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Anchor Bay Abducts 'Alice Creed'

Posted by Eric Lavallee on Jan 08, 2010
Source: Screen Daily

I would have wanted to have seen J Blakeson’s feature debut, The Disappearance Of Alice Creed at the Toronto Film Festival last September, the role reversal kidnapping thriller starring Gemma Arteton pitted against the excellent Eddie Marsan and Martin Compston (Sweet Sixteen, A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints and Red Road), but my schedule didn't allow for an extra screening. 

In Screen Daily's review, they mention that the tension build up between the characters is close in tone to Danny Boyle’s Shallow Grave. U.S audiences will get an op to see the film, not sure if Anchor Bay plans a theatrical release, but let's hope so. On the same subject matter, I would strongly suggest a pic I saw at Cannes this year, Michel Franco's Daniel y Ana which spends very little time with the kidnapping itself, but sends its young protagonists into some extremely difficult post-trauma terrain.

The pic begins on a suburban street, where two masked men (played by Marsan and Compston) seize a young woman (Arterton). They bind and gag her and take her to an abandoned, soundproofed apartment. She is Alice Creed, daughter of a millionaire. Her kidnappers, the coldly efficient Vic and his younger accomplice Danny, have worked out a meticulous plan. But Alice is not going to play the perfect victim – she’s not giving in without a fight. In a tense power-play of greed, duplicity and survival we discover that sometimes disappearances can be deceptive.

 



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Review: The Kid With a Bike

Review: The Kid With a Bike

"Despite the one-dimensionality of its anti-patriarchal theme (appeasing the knee-jerk expectations of European film fest audiences), the Dardennes avoid cheapening the story with ideological smugness, achieving an emotional resonance without easy sentimentality."


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Review: Wrong

"Encoded in the outlandish humor that pervades the film are bits of commentary on everyday life. The most overt is Dupieux's urging to appreciate the relationships around you, which is manifested in the dog kidnapping, but also in a subplot in which a woman from the pizzeria moves between men without even realizing they have changed. Another cultural critique is found in the rainy office, an instantly recognizable visual metaphor for how dreary a 9 to 5 job can be."


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