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Eden

  • 2012
  • 12
  • 1h 38min
NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
9,8 k
MA NOTE
Eden (2012)
A young Korean-American girl, abducted and forced into prostitution by domestic human traffickers, joins forces with her captors in a desperate plea to survive.
Lire trailer2:06
1 Video
22 photos
True CrimeCrimeDramaThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA young Korean-American girl, abducted and forced into prostitution by domestic human traffickers, cooperates with her captors in a desperate ploy to survive.A young Korean-American girl, abducted and forced into prostitution by domestic human traffickers, cooperates with her captors in a desperate ploy to survive.A young Korean-American girl, abducted and forced into prostitution by domestic human traffickers, cooperates with her captors in a desperate ploy to survive.

  • Réalisation
    • Megan Griffiths
  • Scénario
    • Richard B. Phillips
    • Megan Griffiths
    • Chong Kim
  • Casting principal
    • Jamie Chung
    • Beau Bridges
    • Matt O'Leary
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,6/10
    9,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Megan Griffiths
    • Scénario
      • Richard B. Phillips
      • Megan Griffiths
      • Chong Kim
    • Casting principal
      • Jamie Chung
      • Beau Bridges
      • Matt O'Leary
    • 51avis d'utilisateurs
    • 49avis des critiques
    • 63Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 9 victoires et 4 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Eden Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Eden Trailer

    Photos21

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 17
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    Rôles principaux48

    Modifier
    Jamie Chung
    Jamie Chung
    • Eden
    Beau Bridges
    Beau Bridges
    • Bob Gault
    Matt O'Leary
    Matt O'Leary
    • Vaughan
    Eddie Martinez
    Eddie Martinez
    • Mario
    Tantoo Cardinal
    Tantoo Cardinal
    • The Nurse
    Tracey Fairaway
    Tracey Fairaway
    • Abbie
    Scott Mechlowicz
    Scott Mechlowicz
    • Jesse
    Roman Roytberg
    Roman Roytberg
    • Ivan
    John Farrage
    John Farrage
    • Avni
    Laura Kai Chen
    Laura Kai Chen
    • Oma
    Joseph Steven Yang
    Joseph Steven Yang
    • Apa
    Tony Doupe
    Tony Doupe
    • Greer
    Russell Hodgkinson
    Russell Hodgkinson
    • Dave
    Bhama Roget
    • Janine
    Jon S. Robbins
    • Bill
    Richard Carmen
    Richard Carmen
    • Divorcee
    Inna Zagariya
    • Ukrainian Teen
    Ronit Feinglass Plank
    • TV Reporter
    • Réalisation
      • Megan Griffiths
    • Scénario
      • Richard B. Phillips
      • Megan Griffiths
      • Chong Kim
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs51

    6,69.7K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    5Rob-O-Cop

    A "true"? story in search of corroboration

    Maybe I'm jaded, I'm sure I am but I just spent a good couple of hours looking for more information on this true story and came up with nothing apart from mentions of this movie and interviews with the main players.

    The movie itself is well made and yes disturbing, even more so since it's true,.... but the implications of it being a true story are huge, and the evidence of anything about these huge implications are completely missing from the official record. A network of kidnappers running a sex slave ring on American soil with members of the American police force involved high up in the organisation. Those are some serious allegations. And a women escapes the clutch of these murdering kidnapping crime lords, and tells the story, that's got to put a price on her head and make her a target? And we'd expect to see some notes run before the credits filling us in on the details of this case, because it's based on a true story, but we get nothing, and there is nothing we can find, there is no movie website that fills us in on the rest of the story. Just the main character telling her story, unsubstantiated and alone. It may well be completely and devastatingly true but because of the way this film presents the information and the fact that they've used the 'based on a true story' tag, that brings a certain degree of responsibility, and it's possibly one of the main failings of this film. Nothing is substantiated outside of the people involved in this movie.

    As a story it stands up OK, but as a true story, well the story remains half told. Can anyone find any more information on this case? Did nothing come of her allegations, did no one get caught? Is there any evidence to corroborate this story outside of Chong Kim's words? Surely for a story this big there should be a trail of arrests and investigations. All the online material links strictly to Chong Kim and interviews with her. None that I could find links to her case from a third party or the police. Suspension of disbelief? I don't know what to think.
    8nowego

    Haunting

    Every now and then I see a movie that just hits the spot. This is one of those movies.

