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5,9/10
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Deux pères de famille s'associent lors d'une croisade destructrice pour sauver leurs familles d'un paradis tropical, après avoir été convaincus qu'un conglomérat américain de biens à temps p... Tout lireDeux pères de famille s'associent lors d'une croisade destructrice pour sauver leurs familles d'un paradis tropical, après avoir été convaincus qu'un conglomérat américain de biens à temps partagé prévoie de sinistres plans pour leurs proches.Deux pères de famille s'associent lors d'une croisade destructrice pour sauver leurs familles d'un paradis tropical, après avoir été convaincus qu'un conglomérat américain de biens à temps partagé prévoie de sinistres plans pour leurs proches.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 4 victoires et 12 nominations au total
Avis à la une
The beginning was promising, but the ending was confusing and weak and pretty much left me indifferent other than I got to see Luis Mendes who I first saw in the 2 Crows series about the soccer team which was great. They guy is a great actor. Also, R J Mitte was surprisingly good. I guess he never got a chance in Breaking Bad because he was just a peripheral character.
I catched this mini masterpiece at Sundance and I am grateful to be the first user review. This film is much more than meets the eye. It begins as a light family comedy of errors and it ends as a horror film where the only monsters are the feelings of paranoia and neurosis in the father figure characters. It is a smart critique on globalization, savage capitalism, the re colonization of Mexico *Even the hotel is an Aztec pyramid. A scary POV of a based patriarchal society. I recommend to watch this bizarre fable, a strange marriage between Buñuel and Lynch. RJ Mitte from Breaking Bad gives a mature portray or an American manager. Glad to see him grow up into a solid actor.
Either I was tired or this was a concept that did not get off the ground. Time Share challenges the viewer to look into the concept of family, while involving some sort of brainwashing pyramid scheme. Honestly, it leaves the viewer unsure of what the plot or main focus should be. I did not find anything to be funny in this film.
If you enjoy well made foreign indies, then I recommend this film. The film is beautifully shot and the acting is on point. It is a slow burn somewhat surrealist movie. If that sounds like your kind of film and have Netflix then there is no reason not to check it out. Personally, my main complaint was with the narrative as the film progressed. I felt the film sort of became lost in itself.
If you have ever entertained the temptation to time share at a resort, give Time Share a chance to deter you from a potential disappointment. Writer-director Sebastian Hofmann and writer Julio Chavezmontes have mounted a crafty Costa-Rican satire of corporate tyranny and paternal vulnerability in the tropical time-share industry of Mexico.
Husband Pedro (Luis Gerardo Mendez), wife Eva (Cassandra Ciangherotti), and son spend a considerable amount of time at a fancy new villa recently acquired by an international conglomerate claiming to offer them "paradise" for their pesos. No vacationer who has been approached by a sales mongrel from a resort can neglect the suspicion that they are being "taken."
They are forced to share with another family because of an overbooking, for which there is no comp or remorse from a corporation that claims overbooking "isn't illegal if it's the result of success." Corporate indifference at that basic level and distance from the protections of everyday modern living are like being list in a jungle.
The interesting twist to this cautionary tale is that ambiguity supersedes any concrete proof that this has been a scam. Just as prominent concern is the slam on the father, who bears the ignominy and who, like dad at an avalanche in Force Majeure, faces humiliation for a perceived cowardice, a blow to masculinity difficult to ignore.
Along with the indignities suffered by workers in the hospitality force, the men especially are victims of a culture that, despite the claims of females, still holds males hostages to paternalistic notions of responsibility.
Even laundry worker Andres Andres (Miguel Rodarte) has his challenges with the corporate funny business, for like Pedro, he is responsible although possibly abuse by a corporation that uses him and his wife as profit-making traumatic donors.
Time Share won the Special Jury Prize for Screenwriting at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. Given the ambiguities of nasty vacation mishaps, its screenplay accurately portrays the vulnerabilities of once happy-go-lucky vacationers who entertain corporate vultures.
Husband Pedro (Luis Gerardo Mendez), wife Eva (Cassandra Ciangherotti), and son spend a considerable amount of time at a fancy new villa recently acquired by an international conglomerate claiming to offer them "paradise" for their pesos. No vacationer who has been approached by a sales mongrel from a resort can neglect the suspicion that they are being "taken."
They are forced to share with another family because of an overbooking, for which there is no comp or remorse from a corporation that claims overbooking "isn't illegal if it's the result of success." Corporate indifference at that basic level and distance from the protections of everyday modern living are like being list in a jungle.
The interesting twist to this cautionary tale is that ambiguity supersedes any concrete proof that this has been a scam. Just as prominent concern is the slam on the father, who bears the ignominy and who, like dad at an avalanche in Force Majeure, faces humiliation for a perceived cowardice, a blow to masculinity difficult to ignore.
Along with the indignities suffered by workers in the hospitality force, the men especially are victims of a culture that, despite the claims of females, still holds males hostages to paternalistic notions of responsibility.
Even laundry worker Andres Andres (Miguel Rodarte) has his challenges with the corporate funny business, for like Pedro, he is responsible although possibly abuse by a corporation that uses him and his wife as profit-making traumatic donors.
Time Share won the Special Jury Prize for Screenwriting at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. Given the ambiguities of nasty vacation mishaps, its screenplay accurately portrays the vulnerabilities of once happy-go-lucky vacationers who entertain corporate vultures.
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- How long is Time Share?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 370 280 $US
- Durée1 heure 36 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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