Dos padres entran en una carrera contrarreloj cuando reciben una angustiosa llamada telefónica de su hija a altas horas de la noche después de que ella provocara un trágico accidente automov... Leer todoDos padres entran en una carrera contrarreloj cuando reciben una angustiosa llamada telefónica de su hija a altas horas de la noche después de que ella provocara un trágico accidente automovilístico.Dos padres entran en una carrera contrarreloj cuando reciben una angustiosa llamada telefónica de su hija a altas horas de la noche después de que ella provocara un trágico accidente automovilístico.
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Opiniones destacadas
Just Got out of a Screening of Hallow Road
📱- It was such a Great watch, lots of tension building because of the situation and the phone calls, the parents on their way to Alice at Night Time, on a long Dark road. The Constant Phone Calls Back and Forth etc. All of that was Great.
😳 - The Deeply Unsettling Sound Effects, talks of Dead Bodies Faces Morphing was Very Disturbing as I watched.
🤔 - All of this leads to 2 Things for the Viewer.
🤔 - Either, all that built up was for pretty much nothing, and when you leave the Cinema, you will be disappointed with the Explanation. Because when we get to the destination, #1. All of the Stuff Preceding it wouldn't have made any sense. Or #2. You Will Embrace the Supernatural/Well then what Really Happened? Direction.
So Overall, a Great Watch with what would be seen to be multiple interpretations of what really happened. It's up to the Viewer to Examine and Conclude to an Explanation of What actually Happened.
📱- It was such a Great watch, lots of tension building because of the situation and the phone calls, the parents on their way to Alice at Night Time, on a long Dark road. The Constant Phone Calls Back and Forth etc. All of that was Great.
😳 - The Deeply Unsettling Sound Effects, talks of Dead Bodies Faces Morphing was Very Disturbing as I watched.
🤔 - All of this leads to 2 Things for the Viewer.
🤔 - Either, all that built up was for pretty much nothing, and when you leave the Cinema, you will be disappointed with the Explanation. Because when we get to the destination, #1. All of the Stuff Preceding it wouldn't have made any sense. Or #2. You Will Embrace the Supernatural/Well then what Really Happened? Direction.
So Overall, a Great Watch with what would be seen to be multiple interpretations of what really happened. It's up to the Viewer to Examine and Conclude to an Explanation of What actually Happened.
Too many films bombard you with so much that you become complacent to what you are watching..not Hallow Rd.
This film may sound very simple, 2 people in a car driving to help their daughter, but it keeps you interested and engaged throughout.
I can't tell you too much as ill ruin it for you but my advice is pay attention as you will be piecing everything you have seen together at the end.
Excellent acting from Rosamund Pike and Matthew Rhys and tight direction from Babak Anvari. He was behind I Came By which i also enjoyed on Netflix. If youve seen that then you will know to expect the unexpected Go see and enjoy the debate afterwards!
This film may sound very simple, 2 people in a car driving to help their daughter, but it keeps you interested and engaged throughout.
I can't tell you too much as ill ruin it for you but my advice is pay attention as you will be piecing everything you have seen together at the end.
Excellent acting from Rosamund Pike and Matthew Rhys and tight direction from Babak Anvari. He was behind I Came By which i also enjoyed on Netflix. If youve seen that then you will know to expect the unexpected Go see and enjoy the debate afterwards!
STAR RATING: ***** Brilliant **** Very Good *** Okay ** Poor * Awful
Maddie (Rosamund Pike), a paramedic, and her husband, Frank (Matthew Rhys), are a middle class couple, who receive a late night phone call from their teenage daughter, Alice (Megan McDonnell), who has been involved in a hit and run incident. The pair race to the scene, keeping in touch on speaker phone, but as they do, tensions erupt between the couple, before things take a sinister turn.
For those not lulled in by the big new Mission: Impossible film, this little (virtually un) publicised film might be a decent distraction. After checking the running time, it becomes quickly evident that it's another addition from the 'real time' staple (with events playing out exactly as they occur with no cuts) , the last I can remember being Paul Andrew Williams's 2010 effort Cherry Tree Lane.
In a film with pretty much only two cast members, Pike and Rhys play well off each other, and develop an effective chemistry as a couple with conflicting approaches and attitudes towards their daughter, and what may have led to and how to resolve her current predicament. Likewise, McDonnell does well in a voiceover role, descending further into distress and disbelief while her happy, carefree profile picture stares back at us. It's all genuinely compelling and inspired , until an unwelcome supernatural element is added to the story that detracts from the realism of the events. Indeed, it's at this late point that we suddenly learn the film is set at Halloween (which may have been foreshadowed by the Hallow in the title.)
