The continuation of Lauren's mysterious background as her identity becomes the focus of an intense media circus.The continuation of Lauren's mysterious background as her identity becomes the focus of an intense media circus.The continuation of Lauren's mysterious background as her identity becomes the focus of an intense media circus.
Rory Anthony
- Liam Boon
- (as Rory Galley)
Kim Waters
- Marie Howard
- (credit only)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
We are dealing with something serious here. Upcoming director Kris Smith's Set Me Free is quite the trip as it shines with it's diverse characters, clever twists and the idea of going deep into the rabbit hole of mayhem. It's an intriguing analytical mess of reality, mystery and emotion. Set Me Free focuses on the desire to seek the truth of the past, though it always comes back to haunt you, it is the trouble and isolation that comes with that - which our main girl Lauren/Ava deals with. The story has a certain way of exploring the psychological persuasion into a way of thinking; Could this happen to your loved one? Astounding and original.
The women steal the film in my opinion (such as Nina Taylor, Leila Kotori, Ann-Marie Doggett, Jo Lay etc), their strong feminine approach creates such a strong impact to the film making me want to watch more. Well done girls! It's funny how the men are depicted as somewhat weak in the whole film (with minor exceptions from the father character) and the female roles are the ones that push the story forward. Nice touch. Charlotte was my favourite character due to her manipulation, greed of power and exposure of others, and I believe the film starts to become way more interesting the minute she first appears.
While there is still something I still cannot quite describe that holds Set Me Free back from being one of the best films i've seen this year, I cannot stop thinking about how powerful and great it really is. It is an ambiguous film that stays with you long after you've watched it and one that packs fantastic performances. This is an incredible film by a young, ambitious team of filmmakers. But don't get me wrong, there will undoubtedly be some debate about whether this is cutting edge independent filmmaking or just another snooty art-house mind-messer. All I can say is, I hope the film grabs enough audience for the debate to matter. It deserves it.
The women steal the film in my opinion (such as Nina Taylor, Leila Kotori, Ann-Marie Doggett, Jo Lay etc), their strong feminine approach creates such a strong impact to the film making me want to watch more. Well done girls! It's funny how the men are depicted as somewhat weak in the whole film (with minor exceptions from the father character) and the female roles are the ones that push the story forward. Nice touch. Charlotte was my favourite character due to her manipulation, greed of power and exposure of others, and I believe the film starts to become way more interesting the minute she first appears.
While there is still something I still cannot quite describe that holds Set Me Free back from being one of the best films i've seen this year, I cannot stop thinking about how powerful and great it really is. It is an ambiguous film that stays with you long after you've watched it and one that packs fantastic performances. This is an incredible film by a young, ambitious team of filmmakers. But don't get me wrong, there will undoubtedly be some debate about whether this is cutting edge independent filmmaking or just another snooty art-house mind-messer. All I can say is, I hope the film grabs enough audience for the debate to matter. It deserves it.
This is a thought provoking film that leaves the watcher with many questions about how they would feel if they were in the shoes of Lauren (Nina Taylor). Kris has invoked a sense of menace and outrage from the very start in the way that Lauren's life is controlled and how her innocence is betrayed by her parents time and time again. The characters portrayed by most of the actors were utterly believable with particularly strong performances by Nina Taylor, Steve Carroll and Max Rudd. I enjoyed Ann Marie Doggett's role as the busy housewife and the two investigating Police Officers Mark Wells and Jo Lay in their dogged battle with the overbearing stupidity of their superior officer. As the story unfolds we are treated to an insight into the machinations of a baying press core which again leaves questions in the mind of the viewer about how they would react in similar circumstances. When a film leaves you thinking about it in the following days, then it has worked and this film has certainly done this. I hope it reaches a wide audience as it deserves to be out there in the public eye. Though the subject of the film is disturbing and the action tugs at your emotions in ways that you may not like, it is at the same time extremely engaging. An excellent film that I have no hesitation in recommending.
I know you need both films together to make this work, but I personally enjoyed this one more than the first one. This volume seems to have more energy and action instead of character development. Thought the ending was very good for what it's worth because when you invest your time into the story and characters for 2 and a half hours it's important to have an ending that wraps everything up nicely.
I watched this on youtube and thought it was superb. I hope this gets the recognition that it deserves.
So I just returned from watching both volumes of Set Me Free at a test screening and I got to say, this is impressive. I heard just before watching this that it was done on such a shoe-string budget and the thought of this just blew me away, it was handled in such a way that's quite beyond perfection. It's a riveting and harrowing story that focuses on very interesting characters and it delivers such charm and joy even though it is a dark mystery thriller. I think concepts like this are always misled or not done properly in big Hollywood films whether it's the company's interference or not, but Set Me Free grabs an emotional response and it's films like this that should gain public interest and be shown to thousands.
VERY long story short, our main protagonist is Lauren (Nina Taylor) who is confined indoors in a lighthouse by her strange parents whom she addresses formally ("Father, Mother"). She is told to never leave the lighthouse and explore outside for it is toxic and would instantly kill her without a certain protective gear. As days go by her suspicions grow more and she eventually dares to go out, not knowing that the oxygen outside is totally safe and normal (like it always has been). But Lauren is discovered by a single mum, detectives and a social-worker (who becomes a therapist) and soon begins to realise that her whole life in the lighthouse was a lie; the air outside, certain rules inside the lighthouse and especially the people who claim to be her parents. Meanwhile a hardworking journalist (Leila Kotori) gets a position at an impressive news organisation and investigates how to corrupt and expose poor Lauren into the truth behind her past. I'm not going to spoil the entire thing as it's such a complex story line but that's the core point. It's preachy and manipulative – it lets the story speak for itself.
The performances are debatable as some acting is weaker than others but on the plus side it's not distracting. Nina Taylor proves that she doesn't mind being put into the most unflattering light possible and for that she is fearless, bold and interesting to keep watching. The kidnap parents (Steve Carroll and Kim Waters) are truly in the spotlight in my personal opinion as they were perfect as the unusual parents, better than the rest of the performances.
Set Me Free is the kind of film that inspires debate and discussion long after the credits have rolled. It's ambiguous and mystery is a positive, believe me! It's well directed, well written and more importantly entertaining all the way throughout. This is how dramas should be and I wish to see more films like this.
VERY long story short, our main protagonist is Lauren (Nina Taylor) who is confined indoors in a lighthouse by her strange parents whom she addresses formally ("Father, Mother"). She is told to never leave the lighthouse and explore outside for it is toxic and would instantly kill her without a certain protective gear. As days go by her suspicions grow more and she eventually dares to go out, not knowing that the oxygen outside is totally safe and normal (like it always has been). But Lauren is discovered by a single mum, detectives and a social-worker (who becomes a therapist) and soon begins to realise that her whole life in the lighthouse was a lie; the air outside, certain rules inside the lighthouse and especially the people who claim to be her parents. Meanwhile a hardworking journalist (Leila Kotori) gets a position at an impressive news organisation and investigates how to corrupt and expose poor Lauren into the truth behind her past. I'm not going to spoil the entire thing as it's such a complex story line but that's the core point. It's preachy and manipulative – it lets the story speak for itself.
The performances are debatable as some acting is weaker than others but on the plus side it's not distracting. Nina Taylor proves that she doesn't mind being put into the most unflattering light possible and for that she is fearless, bold and interesting to keep watching. The kidnap parents (Steve Carroll and Kim Waters) are truly in the spotlight in my personal opinion as they were perfect as the unusual parents, better than the rest of the performances.
Set Me Free is the kind of film that inspires debate and discussion long after the credits have rolled. It's ambiguous and mystery is a positive, believe me! It's well directed, well written and more importantly entertaining all the way throughout. This is how dramas should be and I wish to see more films like this.
Did you know
- TriviaWas originally going to be shot as one feature film. But due to it's length it was cut into two films instead. The crew thought it would be a nice touch to extend it to another film so that it was a trilogy, eventually the idea was scrapped.
- GoofsCameraman is seen (blurred) in the background as the AD's are preparing everything together for the interview.
- Quotes
Lauren Howard: I think they wanted me. They wanted a daughter, a child I mean. So they got one.
Ethan Wright: Yes. Yes they wanted you, and they just took you.
Lauren Howard: I was theirs.
- Crazy creditsDuring the beginning credits, a conversation between Rachel and Ethan focuses on how serious the Lauren case is.
- ConnectionsFeatures Set Me Free: Vol. I (2016)
- SoundtracksSet Me Free
Written by Samantha Fry & James Rogers
Performed by Abby Elliot
Courtesy of Simply Sonic Studios & Television Bandits (2016)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- £6,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 10 minutes
- Color
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