In the remote west coast of Scotland, a drug dealer double-crosses and kills a drug trafficker who imports drugs for him. The dealer is arrested and learns that the murder was witnessed by a... Read allIn the remote west coast of Scotland, a drug dealer double-crosses and kills a drug trafficker who imports drugs for him. The dealer is arrested and learns that the murder was witnessed by a couple of anonymous locals. Facing life imprisonment, the dealer decides to hire a hitman... Read allIn the remote west coast of Scotland, a drug dealer double-crosses and kills a drug trafficker who imports drugs for him. The dealer is arrested and learns that the murder was witnessed by a couple of anonymous locals. Facing life imprisonment, the dealer decides to hire a hitman to eliminate all the potential witnesses. Outside a rural police station, the hired hitma... Read all
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The Director, Steven Lewis Simpson, uses some of the most modern filmmaking techniques to keep the excitement and time criticality to the film and the music keeps the heart beat pumping right until the last scene. Gripping stuff, quality acting and a great film.
My only reserve was for the pace at the beginning, but after a little while it starts to pick up really rapidly. There's quite a bit of cold-blooded killing (or should as say, unapologetic?): the `good' guys don't all come out unscathed, as is the usual tradition. I believe the whole movie was shot in digital - interesting use of split screen effects (last used in the movie `Timecode', if I remember correctly) and other edits. Good photography (opening scene notably), and a great, driving soundtrack to accompany the action. Actors were good and convincing (keeping in mind this is not Hamlet).
The last part of the movie is almost exempt of dialogue - and features a great, heart-racing chase scene (of the non-car-crashing-exploding kind, thank you).
Cool feature: I liked the crossbow being used in the action. when was the last time you saw one used in a movie (set in modern times)?
So in the end, it's good to know that you don't need bullet-time and multi-gazillions of dollars to make an exciting thriller. Plus, it's shot in Scotland. (Check out the scenery!)
Hoping it gets released here!
I saw it right away, completely and I thought you cannot have worst actors and a killer that needs some military training to be a professional hit-man. I'v seen movies with lower budget that are much more breath taking than this one. Of course the Idea of it is not bad. But honestly: A wannabe director should learn the meaning of pace and suspense.
I give it a three because I hoped that non professional people would do better than Hollywood nowadays. But I guess I was mistaken.
It's exciting, thrilling and literally has you on the edge of your seat the entire time. Cinematography is impressive; love the way Simpson used the features of digital technology.
The result is a unique and refreshing thriller that will have your adrelin pumped up. Would definitly see it again if it's released here!
After the screening, several viewers gathered to talk about it. All of them had found the experience overwhelming, although some of them found it hard to describe or even to understand the experience. It was that unusual.
One, for instance, said that he was shocked-he meant morally outraged-by all the violence. Even though more than a dozen people are blown away, though, this isn't really a violent movie in what has become the conventional sense in Hollywood: movies that revel in the gore resulting from explosions and car crashes; those killed in this movie simply fall down as the camera moves on with the killer to a new victim. What counts here is the pace, which is almost incredibly fast. Once the shooting began, I thought immediately of Deliverance, the classic of this `genre' in which four pals paddle down a river in the rural South and are relentlessly stalked and killed by local hillbillies.
Another viewer gave Ticking credit for cinematic tension of the kind that made Hitchcock famous but added that it's `about nothing.' Actually, it is about something. It's just not about characters or even narrative in the conventional sense. It's about the experience of primal dread. Or, to put it another way, it's about the experience of being alive in the face of mortal danger. I was stunned, but also refreshed and stimulated, as I emerged from the screening room. How often do we see movies that can do that these days?
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