R-T-C
Entrou em out. de 2003
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Selos4
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Avaliações7
Classificação de R-T-C
I just returned from seeing this film in Lancaster. Hearing about a locally shot film, I expected not much more than a mini-DV cheapie. However this film is far removed from that.
Kath is a young woman (33) whose sister Annie disappeared two years ago without a trance. Kath rather obsessively hunts around for information to try and work out what happened. The centre of her focus is CCTV footage of her sister, that seems to suggest that something odd happened.
Shot entirely in the Lancaster/Morecambe/Fleetwood region, in the North West of the UK, the film has very powerful visuals, the scenes shot on the bay itself have an amazing dream-like quality almost Herzog-like. The direction is never pedestrian, always adding to scenes.
Shirley Henderson is superb as Kath, who is just by rights, a typical northern girl and comes across very well as such. The supporting cast is all solid.
The script is simply superb, with an ever changing story line, and some very interesting sub-plots, that add a lot of detail to the characters and remind you that nothing ever happens in isolation, there are always other things going on in their lives. Fortunately these do not pose any real pacing issues. The ending is solid.
A unique film, it is hard to determine who it would really be aimed at, certainly fans of Don't Look Now, and similar, would really enjoy this - on a larger scale, any fans of small scale, artistic cinema should get their money's worth.
In all, a very good film and certainly worth seeing if you get the chance. I am looking forward to a DVD release so I can watch it again.
Kath is a young woman (33) whose sister Annie disappeared two years ago without a trance. Kath rather obsessively hunts around for information to try and work out what happened. The centre of her focus is CCTV footage of her sister, that seems to suggest that something odd happened.
Shot entirely in the Lancaster/Morecambe/Fleetwood region, in the North West of the UK, the film has very powerful visuals, the scenes shot on the bay itself have an amazing dream-like quality almost Herzog-like. The direction is never pedestrian, always adding to scenes.
Shirley Henderson is superb as Kath, who is just by rights, a typical northern girl and comes across very well as such. The supporting cast is all solid.
The script is simply superb, with an ever changing story line, and some very interesting sub-plots, that add a lot of detail to the characters and remind you that nothing ever happens in isolation, there are always other things going on in their lives. Fortunately these do not pose any real pacing issues. The ending is solid.
A unique film, it is hard to determine who it would really be aimed at, certainly fans of Don't Look Now, and similar, would really enjoy this - on a larger scale, any fans of small scale, artistic cinema should get their money's worth.
In all, a very good film and certainly worth seeing if you get the chance. I am looking forward to a DVD release so I can watch it again.
If you get a chance to see this 2-part TV show, then you certainly should.
Synopsis: (NO SPOILERS)
The story concerns police detective Mackenzie Stone whose wife disappeared a few years ago - and he who still recovering from the incident - experiencing weird dreams and the like. At the same time we are introduced to another man - John Dean, who is suffering from total amnesia, meaning that he remembers nothing of his past life before he turned up in hospital 5 years ago.
Mackenzie Stone, played by John Hannah becomes convinced that he knows who John Dean really is, that he is a man who dissapeared a few months before John Dean appeared - and that he murdered his family before hand to claim the insurance money. However, it starts to become apparant that DS Stone may well have killed his own wife...
In all this is a very good 2-parter with a very nice pay-off at the end. All the cast put on good performances, and it is all very believable.
Synopsis: (NO SPOILERS)
The story concerns police detective Mackenzie Stone whose wife disappeared a few years ago - and he who still recovering from the incident - experiencing weird dreams and the like. At the same time we are introduced to another man - John Dean, who is suffering from total amnesia, meaning that he remembers nothing of his past life before he turned up in hospital 5 years ago.
Mackenzie Stone, played by John Hannah becomes convinced that he knows who John Dean really is, that he is a man who dissapeared a few months before John Dean appeared - and that he murdered his family before hand to claim the insurance money. However, it starts to become apparant that DS Stone may well have killed his own wife...
In all this is a very good 2-parter with a very nice pay-off at the end. All the cast put on good performances, and it is all very believable.
This is a film that takes what is an interesting notion - that of there being no-one left on earth at all (for reasons never fully explained) and does wonderful things with it.
Zach, the main character, spends the first half of the film almost enjoying his freedom, as he drives trains and lives in large mansions. However he starts to crack up after a while, leading to a memorable scene as he delivers a resounding speech to a bunch of cardboard cut-outs. The film opens up with new characters, but I believe it did not loose anything in doing so, the characters react to each other in a believable way.
The conclusion is stunning and dramatic.
In all this is a superb film, made on a low budget, with no big names - but is probably my favourite film of all time. It is the kind of film you wish would go on forever.
R-T-C
Zach, the main character, spends the first half of the film almost enjoying his freedom, as he drives trains and lives in large mansions. However he starts to crack up after a while, leading to a memorable scene as he delivers a resounding speech to a bunch of cardboard cut-outs. The film opens up with new characters, but I believe it did not loose anything in doing so, the characters react to each other in a believable way.
The conclusion is stunning and dramatic.
In all this is a superb film, made on a low budget, with no big names - but is probably my favourite film of all time. It is the kind of film you wish would go on forever.
R-T-C