A thriller that dramatizes the last 24 hours in the lives of Jim Jones and The Peoples Temple Church through the eyes of a reporter.A thriller that dramatizes the last 24 hours in the lives of Jim Jones and The Peoples Temple Church through the eyes of a reporter.A thriller that dramatizes the last 24 hours in the lives of Jim Jones and The Peoples Temple Church through the eyes of a reporter.
- Awards
- 7 wins & 9 nominations
Photos
Annie Feldsott
- AnnaBell
- (as Annie Micayla)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaTwo of the extras were former members of Peoples Temple. One woman had lived in Jonestown for two years, while another got an invitation to move down, but declined. They didn't tell anyone on production until filming was completed, because they didn't want people to know about their experience with Peoples Temple.
- ConnectionsAlternate-language version of Guyana: Cult of the Damned (1979)
Featured review
A chronicle on the final events before the mass suicide at Jonestown in 1978 is told in a curious way, quite resourceful despite the limited budget and carried with great ambition. From the congressman's visit to the People Temples in Guyana and the "defectors" who wanted to return to America, the airstrip ambush and the final events with Jim Jones leading his followers to commit suicide, all of those moments are seeing through the perspective of a journalist, who notices that the place isn't all the friendly and peaceful as Jones claimed to be. It's all been registered, documented and presented many times before in several news reports and documentaries (and the Powers Boothe film), the reality is all present in the short but there's a sense of unnecessary fiction in the air, designed to not necessarily show the horror of the whole situation but instead to create a horror film vibe (with some twists that I won't bother detailing).
The story is told in a nice way in those 20-something minutes. The director had a great sense of creativity with the tiny resources that he had - and you have to pay little attention in seeing the Jonestown community in all those tiny houses all put together one next to the other when in fact the real thing were filled with huge constructions with a certain distance in between. Leandro Cano while playing Jones, despite limited screen time, has a certain charisma but unlike Jones or even others who played the man in films or that Discovery documentary. He steals the show, though something is missing (the voice sounds different). And the actress playing the reporter truly carried the film while the supporting roles (the people wanting to leave) are given to actors that you don't sense they're acting, they look, sound and feel genuine simple people caught under an extraordinary situation and finally found a way to escape from it.
A relevance this "Jonestown" has is the fact of telling that horrific story, to briefly examine possible causes of why it happened. To wide audiences get a general feel about everything concerning the deadly event that claimed more than 900 lives would be with a miniseries or a well summarized film, that I hope director David B. Berget will find a way to bring to life. Not a single moment was wasted and he created the perfect environment, the precise tension evoked by the real tragedy. He avoids the shocking bits but keeping an adequate level of horror and despair that doesn't wash away immediately. Haunting. 8/10
The story is told in a nice way in those 20-something minutes. The director had a great sense of creativity with the tiny resources that he had - and you have to pay little attention in seeing the Jonestown community in all those tiny houses all put together one next to the other when in fact the real thing were filled with huge constructions with a certain distance in between. Leandro Cano while playing Jones, despite limited screen time, has a certain charisma but unlike Jones or even others who played the man in films or that Discovery documentary. He steals the show, though something is missing (the voice sounds different). And the actress playing the reporter truly carried the film while the supporting roles (the people wanting to leave) are given to actors that you don't sense they're acting, they look, sound and feel genuine simple people caught under an extraordinary situation and finally found a way to escape from it.
A relevance this "Jonestown" has is the fact of telling that horrific story, to briefly examine possible causes of why it happened. To wide audiences get a general feel about everything concerning the deadly event that claimed more than 900 lives would be with a miniseries or a well summarized film, that I hope director David B. Berget will find a way to bring to life. Not a single moment was wasted and he created the perfect environment, the precise tension evoked by the real tragedy. He avoids the shocking bits but keeping an adequate level of horror and despair that doesn't wash away immediately. Haunting. 8/10
- Rodrigo_Amaro
- Oct 17, 2016
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $65,000 (estimated)
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