Em um mundo de castelos falsos e roedores antropomórficos, uma batalha épica começa quando a sanidade de um pai desempregado é desafiada por um encontro casual com duas meninas menores de id... Ler tudoEm um mundo de castelos falsos e roedores antropomórficos, uma batalha épica começa quando a sanidade de um pai desempregado é desafiada por um encontro casual com duas meninas menores de idade em férias.Em um mundo de castelos falsos e roedores antropomórficos, uma batalha épica começa quando a sanidade de um pai desempregado é desafiada por um encontro casual com duas meninas menores de idade em férias.
- Prêmios
- 2 vitórias e 5 indicações no total
- Man on Scooter's Wife
- (as Kimberly Jindra)
- Lifeguard
- (as Lex Edelman)
Avaliações em destaque
Director/writer Randy Moore perhaps has broke the mold for turning something so loved and established on it's head. If it wasn't for the fact it is in black and white it could almost be described as a trippy, psychedelic horror ride.
Opening with a ride on 'Thunder Mountain' (many famous rides are featured throughout) it quickly turns into a paranoia 'Invasion of the Body Snatchers' type vibe, reminiscent of elements of with 'Jacobs Ladder' and 'Twin Peaks' as a father begins to see the happy faces of visitors, staff and characters around the theme park turn into gnarled faces, evil faces and others with empty black eyes sockets.
Roy Abramsohn plays Jim; every day Dad, perfectly however, either there's something not quite right with Jim or the park is off. There's some irony thrown in is as the queues are endless for the rides and the pressure of taking the family on any holiday. Both child actors Katelynn Rodriguez as Sara and Jack Dalton as Elliott are notable.
For the first hour Moore creates an uneasy anxiousness throughout as Jim spends his time following two young French girls around the park in midlife crisis fashion straining his relationship with his wife Emily played by excellently by Elena Schuber. You have a grown man who has lost his job, at the end of his tether, blacking out and leaving his kids unattended (horror enough), while encountering strange characters including a cougar like drunk, a whaling nurse, naked women and a kooky scientist to name a few.
While the story isn't linear, it's a strange trippy ride especially in the latter half where Jim finds himself under The Epcot Centre in a '2001 Space Oddity' and 'Future World' looking environment. In addition, the final act and closing has Hitchcockian/'Twilight Zone' qualities.
As a low budget affair what is commendable is that director Moore manages to put a David Lynch style chiller together turning something so ingrained as joyous and familiar into something so unnerving and surreal, while still respecting the real life park and big W (it's not a Disney bashing film persay). Clearly filmed at Disney World and Disneyland it's surprising how well put together and edited the film is and it has some nice effects and blood thrown in for good measure. Abel Korzeniowski's music score emulates and captures both the park's environment and paranoia perfectly.
Overall it's not a conventional or mainstream horror but its not experimental film either. Recommended for those who want to see something truly uneasy without being too graphic. Disney will never seem the same again.
Contrary to expectation, Escape From Tomorrow has an incredibly mild execution, focusing on cheap gags and slapstick rather than scares or atmosphere (black and white film is not atmosphere). Granted, I'm sure Moore had a lot of challenges and maybe the film doesn't match his initial vision, but the scenes away from the parks match the weirdly off tone so maybe this is who he is. The photography is only okay. The technical aspects do suffer, particularly with sound and visual effects in green screening, but that's forgivable given the circumstance but not forgivable given the script. The fundamental problem is that the acting is very unconvincing. Instead of a protagonist undergoing an understandable mid-life crisis, he ends up like Lester Burnham without the charm, acting just like a terribly unlikeable 16 year old pervert. And this guy is supposed to be a parent.
Perhaps Moore wants us to be uncomfortable watching him, maybe there's things to be said about man's desire for young women, but it's not the kind of meaningful discomfort that really makes a viewer think, it feels thrown in there as a character quirk. It's hard not to go into these types of films without expectations, but it simply didn't go as dark as I would've wanted and ended up feeling random instead with too many plot threads. The film could've saved itself by its final minutes by tying up all of them in an interesting way that actually says something, but instead they vouch for a single one that negates the others. It can be interesting and engaging at times, but as a whole it doesn't really work since Moore doesn't have anything to say about the human psyche, just that this would probably be cool if a film shot in Disneyland about bad things happening existed. Please make this a curiosity viewing only and don't get too excited.
5/10
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesFilmed at Disney World and Disneyland without permission.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen Jim is talking to his boss on his cell phone, he looks down from the balcony. You can tell that their room is on a high floor. But when the family leaves the room and goes to the elevator it has a number 2 near the elevator door, indicating the scene was filmed in the 2nd floor hallway.
- Citações
Elliot: [about young girls] Dad, they're pretty, huh?
Jim: Well, ya know, pretty depends on your definition of pretty. Do you think they're pretty?
Elliot: I guess.
Jim: Well then, there you go. That's *your* definition.
Elliot: Is mommy pretty?
Jim: Your mother... Yeah, she's beautiful.
Elliot: I think so, too.
Jim: Yeah. I mean, not in a classical sense, but more in an Emily Dickinson, kind of bookish Tina Fey kind of thing.
- ConexõesFeatured in Some Jerk with a Camera: Boy Meets World Meets Disney World! (2013)
- Trilhas sonorasFeels Like Home
Performed by Meck featuring Dino
Principais escolhas
- How long is Escape from Tomorrow?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 650.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 171.962
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 63.297
- 13 de out. de 2013
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 171.962
- Tempo de duração1 hora 30 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1