AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
7,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Uma jornalista britânica infiltrada infiltra-se nos canais de propaganda 'on-line' do chamado Estado islâmico, para ser capturada apenas por seu recrutador.Uma jornalista britânica infiltrada infiltra-se nos canais de propaganda 'on-line' do chamado Estado islâmico, para ser capturada apenas por seu recrutador.Uma jornalista britânica infiltrada infiltra-se nos canais de propaganda 'on-line' do chamado Estado islâmico, para ser capturada apenas por seu recrutador.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 4 vitórias e 7 indicações no total
Hollie Burgess
- Friend
- (não creditado)
Marie Hamilton
- Waitress
- (não creditado)
Irina Klimovich
- Journalist
- (não creditado)
Louis Martin
- Bouncer
- (não creditado)
Adam Scott-Rowley
- Journalist
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Greetings again from the darkness. French journalist Anna Erelle documented her month-long correspondence with an ISIS terrorist in her 2015 book, "In the Skin of a Jihadist." Her experience resulted in a fatwa being issued for her ... basically an Islamic death sentence on her head. Based on (more like influenced by) Ms. Erelle's story, writer-director Timur Bekmambetov (ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER, 2012) and co-writers Brittany Poulton, Olga Kharina bring us a movie version via computer screen storytelling.
Valene Kane ("The Fall") stars as Amy Whittaker, a British freelance journalist with a bright idea for an important story. With so many western girls being recruited by ISIS and sold as sex slaves, Amy decides to track down a recruiter and gain intel on how the process works. She does this by creating new Facebook and Skype accounts under the fictitious name of Melody Nelson, an "almost" 20 year old new convert to Islam who just doesn't fit in to her current world. With the beep of a new post, Melody is contacted by Bilel, a terrorist and ISIS recruiter, whose profile expertly blends cat videos with bombings and beheadings.
Bilel (Shazad Latif, "Star Trek: Discovery") is handsome and charming. He talks the talk and walks the walk as both a terrorist and man who can seduce vulnerable young women via FaceTime. There is a lot happening on Amy's/Melody's screen at any given time. The pop ups come fast and frequently from her hard-nosed news editor Vick (Christine Adams, "Black Lightning"), curious best friend Kathy (Emma Cater), confused boyfriend Matt (Morgan Watkins), and IT specialist Lou (Amir Rahimzadeh), himself the son of a Muslim. As if all that isn't enough, YouTube videos come and go, and Melody is constantly googling the latest topic of conversation so she doesn't give away her ruse.
Artistic license is taken with her in-the-moment research and blunders. Although Ms. Kane is strong in the role, Amy never comes across as a professional journalist on a job. She does, however, expertly play to the stresses - rent due, concerned boyfriend, social commitments, dual personas, work deadlines, and the social media chaos that comes with flirting with terrorists or "making friends with jihadists". It's just impossible to imagine a job like this wouldn't find all parties better prepared and protected.
Still, the reality of young women being seduced and recruited by terrorists is quite real, and this should generate fear in every parent. I kept thinking "that wouldn't happen", all the while my stomach churned with the tension. It's the reality of the threat that creates the fear, but director Bekmambetov effectively uses the online interactions to create a current and urgent scenario.
In theaters on May 14, 2021.
Valene Kane ("The Fall") stars as Amy Whittaker, a British freelance journalist with a bright idea for an important story. With so many western girls being recruited by ISIS and sold as sex slaves, Amy decides to track down a recruiter and gain intel on how the process works. She does this by creating new Facebook and Skype accounts under the fictitious name of Melody Nelson, an "almost" 20 year old new convert to Islam who just doesn't fit in to her current world. With the beep of a new post, Melody is contacted by Bilel, a terrorist and ISIS recruiter, whose profile expertly blends cat videos with bombings and beheadings.
Bilel (Shazad Latif, "Star Trek: Discovery") is handsome and charming. He talks the talk and walks the walk as both a terrorist and man who can seduce vulnerable young women via FaceTime. There is a lot happening on Amy's/Melody's screen at any given time. The pop ups come fast and frequently from her hard-nosed news editor Vick (Christine Adams, "Black Lightning"), curious best friend Kathy (Emma Cater), confused boyfriend Matt (Morgan Watkins), and IT specialist Lou (Amir Rahimzadeh), himself the son of a Muslim. As if all that isn't enough, YouTube videos come and go, and Melody is constantly googling the latest topic of conversation so she doesn't give away her ruse.