It remains genuinely suspenseful until the end, which comes in not the most comprehensible fashion, with matters feeling unresolved. Could have been highly recommendable, if it had just stayed on track. ***
Maddie (Rosamund Pike), a paramedic, and her husband, Frank (Matthew Rhys), are a middle class couple, who receive a late night phone call from their teenage daughter, Alice (Megan McDonnell), who has been involved in a hit and run incident. The pair race to the scene, keeping in touch on speaker phone, but as they do, tensions erupt between the couple, before things take a sinister turn.
For those not lulled in by the big new Mission: Impossible film, this little (virtually un) publicised film might be a decent distraction. After checking the running time, it becomes quickly evident that it's another addition from the 'real time' staple (with events playing out exactly as they occur with no cuts) , the last I can remember being Paul Andrew Williams's 2010 effort Cherry Tree Lane.
In a film with pretty much only two cast members, Pike and Rhys play well off each other, and develop an effective chemistry as a couple with conflicting approaches and attitudes towards their daughter, and what may have led to and how to resolve her current predicament. Likewise, McDonnell does well in a voiceover role, descending further into distress and disbelief while her happy, carefree profile picture stares back at us. It's all genuinely compelling and inspired , until an unwelcome supernatural element is added to the story that detracts from the realism of the events. Indeed, it's at this late point that we suddenly learn the film is set at Halloween (which may have been foreshadowed by the Hallow in the title.)
It remains genuinely suspenseful until the end, which comes in not the most comprehensible fashion, with matters feeling unresolved. Could have been highly recommendable, if it had just stayed on track. ***
I feel a bit gaslit by this one as critics and audience reviews are pretty good but I just didn't connect with it.
Hallow Road takes place in near real time mostly inside of a car as two parents race to the scene of an accident (on "Hallow Road") their daughter has been involved in. I say "near" real time because the drive is only 40 minutes and yet surely takes up longer in the movie as it's ~80%+ of the runtime.
The problem for me is that this felt like a cheap episode of a TV drama that would be shown on ITV. The parents were annoying, particularly the father and the car setting began to get tedious, especially every time the sat-nav told the audience how far we had to go. For some this will rachet up tension and desperation to get there quicker, but for me the journey felt like a slow crawl.
For me the ending left much to be desired. An earlier throwaway line about how the parents "will never find resolution" felt like expectations management from the director - when I heard this I prepared for the worst and was still disappointed. Another cop out ending in a critically acclaimed indie movie? Surely not?!
The second twist is revealed when the lights come up, but this one itself was largely guessable if you were paying attention - but even if you weren't, spelling it out in this fashion felt like an odd bolt-on to the movie. It would have benefitted from being included in the film and not the credits.
Overall Hallow Road is a largely tepid, slightly creepy story of parents rushing to the aid of the child but I now grow weary of so many indie films choosing to use amibiguity as a means to add weight to their story. Sometimes I would just like a tied up ending.
Hallow Road takes place in near real time mostly inside of a car as two parents race to the scene of an accident (on "Hallow Road") their daughter has been involved in. I say "near" real time because the drive is only 40 minutes and yet surely takes up longer in the movie as it's ~80%+ of the runtime.
The problem for me is that this felt like a cheap episode of a TV drama that would be shown on ITV. The parents were annoying, particularly the father and the car setting began to get tedious, especially every time the sat-nav told the audience how far we had to go. For some this will rachet up tension and desperation to get there quicker, but for me the journey felt like a slow crawl.
For me the ending left much to be desired. An earlier throwaway line about how the parents "will never find resolution" felt like expectations management from the director - when I heard this I prepared for the worst and was still disappointed. Another cop out ending in a critically acclaimed indie movie? Surely not?!
The second twist is revealed when the lights come up, but this one itself was largely guessable if you were paying attention - but even if you weren't, spelling it out in this fashion felt like an odd bolt-on to the movie. It would have benefitted from being included in the film and not the credits.
Overall Hallow Road is a largely tepid, slightly creepy story of parents rushing to the aid of the child but I now grow weary of so many indie films choosing to use amibiguity as a means to add weight to their story. Sometimes I would just like a tied up ending.
It's so simple, almost an audio play and yet it's so very good. We've all been here before, we've all had arguments with our parents and some of us who are lucky enough to have children have had arguments with our kids. But this takes it to a whole new level. I was never sold by "inside car films" such as "LOCKE" with Tom Hardy but this film, this to me actually has a reason to be fully set in a car, the tension is agonizing and the end whole probably difficult or perhaps preposterous for some was for me suitable and fascinating.
In a world with awful endless marvel, superhero and sequel movies, this is largely a great breath of fresh air.
In a world with awful endless marvel, superhero and sequel movies, this is largely a great breath of fresh air.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaFilmed in both Ireland and, for the interior scenes, the Czech Republic.
- ErroresAt one point in the film, you are shown the sat-nav and it says that they are precisely 25 miles away. 15 minutes later, the sat-nav is shown again, and they are still exactly 25 miles away, despite having not stopped driving during that time.
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 264,792
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 20min(80 min)
- Color
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