Showing posts with label Unhinged. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unhinged. Show all posts

Friday, 7 August 2020

UNHINGED : Tuesday 4th August 2020.

'UNHINGED' which I saw at my local multiplex earlier this week is an MA15+ Rated American psychological thriller film Directed by Derrick Borte, whose previous film making credits take in 2009's 'The Joneses', 2013's 'Dark Around the Stars', 2015's 'H8RZ', 2016's 'London Town' and 2019's 'American Dreamer'. Costing US$33M to make, the film has had its cinematic release date pushed back and brought forward several times in the hope of being amongst the first to test the waters as cinemas reopen. The film opened in Europe, Latin America and Asia mid last month, in Australia last week and is slated for its US release sometime in August, has so far grossed US$1.6M and has generated mixed Reviews.

The film opens with a lone man, later going by the name of Tom Cooper (Russell Crowe), sitting in his pick-up truck late at night in the pouring rain. He's popping pills, and playing with matches with an intensely angered look on his dial. He gets out of his car, takes off his jacket, folds it neatly and places it on the passenger seat. He then goes to the back seat and pulls out a can of petrol and a hammer. Walking up to the front door of a house with a recently listed for sale sign out the front, he smashes the front door in with said hammer. A man comes running out wondering what all the commotion is about followed by a woman. The pair are quickly bludgeoned to death with the hammer and the house then set alight. Driving away from the scene the house explodes in a ball of flame, as the rain drenched man sits behind the wheel expressionless.

Later that morning we are introduced to Rachel Hunter (Caren Pistorius), sleeping on the couch when her phone rings, waking her up late. It is Andy (Jimmi Simpson) on the other end of the line, her friend and divorce lawyer, saying that her soon to be ex-husband Richard, has filed a claim for the former matrimonial home. Andy says that he has already drafted a response rejecting the claim considering that Rachel paid for it, while her husband bummed from one job to the next. She says she'll think about it, they agree to meet up for lunch, and Rachel hangs up, saying that she needs to get her son Kyle (Gabriel Bateman) to school and they're already running late. On the drive to school, the traffic is at its usual peak hour standstill. They take the freeway but this is jammed tight. Rachel takes the hard shoulder and turns off at the next exit. She comes to halt at a red stop light behind a pick-up truck. The light turns green, but the truck in front doesn't move. She honks the car horn repeatedly trying to get the driver in front to move before the light turns red again. Out of frustration, she manoeuvres her beat up old Volvo station wagon around the pick-up truck just as the lights turn red, and she's clear, leaving the truck still standing. At the next stop, the pick-up truck pulls up beside her.

The man driving the pick-up truck is the same guy who killed and torched the couple's home earlier that night. He calmly winds his window down and motions to Kyle to do the same. Very matter of factly he tells Rachel that instead of repeatedly honking her car horn at him she should have given him a 'courtesy tap' - a couple of polite and quick beeps. After all he had just 'zoned out' for a minute or two, and besides he's having a very bad day. He apologises for keeping her waiting at the red stop light, and demands an apology from Rachel, so they can then both go about their business. Rachel refuses point blank to say sorry, despite the wishes to do so from Kyle in the back seat.

When the cars move off, Cooper chases Rachel and Kyle bumper to bumper down tight city streets, eventually evading the man, and dropping Kyle off at school. When alone, Rachel calls Andy and explains that she's just had a nightmare road rage experience, she was just fired by her best client for being late (again!), and Kyle will get a thirty minute detention for arriving late at school. Can they do breakfast instead of lunch? Andy agrees, and sends Rachel a diary insert to meet at their favourite diner for breakfast in half an hour or so. Rachel needs to refuel her Volvo, and pulls up at a petrol station. Having paid, she notices Cooper parked up directly behind her at the fuel pump. She doesn't know what to do. The attendant offers to call the Police, but Rachel declines. Another male customer offers to walk Rachel out to her car, and take Copper's license plate number. When Rachel is back in her vehicle and drives off, the kindly customer motions to Cooper to just leave her alone, and that they have noted his licence plate number. At this Cooper revs the engine and drives headlong at the guy at speed lifting him up onto the bonnet of his truck, before turning sharply in pursuit of Rachel once again. As the guy is thrown off the bonnet into the road, he staggers to get up only to be killed outright by a passing delivery truck. Rachel witnesses this in her rear view mirror.

