Johnny, the megalomaniac leader of a group of squeegee kids, finds a video camera and pushes his followers into "acting" out increasingly dangerous "scenes".Johnny, the megalomaniac leader of a group of squeegee kids, finds a video camera and pushes his followers into "acting" out increasingly dangerous "scenes".Johnny, the megalomaniac leader of a group of squeegee kids, finds a video camera and pushes his followers into "acting" out increasingly dangerous "scenes".
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Chris William Martin
- Johnny
- (as Chris Martin)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The way the movie was filmed makes you feel like you're actually there experiencing it at some points which is cool. But sometimes it also feels a little awkward like a student film. Overall I really loved the movie. It has a really dark tone and definitely an unexpected ending. It's very intense in a way that I wasn't expecting being used to like horror and all...it's nothing like that. Obviously it's because it's a drama, but it certainly has horror elements because everything that happened was very real and that makes it scary. I enjoyed how the POV switches between the characters and it's a very creative decision to make Johnny the main character. I can certainly think of a few people I've met like him and can understand why they all followed him even though he was awful to them. It's a very good depiction of a sociopath. Also I absolutely adore Kris Lemche so of course I enjoyed that element.
Johnny (Chris William Martin of "Felicity") is a sociopath, but his charisma is so overwhelming that it is easy to see how easily people can overlook this in a leader. He is strong, powerful, and -- most alarmingly -- tender and loving to his followers. In one moment he may be encouraging them to humiliate themselves, in the next goading them into acts of extreme violence against one another, and then making it all better by bestowing (apparently sincere) affection on his groupies. Johnny is a Hitler, a Mao, a rock star, a Charles Manson, and a messianic martyr rolled into one package. In other environments than the streets, he might have become a politician, an entertainer, a military leader, president of a Yale secret society, or the dark shadow of J. Pierpont Finch, rising from mailroom clerk to corporate command. This is one powerful movie!
This is a good film. Mr. Bessai shows his directing chops in this nifty feature about street kids making their own little movie factory helmed by the megalomanic director/dictator Johnny. This is an insightful look not only into the hearts and lives of a disinfranchised youth but also into the mind of a director at odds with himself and the creative process. Not your average canadian film.
7hm-4
The first 10-12 minutes seemed unnecessary to the plot. But, once the movie got into the story and into the characters, it was a powerful drama of confusion, abuse, power, and control filmed in an intimate style placing the movie viewer in the scenes. Some may think of this film as a sort of Animal Farm except with humans. The story is about a homeless band of young people whom we find are homeless by choice. They think they are held together by each other's friendship, but at the hub of their strength is "Johnny," the title character, that controls them all. As his needs are fulfilled, the others are torn apart and taken right to the edge. The audience is taken right along for the ride to a seemingly inevitable but unexpected conclusion. Strong performances by a talented group of young Canadian performers whom I hope we see a lot more of.
Did you know
- TriviaConsidered to be the first North American film shot in the style of Dogma 95.
- Crazy creditsCarl Bessai is credited as writer and producer but his director credit is replaced by the statement "(dIRECTOR SHALL NOT BE CREDITED- DOGME 95 VOW #10)". This is done in adherence to the art film movement called Dogma 95.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Lola (2001)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 24 minutes
- Color
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