Robson Green stars in a powerful love story exploring the roots of domestic violence.Robson Green stars in a powerful love story exploring the roots of domestic violence.Robson Green stars in a powerful love story exploring the roots of domestic violence.
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Gritty and British nearly always add up to a successful viewing for me. I love films, shorts or series based on real and harrowing events in the lives of people from my own homeland.
This tends to make me very accepting of the varying production standards and levels of talent on show but, unfortunately, "Beaten" falls way below many other such art in the same vein.
The acting is inconsistent. From the sublime handling of a difficult subject, to the GCSE drama levels of hammy. But sometimes the writing is such that Pacino would be crying on the inside whilst delivering the poorer than first draft dialogue.
The twist is obvious after a certain point, but I don't hold that against it as the "twist" is perhaps the most overused plot device in modern film. When a tale is worth telling, why the reluctance to let the reality be the intriguing factor? And twists, for me, have no place at all in my favourite genre.
To say this would be been improved by Robson duetting with Jerome is unfortunately how far this one fell short.
This tends to make me very accepting of the varying production standards and levels of talent on show but, unfortunately, "Beaten" falls way below many other such art in the same vein.
The acting is inconsistent. From the sublime handling of a difficult subject, to the GCSE drama levels of hammy. But sometimes the writing is such that Pacino would be crying on the inside whilst delivering the poorer than first draft dialogue.
The twist is obvious after a certain point, but I don't hold that against it as the "twist" is perhaps the most overused plot device in modern film. When a tale is worth telling, why the reluctance to let the reality be the intriguing factor? And twists, for me, have no place at all in my favourite genre.
To say this would be been improved by Robson duetting with Jerome is unfortunately how far this one fell short.
- jamielittlefield79
- May 17, 2022
- Permalink
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- TriviaRobson Green said: "I think it's an important groundbreaking piece because it deals with things that are not spoken about. And it's written by a woman."
"Their son (Corey J. Smith) witnesses this act, so thinks his father has been battering his mother. We then start telling the reason for that particular moment. You will side with the woman - then, suddenly, I hope your allegiances change. Then at the end you don't side with anybody, but empathize with the boy, who's actually on the receiving end of this mental misunderstanding."
"There's nothing amazing about the guy - you don't see why he would be involved in anything like that. He's a hard-working man at a shipyard who loves his wife, who dotes on his son and who loves his home."
Beaten is "incredibly intelligent, but very simple to tell," reveals Robson.
"It's about how, sometimes, people get involved in relationships that are incredibly unhealthy - how we convince ourselves that everything will be fine, when actually it's not normal."
"I'm really excited by it because when we developed the script, we thought, 'if we get this right, it will blow people's minds. This will really change the perception of what we hear about wife-beating.'"
- ConnectionsReferences 2001 : L'Odyssée de l'espace (1968)
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