things will continue from then on. It's quite shocking. One moment Sadie looks at a confident, arrogant person who doesn't tolerate contradiction. Let alone from a woman. The next moment you see the same person beaten up, anxiously agreeing with the requested requirements and leave the house with a clear message. And that message is to never return. I had to fight the urge to start cheering, but I wouldn't mind if there were more ladies like Sadie walking around on this globe.
Sadie, herself a victim of domestic violence, is on a mission. A goal she set for herself with the help of a fellow victim she knows from a support group. The message from that person was quite clear. She was talking about victims that don't make it every day. That cemeteries are full of women and men who didn't survive. And that Sadie wastes her time while she's still alive and doing well. That she must fight back. Even if it kills her. And when Sadie finds a book about combat techniques, her decision is made. In fact, that's the only thing I had questions about. First of all, I thought that the roommate's plea was rather presumptuous. Or was she also a vigilante who beats up perpetrators? And second of all, it seemed a little unlikely to me that a handbook could transform someone into a dreaded revenge machine. Perhaps the survival trips Sadie undertook with her ex, also provided experience.
"A vigilante" is not a pleasant film. It shows the downside of our society. And Sadie tries to turn the tide here like an outright John Wick. The intention is not to kill the targeted persons, but to remove them out of the victim's life. But it's not only the reprisals that demand attention. The most impressive images are those in which you see Sadie languish and how she's still tormented by her own past full of abuse. The moments that she suffers physically and psychologically and crawls around anxiously while grinding her teeth and whimpering about demons torturing her are painful to see. Her inner wounds are probably as horrible as those present on her back. In my eyes, this was a piece of brilliant acting by Olivia Wilde.
"A vigilante" isn't just a revenge movie. It's more realistic and more shocking than other revenge films such as "Revenge". And this mainly because of the realism. The real-life testimonies of victims and Sadie in the support group. At those moments it seemed like a current affairs programme. Sadie also has another goal in mind. Kind of obvious when you see the meticulously filled map of the US. The fact that the revenge will be sweet and a life insurance policy plays a specific role, is something you get from Sarah Daggar-Nickson very slowly. The story itself is an entanglement of the present and the past. It takes a while before you know what's going on. And the highlight is the ultimate confrontation. This section increases the spectacle content of the film and reminds you that it's a feature film. And yet you are left with that uncomfortable feeling and you realize some people live in a hopeless situation. And not only female victims. Also male victims. So ... Help us, Sadies of this world!
More reviews here: movie-freak.be
Anyone saw "John Doe: Vigilante"? No? I hope you're not going to waste your time on that one. Just put that intention aside and watch the movie "A vigilante" instead. The latter is much better, much more intense and at times awfully brutal and cruel to see. Highly recommended. The most disturbing is the fact that in reality, many people are the victims of physical and psychological abuse within a family circle. People who are mistreated daily in an inhumane manner and who can't find a way out of these miserable circumstances. And strange but true, most victims have an immense sense of guilt and sometimes can't bring themselves to turning their back on the abuser.
Sadie (Olivia "Life itself" Wilde) is a female version of Joaquin Phoenix in "You were never really here". Victims call her and first say an agreed phrase and then state their personal details and home situation. And Sadie doesn't let any grass grow under her feet. In no time she appears at the door of the person concerned and she takes care of the situation. The first fragment she makes it clear to an abusive businessman how things will continue from then on. It's quite shocking. One moment Sadie looks at a confident, arrogant person who doesn't tolerate contradiction. Let alone from a woman. The next moment you see the same person beaten up, anxiously agreeing with the requested requirements and leave the house with a clear message. And that message is to never return. I had to fight the urge to start cheering, but I wouldn't mind if there were more ladies like Sadie walking around on this globe.
Sadie, herself a victim of domestic violence, is on a mission. A goal she set for herself with the help of a fellow victim she knows from a support group. The message from that person was quite clear. She was talking about victims that don't make it every day. That cemeteries are full of women and men who didn't survive. And that Sadie wastes her time while she's still alive and doing well. That she must fight back. Even if it kills her. And when Sadie finds a book about combat techniques, her decision is made. In fact, that's the only thing I had questions about. First of all, I thought that the roommate's plea was rather presumptuous. Or was she also a vigilante who beats up perpetrators? And second of all, it seemed a little unlikely to me that a handbook could transform someone into a dreaded revenge machine. Perhaps the survival trips Sadie undertook with her ex, also provided experience.
"A vigilante" is not a pleasant film. It shows the downside of our society. And Sadie tries to turn the tide here like an outright John Wick. The intention is not to kill the targeted persons, but to remove them out of the victim's life. But it's not only the reprisals that demand attention. The most impressive images are those in which you see Sadie languish and how she's still tormented by her own past full of abuse. The moments that she suffers physically and psychologically and crawls around anxiously while grinding her teeth and whimpering about demons torturing her are painful to see. Her inner wounds are probably as horrible as those present on her back. In my eyes, this was a piece of brilliant acting by Olivia Wilde.
"A vigilante" isn't just a revenge movie. It's more realistic and more shocking than other revenge films such as "Revenge". And this mainly because of the realism. The real-life testimonies of victims and Sadie in the support group. At those moments it seemed like a current affairs programme. Sadie also has another goal in mind. Kind of obvious when you see the meticulously filled map of the US. The fact that the revenge will be sweet and a life insurance policy plays a specific role, is something you get from Sarah Daggar-Nickson very slowly. The story itself is an entanglement of the present and the past. It takes a while before you know what's going on. And the highlight is the ultimate confrontation. This section increases the spectacle content of the film and reminds you that it's a feature film. And yet you are left with that uncomfortable feeling and you realize some people live in a hopeless situation. And not only female victims. Also male victims. So ... Help us, Sadies of this world!
More reviews here: movie-freak.be
It's great to see a film that deals with such subject matter in such a stark and realistic way. Films like peppermint do little to elevate tired approaches of women fighting back, as they're so unrealistic they're laughable, but this film is so different to that. Olivia Wilde shines in this role, as the wounded healer who helps women and children escape the war zones of "domestic" (hate that phrase) violence, and fleeing her own abusive husband. It's an understated, yet powerful, portrayal of a widely under reported blight on society. It's a shame this film hasn't received the attention and acclaim it deserves, as it's fraught with tension throughout, presents in an empathic and sensitive way and is really engaging. Interpersonal violence is still a misunderstood and under resourced issue that hasn't ever been tackled effectively, certainly not in the uk. We are losing 3 women and 2 children a week to their perpetrators, yet are losing shelters every month that could save lives. Films like this explore the possibility of a world where it could be different.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe fighting style that Sadie uses is Krav Maga, an Israeli self defense and fighting system developed in the 1950s.
- Zitate
Sadie: I thought it was love you had. But it's not. It's need. Desperate... perverted... need.
Sadie's Husband: Sadie. No.
Sadie: I tried to hide from it. And then I tried to run from it. And now... Now I'm gonna end it.
- VerbindungenFeatured in MsMojo: Top 10 Best Female Revenge Movies of All Time (2022)
- SoundtracksLove of My Heart
Written by Troy Donockley and John Fiddy
Performed by Artist Number One
Courtesy of APM Music
Top-Auswahl
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Details
Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 83.012 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 31 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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