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Reviewed by Aaron Haynes
As
the credits for this seemingly concept-based little short
rolled, I was scratching my head. Not at the plot, the premise,
or anything about the movie. I was trying to figure out why JP
thought it was so awful. Fresh off of one viewing, I couldn't
tell you a single character's name, but slowly, as the ending
played out, it all clicked in my head and I understood how all
these snippets of character profiles came together. It's an
extremely complex story told in an extremely fragmented way, and
by God, it works.
In a longer, more developed film, I would have considered the
cinematography and editing choices poorly done. The angles are
shot in such a way that it's like you're viewing the whole world
with your head tilted 75 degrees and squinting your eyes. The
colors are drab and while the whole thing is very sleek and
professional-looking, there's nothing visually appealing
onscreen most of the time. The tiny bits of character
development we get are fenced off from each other by black
screens narrated over by the next chunk of story. Some stories
go by so quickly it's easy to get frustrated with the whole
thing -- I can easily see how JP could have hated the final
version, now that I think about it. Voice acting and music are
excellent by any standards, of course. It plays like an
experimental short indie film where we're given a few pieces of
a puzzle and have to race to put them together as the film
starts to end, and something about the final TV broadcast just
cracked me up, as I started to understand everything while the
guy yells, "That's....that's incredible!"
It begins with a short news broadcast telling us about an
up-and-coming recording artist who's been murdered in an
apartment. We flash to a man in a confession booth telling a
preacher about what is apparently the same murder. We then move
to two other side stories about a man who abuses his wife and
two hitmen out on a job, one of whom isn't handling his job so
well. Obviously, these stories will collide in the end, and they
do; there's a really subtle twist at the end when you consider
the way one of the hitmen and the murderer each deal with the
guilt of what they do, and what inevitably happens to them, and
a wrapping up of some of the darker plot points ("Was there
anyone else in the car with you?") that become clearer in
retrospect. It ends on a comedic note that might have felt
forced if I'd disliked the movie, but really made me smile since
I was just starting to get it.
Whether you consider it a brilliant experiment, an interesting
failure, or a complete train wreck of side plots, it'll
definitely make you scratch your head and think about it for a
few moments afterwards. I really enjoyed it, and even if pushes
fragmented storytelling to the breaking point, it's an
eyebrow-raiser, and that's always good in my book. Whether you
raise both eyebrows or just one depends on your own preference
for storytelling, I suppose.
Critical Score: 76/100.
Personal Score: 92/100.
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