AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
4,2/10
3,3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSubjected to bizarre, increasingly violent pseudo-scientific experiments in personality modification, brainwashing and mind control, Isabel must escape the clutches of the Rosewood Institute... Ler tudoSubjected to bizarre, increasingly violent pseudo-scientific experiments in personality modification, brainwashing and mind control, Isabel must escape the clutches of the Rosewood Institute and exact her revenge, or else be forever lost.Subjected to bizarre, increasingly violent pseudo-scientific experiments in personality modification, brainwashing and mind control, Isabel must escape the clutches of the Rosewood Institute and exact her revenge, or else be forever lost.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Amber Viera
- Margaret
- (as Amber Coney)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
The Institute is a thriller starring James Franco and Eric Roberts and had me bored, frustrated and simply not interested throughout.
Based very very very very loosely on a true story it follows a girl who commits herself into an asylum after a tragedy only to find out that nefarious dealings go on within its walls.
Franco not only stars but directs here and many don't realize he's been directing for over a decade now! I just personally don't think he's very good at it, and quite frankly I don't like seeing him in front of the camera either.
I get what the movie is doing and the concept is passable enough, sadly the execution is lacking and meanders through its 90 minute runtime at a grindy boring pace.
It has its moments and that finale was quite inspired but entertaining? Hardly.
I'm sure had we known the truth about what truth happened in the real Rosewood center that would have been for a more interesting tale.
The Good:
Decent finale
The Bad:
Simply unlikable
James Franco
Things I Learnt From This Movie:
I'll never understand why people adapt true stories and turn them into fiction anyway
I don't like James Franco's face
Based very very very very loosely on a true story it follows a girl who commits herself into an asylum after a tragedy only to find out that nefarious dealings go on within its walls.
Franco not only stars but directs here and many don't realize he's been directing for over a decade now! I just personally don't think he's very good at it, and quite frankly I don't like seeing him in front of the camera either.
I get what the movie is doing and the concept is passable enough, sadly the execution is lacking and meanders through its 90 minute runtime at a grindy boring pace.
It has its moments and that finale was quite inspired but entertaining? Hardly.
I'm sure had we known the truth about what truth happened in the real Rosewood center that would have been for a more interesting tale.
The Good:
Decent finale
The Bad:
Simply unlikable
James Franco
Things I Learnt From This Movie:
I'll never understand why people adapt true stories and turn them into fiction anyway
I don't like James Franco's face
Wow. For the life of me, I cannot find anything about this film I liked. With a cast that should have done so much better, we have to lay blame to the awful script and terrible direction. It looked like a made for TV film from the 80s with its soft focus and glaring backlight. It's apparent thriller theme was wanting and any mention of horror or scares is mistaken. I would suspect that this could be used for GCSE media students on how not to make a film.
The Institute could have been so much more If only the story had more clarity. The elements were all there to make this a gripping, and memorable tale.
There are also some alluring references to Poe, with the pendulum and the pit in this gothic horror set in the Victorian era
Loosely based on true events this story gives more attention to the real institute for the feeble-minded, which in itself is interesting, and can immediately make you want to learn more about its history.
Unfortunately, the plot is very patchy. It can be a little confusing to follow, and I can't help but feel it could have focused more heavily on the human side of compassion, deceit, and blackmail, which would take you on more of an emotional journey.
We are presented with a potent theme that has relevance today. As the film is set in a time when the men used their power to control women, who had not yet captured their independence.
I strongly believe James Francou was the wrong choice for the part of Dr. Cairn. In some scenes, he was reasonable enough, but in others felt overacted, he sounded gruff but lacked influence. I think this particular role should have been performed by someone with a little more authority. Take Ben Kingsley, Patrick Stewart, or even Ian Mckellen for example.
Unfortunately, there is a severe lack of flow to the story. I didn't fully understand the concept of mind control or the different role-playing scenarios with the patients. Unless it was an experiment to damage their already frail minds, and then auction them off as slaves under a new identity?
The cult aspect involving the upper elite was fantastic, however, and I would have loved it to go into more depth. I think they could have made a stronger focal point of the women being sold into slavery, along with the drug abuse, and how the hospital staff was obtaining, and administering the poison to subdue their subjects.
The Institute has many solid ideas. Unfortunately, it just can't put them together for a highly diverse movie. I've already given my thoughts that the casting was a little off, and the story needed to divulge, and flesh out some deeper character emotions.
Sometimes basic explanations and simple storytelling can be the most powerful to engage with your audience. Alas, the Institute delivered an incomplete plot, devoid of human compassion, scrambled with weird ritualistic sacrifices, which just added deeply to pandemonium.
5/10.
There are also some alluring references to Poe, with the pendulum and the pit in this gothic horror set in the Victorian era
Loosely based on true events this story gives more attention to the real institute for the feeble-minded, which in itself is interesting, and can immediately make you want to learn more about its history.
Unfortunately, the plot is very patchy. It can be a little confusing to follow, and I can't help but feel it could have focused more heavily on the human side of compassion, deceit, and blackmail, which would take you on more of an emotional journey.
We are presented with a potent theme that has relevance today. As the film is set in a time when the men used their power to control women, who had not yet captured their independence.
I strongly believe James Francou was the wrong choice for the part of Dr. Cairn. In some scenes, he was reasonable enough, but in others felt overacted, he sounded gruff but lacked influence. I think this particular role should have been performed by someone with a little more authority. Take Ben Kingsley, Patrick Stewart, or even Ian Mckellen for example.
Unfortunately, there is a severe lack of flow to the story. I didn't fully understand the concept of mind control or the different role-playing scenarios with the patients. Unless it was an experiment to damage their already frail minds, and then auction them off as slaves under a new identity?
The cult aspect involving the upper elite was fantastic, however, and I would have loved it to go into more depth. I think they could have made a stronger focal point of the women being sold into slavery, along with the drug abuse, and how the hospital staff was obtaining, and administering the poison to subdue their subjects.
The Institute has many solid ideas. Unfortunately, it just can't put them together for a highly diverse movie. I've already given my thoughts that the casting was a little off, and the story needed to divulge, and flesh out some deeper character emotions.
Sometimes basic explanations and simple storytelling can be the most powerful to engage with your audience. Alas, the Institute delivered an incomplete plot, devoid of human compassion, scrambled with weird ritualistic sacrifices, which just added deeply to pandemonium.
5/10.
Hammy acting from renowned actors you'd expect more of. It wasn't laudanum they were ingesting but copious amounts of lithium to numb the brain thus restraining the urge to burst out laughing at every cliched, hackneyed and redundant theme in the plot line.
I hope I hammered that home.
I hope I hammered that home.
A pittyful effort of look smart and surprising, comes out as a leading disorientation and regret.
I genuinely believe, Franco did this movie just to be more around half naked women. It may also be a result of beting between two buddies.
No story, no continuity, no acting, no screenplay, no music and no nothing.
Costumes are nice though...
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAllie Gallerani and Erin Johnson's first career nude scenes.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe main character has obvious bikini tan lines during the ritual.
- ConexõesReferenced in Half in the Bag: The Disaster Artist (2017)
Principais escolhas
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- How long is The Institute?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- The Institute
- Locações de filme
- Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA(location)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 3.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 31.634
- Tempo de duração1 hora 38 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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