In the meantime, while at the fuel stop, Cooper has stolen Rachel's mobile phone from her car, and replaced it with another which he locates in the centre console out of view. After giving chase upon exiting the petrol station, Cooper catches up with Rachel and motions through his window that he is now in possession of her phone. She successfully evades him again and brings her car to a stop under an overpass. She hears a phone ringing and rummaging around inside her Volvo she locates it in the centre console. By this time Cooper has caught up with Andy at their designated breakfast meeting time and place and introduced himself to the divorce lawyer as an old friend of Rachel's from out of town. Andy had tried unsuccessfully to reach Rachel not knowing that she was no longer in possession of her phone, or the reasons why. Needless to say, it doesn't end well for Andy particularly as he is a divorce lawyer and Cooper has gone through the very things that Andy is advocating for Rachel in her divorce from Richard, which only serves to piss off Cooper even more. At about 10:00am in a packed out diner Andy meets with a brutal end. All the while other diners look on in horror, with many filming the whole episode on their mobile phones, which is beamed across TV screens within the hour.

While this is going on, Rachel is on the phone with Cooper pleading with him to stop, but Cooper has no intention of stopping. As he walks out of the diner, he tells her that Andy is dead. Still driving and in disbelief Cooper calls Rachel and says that he has checked out her photos, her contacts, her voicemail messages on her phone. He transfers her life savings to Richard's bank account with a few clicks on the screen, and asks Rachel to choose who his next victim should be from her contacts list, otherwise he will choose someone else very close to her. She gives the name of Deborah Haskell (Anne Leighton) who was the valued client who fired Rachel earlier that morning. Needless to say, Rachel calls the Police to alert Haskell, but Cooper is calling her bluff!

Instead Cooper tells Rachel to collect Kyle from school and to call him back when he is in the car with her. In the meantime he drives to her house to find Kyle's uncle Fred (Austin P. Mackenzie) and his girlfriend Mary (Juliene Joyner). Cooper savagely beats up Mary, and as Fred tries to defend himself and Mary with a kitchen knife, Cooper thrusts Mary onto the blade being held out by Fred repeatedly. With Mary dead, Kyle is gaffer taped to a chair and has lighter fuel doused over him. At this point Rachel calls and is put on loud speaker so that Kyle can hear too. Fred, by now also badly beaten, reads out a letter, sobbing uncontrollably, dictated to him by Cooper as though it is from Fred's own hand, saying that Rachel is responsible for their deaths. At this point a Police officer charges in and fires off a round catching Cooper in the shoulder. He ignites the lighter fuel doused on Fred and pushes the chair in the direction of the Officer so that he can make his getaway. All the while Rachel and Kyle are listening in, distraught.

Back on the freeway, and Cooper has swapped vehicles and is now driving a people mover belonging to a neighbour of Rachel's. Back in the Volvo, Rachel and Kyle come to the conclusion that Cooper must be tracking them using Rachel's phone synched to her tablet which must be somewhere in the car. Rummaging about Kyle locates it switched on and taped to the underside of the passenger seat and out of view. Before you know it, Cooper is upon them once again. The Volvo accelerates ahead of Cooper's and pulls up alongside a Police car. The pair motion to the Officer to wind down his window and shout across that they are being pursued by the guy who has been all over the news earlier that day. Cooper nudges the Police car from behind sending it spinning across several lanes coming to rest against the flow of traffic. About to call it in, the Police car is taken out by a truck trashing the Police vehicle and its occupant instantly. Rachel hatches a plan to drive to her mothers house in the suburbs which has a maze of corridors and secret hideaways that Kyle can stow himself away in safely. Following another high speed chase to get to her mothers place, Rachel loses Cooper in the side streets, and with the tablet now out of juice, Cooper is unable to track the Volvo. He drives around until he spies the parked Volvo. While Cooper is preparing to get out of the vehicle Rachel T-Bones his car with her mother's vehicle, sending it toppling onto its roof. Getting out armed with a golf club, she goes around to the drivers side door to find it open and empty, whereupon Cooper emerges and beats her up leaving her semi-conscious on the ground. Cooper goes into the house in search of Kyle.

