Tre ragazze adolescenti britanniche vanno in vacanza come rito di passaggio bevendo, andando in discoteca e rimorchiando, in quella che dovrebbe essere la migliore estate della loro vita.Tre ragazze adolescenti britanniche vanno in vacanza come rito di passaggio bevendo, andando in discoteca e rimorchiando, in quella che dovrebbe essere la migliore estate della loro vita.Tre ragazze adolescenti britanniche vanno in vacanza come rito di passaggio bevendo, andando in discoteca e rimorchiando, in quella che dovrebbe essere la migliore estate della loro vita.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Nominato ai 3 BAFTA Award
- 14 vittorie e 34 candidature totali
Recensioni in evidenza
The film has a terrific sense of dread. For a long time to begin with you are just watching these characters party and have fun. But you always know that something more sinister is just around the corner. You don't know what it is or where it's coming from exactly. You just know it's coming.
Something else I really liked about this one was that it has a lot of respect for its audience. It doesn't tell you everything. It lets you make up your own mind on what exactly a character is thinking/going through. There is some terrific acting that helps this. Often the camera will just remain on a character's face for an extended period of time and watch her go through a range of emotions when dealing with something. It was really interesting to watch.
I think film discussion groups would have a field-day with this film. There's a lot to break down and because nothing it really spelt out it leaves a lot to interpretation. This was a good one. 7/10.
Besides that minor inconvenience, the film showcased a phenomenal range of talent in all aspects of the film. Molly Manning Walker shows off her modern and evocative cinematography to truly connect the audience with the characters. Walker also wrote the script which is equally brilliant and manages to capture the essence of youth in each of the characters. Not only that, but she also shows no hesitation in creating a realistic depiction of youth which is extremely difficult to find in films today. Walker has created a film which weaves the innocence of three young adults into a story of loneliness and despair that is strikingly relevant to the world today.
It is obvious that this film is deeply personal to not only Walker but also to the three actresses that played the main parts. A story with such tangible emotion cannot be written without a deeply personal idea at the core. The film will put you in the shoes of three young women and will tell you exactly how women feel today.
The performances of the three young adults was masterful. It was like they weren't even acting. The slow decline of Tara's outward personality to a lonelier and more isolated one is showcased brilliantly by Mia McKenna-Bruce. The comedy that flourished at the start of the film was perfected by the young women's ability to so accurately display the emotions that run through every person's head at that age.
Disturbing and hilarious this film left me in my seat a few minutes after it finished. Unlike any other film I have ever seen it will take you on a journey that you've already had before but always wanted to experience again, the journey of youth, and maybe you'll realize you actually, probably, and in most circumstances, do not want to experience that journey again.
Whilst it felt really natural almost like a documentary on itv2 the characters were slightly on the harder to like side to start but you warm to them especially Tara, who seems genuinely young and immature.
The two incidents of attacks, were believable and natural rather than an aggressive style you'd see in darker films, it was clever to do it that way, to show that there are levels to it.
Whilst I hate how many people volunteer to get into states where they lack control with alcohol it is part of society, but I'm still amazed when smoking gets so much attention, drinking which causes more crime/damage/death gets little attention.
What ruined it from being an important film was the ending, where a quick chat seemed to undo it's impact on her, personally think it should've ended on a sad note as potentially these incidents are life ruining. So think whilst idea was good, it chickened out of following through.
An outstanding performance from Mia McKenna-Bruce.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizMolly Manning Walker said the idea for the story came from a "formative memory" during a teenage holiday, when she saw a girl perform oral sex on a man on stage during a bar crawl. "I started writing from there. We spent a bit of time in Malia doing research. We really tried to... engage with real life and what was going on. And then we did some workshops where we talked to 16-year-olds and their concept of consent, and it was quite wild what came out of that."
- Citazioni
Tara: [on her encounter with Paddy] I was... like asleep so...
Em: [concerned] Are you saying...? What Taz, he was like that with you on both nights?
Tara: [begins crying in fear] It's fine.
Em: You should have said something. I didn't clock, I... Taz...
Tara: No, you're right. I should have said something. It's fine.
Em: No it's not.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe cast appear in the end credits in order of appearance. However, Olivia Brady as "Voice of Tara's Mum" appears after the sound department credits.
- Colonne sonoreCame Here for Love
Written by Sigala (as Bruce Fielder), Ella Eyre (as Ella McMahon), Klingande (as Cédric Steinmyller), Bryn Christopher, and Scott Wild
Performed by Sigala and Ella Eyre
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 167.725 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 48.596 USD
- 4 feb 2024
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 1.221.661 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 31 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1