    I watch a lot of movies on DVD because they often never make it to the theater here in Australia. One of the good things about doing that is you can stop and start it anytime you like. This is one of those movies that I did not stop watching from start to finish.

    While it is a very simple movie with very little in the way of action or graphic violence it is still a very disturbing and haunting movie that will stay with you for a long time after you have finished watching it.

    Jamie Chung as Eden was perfect and she held my attention throughout. Matt O'Leary as the cool and hardened Vaughan was also very believable. The rest of the cast also did an excellent job and made the movie what it was.

    Don't watch this movie if you have a weak stomach. Even though there isn't much over the top violence, just the thought of what is going on could turn your stomach.

    The fact that it is based on a true story makes it all the more heart wrenching.

    8 out of 10 for me.
    10DirkesDiggler

    A rare example of an important movie that people need to see.

    Human trafficking is such an antiseptic term. It intellectualizes and softens something that is absolutely horrific. It's the type of term that lives in the world of academia and statistics. There's no emotional impact, no default outrage, no real teeth to it. I prefer to call it what it is, slavery. At this moment it is estimated that up to 4 million people internationally and up to 50,000 people domestically are held by human trafficking rings.

    To put a finer point on it… there are, at this moment, 50,000 people owned as slaves in the United States. Not historically, not descendants of freed slaves, but actual living breathing human beings living as slaves right now. This is not just a forced labor situation either; we are talking about forced prostitution.

    Some are sold by their parents, some are recruited into domestic service jobs only to find out when they are in another country with no ability to leave what the job really is, and other are taken right off the streets in the US and forced into it.

    A majority are women and almost all are under 18.

    These numbers are jarring, alarming, and disgusting and nowhere near enough people are aware of them.

    Eden is the true story of Chong Kim, a Korean American woman who, at the age of 19, went to a bar with a fake ID, had a drink with a very nice fireman who offered her a ride home. He pulled over to make a phone call and by the time she realized that something was wrong… it was too late. She woke up in the trunk of a car and began a harrowing two year long nightmare of isolation, forced prostitution, and every type of abuse and degradation you can imagine. This is not an easy or comfortable film to watch, but it is about something so very important that I believe it needs to be seen. Much like Damian Harris's "Gardens of the Night," which follows the younger spectrum of this abhorrent practice, it sheds light on a world so blackly dark and hidden from view that most people don't know that it exists.

    Unlike "Gardens," which shows a world so vile and reprehensible that it exists entirely behind the curtains and closed doors, "Eden," shows a normalized and, in some ways, accepted trade. It's in the shadows, yes, but it is still in the light. The people who trade in it are somewhat open about it. There are parties with men in suits, fraternity parties, and underground S&M clubs where this type of traffic is a normal part of business. It's an entirely corrupt world where even the law cannot be trusted.

    Director Megan Griffiths does an outstanding job of finding the small pieces of humanity in a dehumanized world and contrasts them with the inherent brutality of the situation. Her direction is unflinching but not exploitative, honest but never preachy, and powerful without being manipulative.

    The performances are phenomenal across the board but the film is moored by two standouts. Jamie Chung creates a heartbreakingly real woman whose sweetness and innocence are stripped away. Matt O'Leary gives an amazingly nuanced performance as Eden's crack smoking handler. He is hateful and repellent, but is also very real.

    This is a rare film in that it has changed the way I look at certain things. You hear terms like "human trafficking," and "forced prostitution," and are justifiably horrified, but they are just abstract concepts. Seeing the reality of women forced to live in dark storage lockers, four to a room on bunk beds, and knowing that it is happening now, in my country both horrified and sickened me. Suddenly, these concepts were no longer concepts, but living breathing facts.

    In a world where millionaire athletes and musicians throw the world slave around it is fairly sobering to have the reality of it shown so plainly.

    I rarely use the term "important," to describe films as even the most "important" films rarely are. Usually it really means "self important." This film however deals with an issue most of us would rather pretend doesn't exist, but that is far more important than can be expressed.

    "Eden" shows evil in its truest form. The evil that allows people to profit from suffering, the evil that exists when good people don't stand up for what is decent, the evil that exists in a world where girls (and let's be clear they are GIRLS) can be treated as disposable property.

    Related Films:

    Very Young Girls- Documentary about teenage girls forced into prostitution.

    Gardens of the Nigh- Fiction film about a girl kidnapped into the world of child sex trade.