Artistic license is taken with her in-the-moment research and blunders. Although Ms. Kane is strong in the role, Amy never comes across as a professional journalist on a job. She does, however, expertly play to the stresses - rent due, concerned boyfriend, social commitments, dual personas, work deadlines, and the social media chaos that comes with flirting with terrorists or "making friends with jihadists". It's just impossible to imagine a job like this wouldn't find all parties better prepared and protected.
Still, the reality of young women being seduced and recruited by terrorists is quite real, and this should generate fear in every parent. I kept thinking "that wouldn't happen", all the while my stomach churned with the tension. It's the reality of the threat that creates the fear, but director Bekmambetov effectively uses the online interactions to create a current and urgent scenario.
In theaters on May 14, 2021.
Amy Whittaker (Valene Kane) creates the Facebook profile of alias Melody Nelson intending to attract attention of ISIS recruiters as part of a Gonzo journalism story chronicling the recruitment processes of European women ho then join up with ISIS. It isn't long before Melody's profile attracts the attention of Bilel (Shazad Latif) a handsome and charismatic man who establishes a rapport with the Melody persona eventually becoming seemingly romantic in nature with the lines between Melody and Amy seemingly blurred.
Adapted from the non-fiction book, In the Skin of a Jihadist by French journalist Anna Ereklle, Timur Bekmambetov directs and co-writes this film inspired by the actual story using the "screenlife" filmmaking style he helped popularize with the unfriended movies, and legitimized with his production of the John Cho thriller Searching which gave the format critical legitimacy that had been lacking from the more horror based narratives around the format. Profile has been completed for about three years with festival viewings occurring as early as 2018 and only recently received a release in 2021 where it was quietly released due to the ongoing pandemic. I'm not quite sure exactly why Profile has been sitting on a shelf so long as aside from the screenlife format it's a very familiar undercover/"in too deep" type narrative that will be familiar to those who've seen this type of story, but it is mostly well done.
Much like how Searching took traditional thriller tropes and applied them to the social media age, Profile does the same with undercover story tropes and plays with the ideas of how ubiquitous and easily accessible the internet and social media has made far reaching places around the world. When we see Amy setting up her account to give the impression of a displaced young woman who's flirting with radicalization it's a good sequence as it shows us how easily we can create an image that distorts the truth of who you're interacting with and creating a façade that is indistinguishable from a real life person. When we see Bilel it's a really strong introduction because he's not overly dominating or angry and has a laid back charisma that makes it believable as to why he'd be able to draw people in. Shazad Latif is really good in the role adding just enough humor to make him relatable, but also enough tension beneath the surface to make him a threat. Amy Whittaker I was slightly more mixed on. While I think Valene Kane does well in a role that is not an easy one, I think the role feels very shaky as the movie often shows her making really obvious mistakes and flubs, but also gives us the sense she's got a tenuous grasp on the situation and makes her seem overly fragile and suggestible. Admittedly I have not read the book so I'm not sure how much of the latter half of this story is drawn from the actual story, but as it's presented it makes it hard for me to believe Amy would fall for a man while still having research notes on another woman who was stoned to death for trying to leave ISIS.
Profile raises some interesting questions about the internet and social media's usage in international terrorism and radicalization, but it does so around a story that gives the audience a bit more than they're capable of swallowing with a "romance" angle that feels hard to buy especially with how mentally unstable our main character seemingly is. The novelty of the format is well utilized and the cast do a good job for the most part so I do recommend it, but it doesn't reach quite as high as it could have.
Adapted from the non-fiction book, In the Skin of a Jihadist by French journalist Anna Ereklle, Timur Bekmambetov directs and co-writes this film inspired by the actual story using the "screenlife" filmmaking style he helped popularize with the unfriended movies, and legitimized with his production of the John Cho thriller Searching which gave the format critical legitimacy that had been lacking from the more horror based narratives around the format. Profile has been completed for about three years with festival viewings occurring as early as 2018 and only recently received a release in 2021 where it was quietly released due to the ongoing pandemic. I'm not quite sure exactly why Profile has been sitting on a shelf so long as aside from the screenlife format it's a very familiar undercover/"in too deep" type narrative that will be familiar to those who've seen this type of story, but it is mostly well done.
