A late-night suicide hotline operator receives a disturbing call from someone claiming to be him, knowing personal details only he would know.A late-night suicide hotline operator receives a disturbing call from someone claiming to be him, knowing personal details only he would know.A late-night suicide hotline operator receives a disturbing call from someone claiming to be him, knowing personal details only he would know.
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The most rewarding aspect of this film is how slowly, seamlessly and believably one is drawn into the "aha" moments of the main character's realizations about his own reality. Josh Stewart's acting was on parr with a great screenplay, drawing you into his life and his relationships with warmth and sincerity that made you feel like his friend, and a bystander all at once. The location for almost the entire film is a relatable, plainer-than-plain office building setting, which is a great contrast to the level of emotional impact the film has on its audience. I look forward to watching this again!
I didn't make this movie to the end. I got too bored.
The synopsis seemed good. A suicide-prevention call-center worker gets a strange call from someone who seems to know all about him. The setting puts him all alone on New Years Eve. I also like the lead actor, who starred in the much-superior "The Collector."
I thought the movie would've worked as a straight popcorn flick: he just gets a call from some deranged person or evil supernatural entity. That's the easy direction that they could (and should) have gone to make a fun flick. Instead, they go in another direction , with all sort of flashbacks to the main character's childhood. I won't spoil, but the mysterious caller represents some sort of psychological message (or something alone those lines). There's just talk and talk and talk
Again, I tuned out around the 45-min mark
3/10.
The synopsis seemed good. A suicide-prevention call-center worker gets a strange call from someone who seems to know all about him. The setting puts him all alone on New Years Eve. I also like the lead actor, who starred in the much-superior "The Collector."
I thought the movie would've worked as a straight popcorn flick: he just gets a call from some deranged person or evil supernatural entity. That's the easy direction that they could (and should) have gone to make a fun flick. Instead, they go in another direction , with all sort of flashbacks to the main character's childhood. I won't spoil, but the mysterious caller represents some sort of psychological message (or something alone those lines). There's just talk and talk and talk
Again, I tuned out around the 45-min mark
3/10.
A real puzzle of story with crisp, natural dialogue and a fantastic lead performance by Josh Stewart. Surprising at several turns. Flies by and leaves you thinking about what is real and what is not, what is in the past and what is in the present. I found myself switching perspectives and perceptions about the reality time, the state of Steven's mind, the possibility of so many unknowns.
There are beautiful sequences and while not exactly scary, there are times when the suspense if palpable and uncomfortable enough to cause some nail-biting.
It is a film I would watch again to test assumptions I made the first time round.
There are beautiful sequences and while not exactly scary, there are times when the suspense if palpable and uncomfortable enough to cause some nail-biting.
It is a film I would watch again to test assumptions I made the first time round.
This is my life. This is the trajectory that I followed to here, and here, I am happy. And I able to help others find their way, but then, something clicks, an unforeseen connection. I'm as lost as he is because this can't be real, and I know my past. But my past is not his, and everything is changing from the simplest things to a lost ring to the scars that I never had but now do. I can't break the connection because it has found its way from one moment in time to where I am now, and now I am held hostage to the vibrations rattling everything that I know, all that I am. They don't know who I am, but the connection remains. I beg him to change his mind, correct the course of time. Maybe, I'm reaching him, but then, another click. And the walls come crashing down, but I'm still here, still holding on to the life that I know I lived. But where will his path leave me?
Sometimes all we need is to hear a familiar story. This one is quite touching.
A well executed film with a very solid performance from the lead, which is quite relevant seeing how intimate the whole setting is, almost completely resting upon his shoulders. Unfortunately, the script is trying to be a bit too clever for its own good, putting too much focus on certain details which just distract from what it's really about. Regardless, "Lifeline" as a whole manages to get its emotion through and it's definitely worth your time.
I probably wouldn't mind watching it once again in the future if I feel this is the story someone really needs to hear.
A well executed film with a very solid performance from the lead, which is quite relevant seeing how intimate the whole setting is, almost completely resting upon his shoulders. Unfortunately, the script is trying to be a bit too clever for its own good, putting too much focus on certain details which just distract from what it's really about. Regardless, "Lifeline" as a whole manages to get its emotion through and it's definitely worth your time.
I probably wouldn't mind watching it once again in the future if I feel this is the story someone really needs to hear.
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- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Color
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