Sharp Corner
- 2024
- 1h 50m
A dedicated family man becomes obsessed with saving the lives of the car accident victims on the sharp corner in front of his house - an obsession that could cost him everything.A dedicated family man becomes obsessed with saving the lives of the car accident victims on the sharp corner in front of his house - an obsession that could cost him everything.A dedicated family man becomes obsessed with saving the lives of the car accident victims on the sharp corner in front of his house - an obsession that could cost him everything.
- Awards
- 3 wins & 4 nominations total
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- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The mild-mannered "Josh" (Ben Foster), his wife "Rachel" (Cobie Smulders) and their son "Max" (William Kosovic) have a brand new home and are looking forward to settling in when there is a car accident outside and a tyre comes a-bouncing through their window at a seriously inopportune moment! Needless to say they are a bit flustered and she thinks maybe they ought to move. Well when it happens again, you'd think that'd be a bit of a no-brainer but he is somehow captivated. Not by the accidents, but by the time it takes the emergency services to arrive, and so he decides to do some training to be able to help out. Of course, his wife and young son are perplexed by his increasingly odd behaviour, as is his boss, and so there's soon a lot on the line for the man. I enjoyed the start of this, and I thought this might be Foster's best performance, but after about half an hour it became a rather joyless exhibition of obsessiveness and selfishness topped off by a truly far-fetched, though sometimes darkly comedic, desire to do good. Smulders does fine, but only features sparingly - which is just as well for given her character is supposed to be a couples therapist, "Rachel" shows a complete lack of appreciation of her husband's trauma and of their son's needs that is ultimately annoyingly breathtaking. Sadly, the initially good idea just turns into a series of overly contrived bad decisions stitched together with an implausible series of incidents that rushed through some universally unlikeable and undercooked characterisations and left me wanting more - or less. Sorry.
This movie demands your patience and attention span. But the story is most effective in this way.
First off, the acting is excellent, and Ben Foster is captivating. I sensed what may happen, but his character adapted and changed his MO a few times.
This is about an unsung hero, who goes through crisis after crisis, but insists on solving the problem himself. Cobie Smuldrrs is excellent as well, and works well in her hyper-organized, perfectionist character.
The tension builds as Foster's character realizes his true calling. Consumed with a new occupation, battling mortal danger, he seeks to fight it head on.
This film is excellent with a plaintive soundtrack, well-rounded characters; and a narrative which belies exposition and resorts to thoughtful yet misguided strategies.
This is a very worthwhile film, but it requires your attention and curiosity.
First off, the acting is excellent, and Ben Foster is captivating. I sensed what may happen, but his character adapted and changed his MO a few times.
This is about an unsung hero, who goes through crisis after crisis, but insists on solving the problem himself. Cobie Smuldrrs is excellent as well, and works well in her hyper-organized, perfectionist character.
The tension builds as Foster's character realizes his true calling. Consumed with a new occupation, battling mortal danger, he seeks to fight it head on.
This film is excellent with a plaintive soundtrack, well-rounded characters; and a narrative which belies exposition and resorts to thoughtful yet misguided strategies.
This is a very worthwhile film, but it requires your attention and curiosity.
Dramatic thriller "Sharp Corner" charts the descent of average family guy Ben Foster (fine actor) from hating his job, thru leaning on booze, to sheer insanity via the titular accident blackspot outside the new home he's bought with wife Cobie Smulders and their young son. As cars repeatedly crash, and folk die, on his front yard, Foster becomes obsessed with the victims and on prepping to 'help' future ones, rather than preventing them and/or addressing his family's trauma. Writer / director Jason Buxton's second film is original, clever, well performed - tho also slow & implausible at times, with an ending that'll irk some. That said, generally, it's a good film.
Is it indented to be a comedy? A surreal david lynch / kids in the hall skit? Tonally this thing is an absolute mess. Unlikeable characters and ham fisted overacting. Not suspenseful in the slightest, not particularly dramatic. Ben foster is usually great but here he plays it up like a high school melodrama. Weird choices abound.
Not sure what was the intended outcome, but this thing is void of any sensible entertainment purpose.
163 characters left? Ok. Nothing more to say or see here. An unfunny comedy, a drama-less drama, a suspense without a hint of suspense. No real plot now that i think of it.
Not sure what was the intended outcome, but this thing is void of any sensible entertainment purpose.
163 characters left? Ok. Nothing more to say or see here. An unfunny comedy, a drama-less drama, a suspense without a hint of suspense. No real plot now that i think of it.
Greetings again from the darkness. Purchasing a home is often called 'The American Dream.' For Josh and Rachel, it's even more special when their son, 6-year-old Max, refers to their new place as "a mansion". Sometimes (especially in movies) dreams turn into nightmares, and that's exactly what happens in this film from writer-director Jason Buxton (his first feature since his debut BLACKBIRD, 2012). Adapted from the short story by Russell Wangersky, this film is billed as a psychological thriller - which it is, yet it's also an enigmatic character study.
Ben Foster (HELL OR HIGH WATER, 2018) plays Josh. Only this isn't the Ben Foster we've come to expect. His usual high-intensity and simmering danger-on-edge is replaced by a mild-mannered man who is even a bit meek whether dealing with his wife or the new manager he once trained at work. Cobie Smulders (Maria Hill in the Marvel Universe) plays his wife Rachel, and their first night in the new house leads to one of the worst cases of coitus-interruptus in history. A car tire comes flying through the living room window just after the loud crash of a car hitting the tree in their front yard. The horrific wreck leaves a young man dead, and the family stunned.
As you might have guessed from the film's title, their new home is located on a dangerous curve. The only warning sign for drivers is mostly blocked by overgrown vegetation. Josh's reaction to the wreck amplifies his struggles at work, while also creating tension with Rachel. He wants to talk about it, and she wants to ignore it. A second wreck has Josh trying to comfort the driver. The wreck convinces Rachel it's time to move, while it simultaneously convinces Josh he could have saved the man's life. Clandestine CPR lessons follow, while family therapy exposes all we need to know.
Rather than a curve, Josh and Rachel come to a fork in the road ... and take different paths. While Josh becomes obsessed with waiting for the next wreck so he can save a life. Rachel simply wants to protect herself and her son, and avoid the obsessed Josh. He's a man who desperately wants to be a savior to strangers, when the best thing he could be is a father/husband. Foster's performance is unlike anything we have seen from him, and it can't help but make us feel uneasy. Director Buxton gives us an early sneak peek at the curve, but mostly we are confused as to why a speed bump or protective/reflective barrier hasn't been installed. Sometimes a movie leaves us feeling like it should have been more interesting, more entertaining, ... more something ... than it was. Foster keeps us watching, yet the whole thing feels a bit hollow.
Opens in select theaters and VOD on May 9, 2025.
Ben Foster (HELL OR HIGH WATER, 2018) plays Josh. Only this isn't the Ben Foster we've come to expect. His usual high-intensity and simmering danger-on-edge is replaced by a mild-mannered man who is even a bit meek whether dealing with his wife or the new manager he once trained at work. Cobie Smulders (Maria Hill in the Marvel Universe) plays his wife Rachel, and their first night in the new house leads to one of the worst cases of coitus-interruptus in history. A car tire comes flying through the living room window just after the loud crash of a car hitting the tree in their front yard. The horrific wreck leaves a young man dead, and the family stunned.
As you might have guessed from the film's title, their new home is located on a dangerous curve. The only warning sign for drivers is mostly blocked by overgrown vegetation. Josh's reaction to the wreck amplifies his struggles at work, while also creating tension with Rachel. He wants to talk about it, and she wants to ignore it. A second wreck has Josh trying to comfort the driver. The wreck convinces Rachel it's time to move, while it simultaneously convinces Josh he could have saved the man's life. Clandestine CPR lessons follow, while family therapy exposes all we need to know.
Rather than a curve, Josh and Rachel come to a fork in the road ... and take different paths. While Josh becomes obsessed with waiting for the next wreck so he can save a life. Rachel simply wants to protect herself and her son, and avoid the obsessed Josh. He's a man who desperately wants to be a savior to strangers, when the best thing he could be is a father/husband. Foster's performance is unlike anything we have seen from him, and it can't help but make us feel uneasy. Director Buxton gives us an early sneak peek at the curve, but mostly we are confused as to why a speed bump or protective/reflective barrier hasn't been installed. Sometimes a movie leaves us feeling like it should have been more interesting, more entertaining, ... more something ... than it was. Foster keeps us watching, yet the whole thing feels a bit hollow.
Opens in select theaters and VOD on May 9, 2025.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- La casa al final de la curva
- Filming locations
- 481 River Rd, Terence Bay, NS B3T 1X3, Canada(The sharp corner)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $79,550
- Runtime1 hour 50 minutes
- Color
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