Much like how Searching took traditional thriller tropes and applied them to the social media age, Profile does the same with undercover story tropes and plays with the ideas of how ubiquitous and easily accessible the internet and social media has made far reaching places around the world. When we see Amy setting up her account to give the impression of a displaced young woman who's flirting with radicalization it's a good sequence as it shows us how easily we can create an image that distorts the truth of who you're interacting with and creating a façade that is indistinguishable from a real life person. When we see Bilel it's a really strong introduction because he's not overly dominating or angry and has a laid back charisma that makes it believable as to why he'd be able to draw people in. Shazad Latif is really good in the role adding just enough humor to make him relatable, but also enough tension beneath the surface to make him a threat. Amy Whittaker I was slightly more mixed on. While I think Valene Kane does well in a role that is not an easy one, I think the role feels very shaky as the movie often shows her making really obvious mistakes and flubs, but also gives us the sense she's got a tenuous grasp on the situation and makes her seem overly fragile and suggestible. Admittedly I have not read the book so I'm not sure how much of the latter half of this story is drawn from the actual story, but as it's presented it makes it hard for me to believe Amy would fall for a man while still having research notes on another woman who was stoned to death for trying to leave ISIS.
Profile raises some interesting questions about the internet and social media's usage in international terrorism and radicalization, but it does so around a story that gives the audience a bit more than they're capable of swallowing with a "romance" angle that feels hard to buy especially with how mentally unstable our main character seemingly is. The novelty of the format is well utilized and the cast do a good job for the most part so I do recommend it, but it doesn't reach quite as high as it could have.
It astonishes me that a movie set entirely on a computer screen can be in any way entertaining, and yet all the movies I've ever seen using that concept ('Unfriended 1 and 2', 'Host', 'Searching' and now 'Profile') are terrific. The concept requires a really well crafted script that moves at a lightning pace. 'Profile' does this extremely well too because it never feels like it's rushing either. I had a really good time with this movie.
The thing about this story is that it feels very real. Obviously it is based on a true story which helps, but the subject matter is very raw. Ghosts and demons attacking people can be scary, but it's always in your mind that they aren't actually real. Terrorists on the other hand are extremely real and are always in the deep recesses of our minds. This creates a very uneasy feeling that the film gives to its audience.
I was going to be very interested in how dark the ending of the film got. Found Footage films are notorious for having particularity brutal and ominous endings (one of the main reasons I lover them so much). I liked the ending 'Profile' went with, but I think I would've liked them to take an extra step further to really keep the film memorable. That's one of the only flaws I found though in an otherwise extremely good film. I highly recommend this one.
The thing about this story is that it feels very real. Obviously it is based on a true story which helps, but the subject matter is very raw. Ghosts and demons attacking people can be scary, but it's always in your mind that they aren't actually real. Terrorists on the other hand are extremely real and are always in the deep recesses of our minds. This creates a very uneasy feeling that the film gives to its audience.
I was going to be very interested in how dark the ending of the film got. Found Footage films are notorious for having particularity brutal and ominous endings (one of the main reasons I lover them so much). I liked the ending 'Profile' went with, but I think I would've liked them to take an extra step further to really keep the film memorable. That's one of the only flaws I found though in an otherwise extremely good film. I highly recommend this one.
I am disturbed by the review that I read by "An Impartial Reviewer" and how they commented that the movie and director only portrayed the dark side of Isis. What?!? Hold on a gosh-darn tick! "Only the dark side"?!!! There is NO LIGHT SIDE TO ISIS!!! They are TERRORISTS, for "Effs" sake! TERRORISTS! They murder innocent people. They cut of their heads, they stone them and the blow them up. They sure do love killing women and children and selling women as sex slaves. There is nothing light or good about them. NOTHING!
7/10 - probably my least favorite of the Screenlife thrillers (I have an unhealthy obsession with Unfriended and Searching), but still a really interesting true life story about ISIS recruiting all on the computer screen.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesSome portions of the film were real documentary footage of true events.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen Bilel is playing soccer and speaking to Amy on Skype there are several instances clearly showing the shadow of the sound man's boom mic and pole on the ground.
- ConexõesReferenced in Vecherniy Urgant: Ani Lorak (2018)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
- How long is Profile?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Profile
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 1.744.740
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 730.290
- 16 de mai. de 2021
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 1.856.730
- Tempo de duração1 hora 46 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.78 : 1
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente