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IMDbPro

Chatroom

  • 2010
  • 12
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
9.8K
YOUR RATING
Aaron Taylor-Johnson in Chatroom (2010)
Trailer for Chatroom
Play trailer1:48
1 Video
24 Photos
Cyber ThrillerDramaHorrorThriller

Five teenagers with different personalities are introduced to one another in a chatroom called "Chelsea Teens!" But one shows its darker side, threatening the others' lives.Five teenagers with different personalities are introduced to one another in a chatroom called "Chelsea Teens!" But one shows its darker side, threatening the others' lives.Five teenagers with different personalities are introduced to one another in a chatroom called "Chelsea Teens!" But one shows its darker side, threatening the others' lives.

  • Director
    • Hideo Nakata
  • Writer
    • Enda Walsh
  • Stars
    • Jacob Anderson
    • Matthew Ashforde
    • Dorothy Atkinson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    9.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hideo Nakata
    • Writer
      • Enda Walsh
    • Stars
      • Jacob Anderson
      • Matthew Ashforde
      • Dorothy Atkinson
    • 52User reviews
    • 63Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Chatroom
    Trailer 1:48
    Chatroom

    Photos24

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    Top cast44

    Edit
    Jacob Anderson
    Jacob Anderson
    • Si
    Matthew Ashforde
    Matthew Ashforde
    • Jim's Father
    Dorothy Atkinson
    Dorothy Atkinson
    • Emily's Mother
    Matthew Beard
    Matthew Beard
    • Jim
    Alex Blake
    Alex Blake
    • Man on Mobile Phone
    Noa Bodner
    Noa Bodner
    • Woman at Book Launch
    Amanda Boxer
    Amanda Boxer
    • Mrs. Sinclair
    Lorraine Cheshire
    • Yorkshire Housewife
    Megan Dodds
    Megan Dodds
    • Grace
    Michelle Fairley
    Michelle Fairley
    • Rosie
    Matthew Fenton
    • Young Jim
    Elarica Johnson
    Elarica Johnson
    • Ushi
    • (as Elarica Gallacher)
    Nicholas Gleaves
    Nicholas Gleaves
    • Paul
    Ross Gurney-Randall
    • Large Camden Man
    Gerald Home
    • Tony Layton
    Karin Ichihashi
    • Japanese Girl
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson
    • William
    • (as Aaron Johnson)
    Daniel Kaluuya
    Daniel Kaluuya
    • Mo
    • Director
      • Hideo Nakata
    • Writer
      • Enda Walsh
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews52

    5.49.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7BloedEnMelk

    Interesting movie shows teen loneliness and the dangers of internet manipulation

    It's a rather odd movie, this Chatroom. Most of the story (not all) takes part in cyberspace, which is visualized in an interesting way. The chatroom is not shown through a computer screen with typed text, but as a real room where our characters meet. This gives this movie quite a strange feel, theatrical at points, but it is quite effective.

    Will is the guy behind the chatroom. It all starts out fairly innocent but slowly we get drawn into his real intentions. The people who come in his chatroom all have their own issues. They are lonely in real life, traumatized or misunderstood, and in the chatroom they find people who they can tell their stories to. At first this seems to have a healing effect, but slowly we see that all is not what it seems to be.

    What this movie shows, IMO, is the loneliness many people face, and also the dangers of using internet for our main communication. Like Will's mum tells him at one point; 'You can not help yourself if you are only talking to strangers. You need to communicate with us.' The plot is not too difficult to figure out and quite predictable, but it's worked out reasonably well and for me, the movie just got under my skin. There is no winner in this movie. I would not name this to be a thriller, but more a psychological drama. The feeling I am most left with is sadness.

    Though this movie doesn't come close to the strength Hideo Nakata's 'Ringu' or 'Dark Water' have, and has a whole different feel to it, I do consider it worth watching.
    5chicagopoetry

    A Novel Idea But Doesn't Deliver

    The concept of Chatroom is a really good idea: five teenagers join an online chatroom and the film portrays their conversations as if they are happening in the real world, in a physical room. I can see, with quite a bit of rewriting, this working as a very engaging stage adaption. However, this film doesn't deliver on the goods. If I could make some decisions here I would have kept the entire film surrealistic, keeping every scene in the virtual world instead of flashing back and forth from the online fantasy into the real world where the kids are typing into their laptops or phones. That would have taken quite a bit of more talent to write, however, as we'd have to stay engaged with a conversation in a My Dinner With Andre sort of way. Also, two of the characters are extremely neglected and their subplots are never carried through to fruition. I also have a hard time believing, even in the virtual world of the internet, that the villain here could actually manipulate everyone so easily without anyone really objecting. It would have been in that objection, in the passion of that debate, that this movie could have found its true energy. But unfortunately it relies too heavily on every parent's paranoid nightmare of the internet leading to suicide or a sexual predator. There are some novel ideas here but unfortunately this film does not realize the potential of those ideas.
    7theycallmemrglass

    Stagey but clever, thought provoking cyberworld teenage drama thriller

    Saw this at a London hotel preview screening today.

    Top marks for effort in trying to translate internet chat rooms onto the screen. It did take me quite a while to adjust to the visual interpretations of online cyberworld chatting but having said that, it was very cleverly done if a bit stagy. This is not a horror film. Despite the surrealistic online interpretation, this was first and foremost a dark teenage drama that quite effectively highlights the dangerous mental traps that socially withdrawn youngsters can face online in real life. Maybe parents of teenagers who spends all their time on the internet, may well find this to be a horror film and start taking away their kids computers, then push a football into their hands.

    Of course this being cinema, liberties need to be taken with plausibility to turn this intriguing drama into a dark thriller. But it works. Its just that it took a heck of a long time to really get going with the main plot. The dialogue also felt very sluggish. The young actors however, were very good and did well to emote their feelings convincingly.

    I was very bewildered at the inclusion of a couple of stop motion animated cartoons which I get the impression were supposed to be darkly funny but I did not find it in the least bit amusing. Maybe that was the idea but it served no purpose in the flow of the movie for me. Also, this being a British Film Four production, it feels so, and you wont find any money spent on special effects apart from a change of wallpaper in the chat rooms.

    Overall though, this is a very good thought provoking film with decent performances from the young cast. It is an effective thriller but very sluggish until it really picks up momentum in the 3rd act.
    6BooHoo7902

    Weird but in a good way

    I didn't really know what to expect with this film. There wasn't much media hype or anything of such so I thought I'd give it a go anyway.

    I was a bit unsure of how the storyline was going to set out. The general pace of the film was quite set out as I didn't feel as if there were any parts that tend to have dragged on.

    The character development was good, however, some characters such as Emily could have had a bit more involvement during.

    Some of the acting was a bit tinny at times, especially at the start but it seemed to ease off as the story became more involved.

    The ending was a slight shock and did in fact have me on the edge of my seat which I was incredibly surprised at!

    The creepiness of Aaron Johnson's character William was what did it for me. I think he played it pretty well.

    Overall, if you're looking for a film which incorporates some modern day technology and a bit of a nut job, this one is for you!
    7tim-764-291856

    The Social Network...

    Before I set to record this film, that was shown on Film 4 last night, I presumed it'd be a trite U.S. comedy/horror, full of gross-out and stoned slackers.

    How pleasantly surprised I was to find it to be a deep, unpredictable British psychological thriller that's high on design and imagination. Yes, the actors look like they've escaped off sets of U.K teen dramas such as Skins, but they are playing characters that that market already caters for.

    It's quite neat how the protagonist, Aaron Johnson, (Will) is accessing the chat-room in question via his PC or smartphone but is also then seen within it. As we soon get to know, Will's psychological make-up and difficulties are complex and largely unexplained. Is the chat-room itself purely in his mind and is the labyrinth of other rooms that we see at the start also only in his imagination? If so, that's quite a neat way of adding extra texture and substance that's already there.

    The challenging soundscapes and things like the animations add extra meat to the body of expression that director Hideo Nakata uses - and I personally liked them and thought they added to the film. Some of the discussions on serious emotional conditions and suicide may help those who are exposed to those feelings and experiences, or they may not - depending on how mentally well one is. But at least it raises them, which is quite brave.

    I don't necessarily think that the "hammy" acting that many have criticised is out of place here - touching and nuanced performances would be out of place in this aggressively symbolic and stylised movie. And, when one types on Facebook, with modern, abbreviated cyber-speak and even more so with Twitter, then dialogue is even more stilted, with even less room for delicate expression.

    The other characters add to the mixture of messed-up heads and some social comment on what is acceptable and what isn't gets some interesting airing. I think many viewers who've come back from the pub and expected a simple cat and mouse cyber-bullying flick may have well been unprepared for how deep and complex this thriller is and been put off by that. It's a brave and imaginative film; flawed, yes. A nice bonus for those of us who've visited the locations such as Camden Lock and London Zoo are indeed, the familiar locations.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      While the film advertises "from the director of The Ring" director Hideo Nakata was, in fact, the director of the original Japanese film Ringu (1998) to which would inspire the American remake The Ring (2002) by American director Gore Verbinski. Nakata however would return to direct the American sequel The Ring Two (2005)
    • Quotes

      Eva: Come on! Come on, get personal. Who is it? Who does Jim hate?

      Jim: Me.

      Mo: Really, Jim?

      Eva: You hate yourself... So what?

      Emily: D'you have an OK family life?

      Jim: [Nods] Yeah. Yeah. I don't have a father. But my mum is really nice.

      Eva: So you hate yourself, because?

      Jim: I've been on anti-depressants for two years.

      Emily: And... Do they help? Do you know if they're helping?

      Jim: I don't know... Maybe...

      William: Come off the medication. If you want to feel like a person again... Come off them.

    • Alternate versions
      The film was altered based on advice given by the BBFC at the script stage to avoid a potential 18 certificate. Several lines of sexual dialogue were altered, and the filmmakers were also advised to avoid "novel detail" when it came to shoot the suicide scenes.
    • Connections
      References Du rififi chez les mômes (1976)
    • Soundtracks
      Disconnect
      Performed by Richie Hawtin (as Plastikman)

      Written by Richie Hawtin

      Published by Mute Song Limited

      Licensed courtesy of Mute Records Ltd

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Chatroom?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 11, 2010 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook (Japan)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ch@troom
    • Filming locations
      • Camden Lock, Chalk Farm Road, Camden, London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Ruby Films
      • Film4
      • UK Film Council
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $683,912
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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