    More at www.thefilmthugs.com
    10jennabrett

    Incredible movie that sticks with you

    Saw this movie at SIFF and STILL can't stop thinking about it. Script, direction, acting, and cinematography are all impeccable. The three leads are perfectly cast. Matt is desperate, hardened, and yet strangely likable. Jamie does a fantastic job as well in a role that requires serious vulnerability and emotional depth. Megan Griffith's directing is superb and the style and tone of the overall film is spot on. I was on the edge of my seat the entire time because the story is so captivating and hard to believe. I'm dying for this film to hit theaters, because it is so incredibly well done. I want to read the memoir it's based off of after seeing the lengths this girl went to to escape from captivity. Thank you for tackling this story and subject matter!
    6Ed-Shullivan

    Thank you for not sensationalizing the plight of the human sex traffic trade

    Some viewers would say the film was weak on portraying how the human sex traffic trade takes full advantage of unsuspecting teenagers (boys as well as girls) by scooping them off the street due to these teenagers own ignorance to the extent of the sex traffic trade, and/or more likely by raising these teenagers self worth, albeit temporarily, until the pimps have full control of them.

    Whether or not this film is loosely based on a true story of a young South Korean girl named Chong Kim should not be what the majority of the films audience should be focused on, nor the disappointment that a movie that is based on the illegal sex trafficking lacks any gratuitous x-rated sex scenes. Instead what the viewers like myself absorbed from Miss Chong Kim's ordeal is we need to do a better job as a nation in realizing how extensive the sex trafficking trade really is, and what we all can do to stop it.

    Firstly, there would be no sex trafficking in North America if there was no demand for the supply of teenage girls (and boys). In this film actor Beau Bridges does more than an adequate job as the corrupt law enforcement officer Bob Gault. Some of the other reviews commented that this is not realistic that a law enforcement officer would be a leader in the sex trafficking ring, but every year law enforcement officers across North America are found guilty of many criminal offences and the important "breach of trust" crime.

    Actress Jamie Chung who plays the young teenage female victim Eden (with braces on her teeth), who was easily duped by a young man in uniform to foolishly feel safe enough to take a ride in his car and then she was quickly moved into the sex trade is a wake up call for all teenagers. The key message being there are many wolves in sheep's clothing and we as a nation have to be more engaged in stopping this corrupt criminal behaviour. Of course the actress Jamie Chung was taller, thinner, with a buff body than the shorter and heavier real life Chong Kim. I felt Jamie Chung did a great job in portraying the real life Chong Kim and how the victim had to adjust to a life in the sex traffic trade over the years she was imprisoned.

    I would also suggest to those critical viewers who scoffed that the dozens of teenage girls who were imprisoned under lock and behind gates in a storage locker as being unrealistic, lets be clear, regardless of where these teenage girls were being housed when they were not working on their backs or knees lets just agree that they were not living the life of a socialite like Paris Hilton, or as a madam like Heidi Fleiss. No I am quite sure that the teenage girls who are really imprisoned by pimps and actively (today and tomorrow) engaged in the sex traffic trade are living in squalor, eating poorly, and have absolutely no life or ambition to speak of.

    I thought the director/co-writer Megan Griffiths did an admirable job of finely balancing the need to NOT over sensationalize the graphic sexual plight of these young teenage girls, but instead emphasize how young women need to appreciate how easily it is to find themselves victims if they do not pay a lot more attention to the wrong type of people who could easily over power them if they are not a lot more careful as to who they choose to socialize or even be in the wrong place (like a bar, a public park late at night, or a pool hall) at the wrong time.

    This is a clean enough film that I would suggest parents of all young teenage girls as well as teenage boys should watch as a learning tool. This is real life sex trafficking that we should not ignore, but we should be doing a lot more to prevent. I give the film a fair 6 out of 10 rating for "lessons learned".

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      In 2014, two years after the film's release, the anti-trafficking charity Breaking Out announced it had investigated the claims of Chong Kim, whose story the film is based on. It claims it debunked her stories as false, though it did not publicly release the information that led them to this conclusion.
    • Gaffes
      The level of ice piled on Eden in the tub changes, depending on the angle.
    • Connexions
      References The Beverly Hillbillies (1962)
    • Bandes originales
      Gag Order
      Performed by Wildcard

      Courtesy of Quality Music, LLC

      Lyrics by Phil Andrade

      Produced by Smoke M2D6

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Eden?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 13 novembre 2013 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Sites officiels
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Chinois
      • Espagnol
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Abduction of Eden
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Coulee City, Washington, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • Centripetal Films
      • Clatter & Din
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 38 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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