Reżyseria:
Xavier GensZdjęcia:
Laurent BarèsMuzyka:
Jean-Pierre TaiebObsada:
Lauren German, Michael Biehn, Milo Ventimiglia, Michael Eklund, Courtney B. Vance, Ashton Holmes, Rosanna Arquette, Iván González, Jennifer Blanc-BiehnOpisy(1)
In this graphic, post-apocalyptic movie, nine strangers escape a nuclear attack by hiding out in their building's basement. Trapped for days underground with no hope for rescue, and only unspeakable horrors awaiting them outside, the group begins to descend into madness, each turning on one another with physical and psychological torment. As supplies dwindle, tensions flare, and they grow increasingly unhinged by their close quarters and hopelessness, each act against one another becomes more depraved than the previous. While everyone in the bunker allows themselves to lose their humanity, one survivor holds onto a thin chance for escape even with no promise of salvation on the outside. (oficjalny tekst dystrybutora)
(więcej)Materiały wideo (9)
Recenzje (3)
Few films have such a perfectly executed and naturalistically disgusting character transformation as The Divide. Depression to lethargy, along with the basic human instincts that come to the forefront due to loneliness over the course of the film, are portrayed so well and uncomfortably that if you enjoy the film, you will get the full experience. The subject of the people on the surface and the radiation or the cause of the bomb being dropped is not dealt with much (nor would there be time for it), which is perhaps a bit of a shame, but it is because of this that the film has plenty of room for its main idea and it succeeds brilliantly. Interesting and varied characters, skilled actors, the grimy bunker setting along with the cutting up of bodies and torture only add more points to the film for visuals and workmanship. The further the film goes, the more depressing it gets and the finale is brought out masterfully. For me, one of the most depressing films and in this genre I would say a straight up masterpiece. ()
The Divide is NOT an indisputably high-quality, unassailable film, it’s very easy to criticise. Myself, I would have no trouble defending a two star rating, because the script doesn’t bother to solve a couple of things (the short trip out of the bunker, what was that supposed to mean? How and why did “that” get there so quickly?), is careless with time, some of the changes in the behaviour of the characters happen too fast and inconsistently, the actors try a little too hard at times, the repetitive score becomes annoying after a while… But the film is so incredibly depressing, dirty, violent, and disgusting that watching it made me almost sad. It had that effect. The characters, who not even at the beginning were Miss Congeniality but you could still root for them, become really messed-up pricks (Marilyn’s transformation? That was something!). It’s not nice to watch and I’d like to warn anyone interested in it: think very well whether you want to watch this because it’s the sleaziest thing I’ve seen since A Serbian Film, an insult to humanity. In any case, Gens has improved a lot since the average gorefest that was Frontier(s). ()
The hasty and often logic-defying first half is quite solidly balanced by the second, mainly because Gens is clearly not very good at building functional interpersonal relationships. Yet when it comes to "evil is in all of us," he lures the viewer in quite bluntly, culminating in a great ending; the fallout epilogue is a bonus. ()
Reklama