The house is all silent as Cooper makes out he is a Police officer and says it's safe to come out in a friendly welcoming tone of voice. Upstairs in a concealed attic space, Kyle is uncertain what to do. He jangles against a fire side setting sending the tools crashing, which alerts Cooper to his whereabouts, but Rachel gets to Kyle first. Thinking they are safe, Rachel is dragged backwards by Cooper into a bedroom and punched repeatedly in the face. He then grabs Kyle and drags him into the room punching him too, and wraps an electrical cord around his neck. As Kyle gasps for breath, Rachel jumps up from the bed wielding a pair of scissors that ultimately sees an end to Cooper. As the Police arrive, they advise the pair that Fred is going to be OK, and as they have made their statements they are free to go.

Tom Cooper is a nasty piece of work. He's got such a big chip on his shoulder it's a wonder he can walk straight, and he really takes road rage to the next level. But for all his anger management issues, his brutality and his malevolence there is something about him that makes for compulsive viewing. Perhaps it is because he is just so over the top unhinged and grounded in some sense of reality that makes this story as compelling as it is. After all, we see and hear almost every day either on the news channels or via social media platforms examples of real life road rage incidents that often leave the viewer dumbfounded and exasperated - but almost never on the level seen in this feature. But I guess the carnage, the brutal acts of violence which leave nothing to the imagination, the pure evil in Tom Cooper's motivations and the game of cat and mouse that ensues all add up to a package that is well crafted but lacks any reason to be, or message, and you just know that in the end the cat will get his comeuppance and the mouse will overcome.

'Unhinged' merits three claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard from a possible five claps.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday, 29 July 2020

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 30th July 2020.

Last week I reported on four major studio films that have had their planned release dates pushed back once again because of the ongoing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent halting or delays experienced by movie production houses, and only the partial reopening of cinemas worldwide. Those four films were 'Tenet', 'No Time To Die', 'Wonder Woman 1984' and 'The Conjuring : The Devil Made Me Do It'. This week I continue in a similar vein, and announce another four major films that have seen their already publicised release dates pushed back yet again.

'THE FRENCH DISPATCH' - Directed, written for the screen, Co-Produced and based on a story by Wes Anderson, this American comedy drama film stars an ensemble cast including Benicio del Toro, Adrien Brody, Tilda Swinton, Timothee Chalamet, Lea Seydoux, Frances McDormand, Jeffrey Wright, Bill Murray, Owen Wilson, Elisabeth Moss, Edward Norton, Willem Dafoe, Liev Schreiber, Christoph Waltz, Saoirse Ronan, Henry Winkler, Bob Balaban, Freddie Highmore and Kate Winslet. Originally slated for a July 24th 2020 release, this was pushed back to October 16th 2020 and has now been pushed back indefinitely, with no future release date as yet announced.

'A QUIET PLACE : PART II' - Directed, Co-Produced and Written by John Krasinski this follow up to the hugely successful 2018 horror film 'A Quiet Place' stars Emily Blunt, Cillian Murphy, Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe, Djimon Hounsou and John Kransinki seen in flashback considering that he was killed off at the end of the first film. Initially intended to be released in cinemas on March 8th 2020, this was subsequently pushed back to September 6th 2020 and has now been pushed back further to April 23rd 2021.

'TOP GUN : MAVERICK' - this action drama film is a direct sequel to the 1986 Tony Scott Directed film 'Top Gun' that launched the career of Tom Cruise into the stratosphere. Directed by Joseph Kosinski and Co-Produced by Tom Cruise, Jerry Bruckheimer and Christopher McQuarrie this film sees Tom Cruise reprise his role as Pete 'Maverick' Mitchell, and Val Kilmer reprise his role as Tom 'Iceman' Kazansky joined by Ed Harris, Miles Teller, Jon Hamm and Jennifer Connelly. Originally intended for a July 24th 2020 release, this was subsequently delayed until December 23rd 2020 and has now been delayed once again to July 2nd 2021.

'HALLOWEEN KILLS' - this American slasher horror film is a direct sequel to 2018's 'Halloween' and is the twelfth instalment in the 'Halloween' franchise. As with the 2018 film, this offering is once again Directed and Co-Written by David Gordon Green and is based on the characters created by John Carpenter for his seminal 1978 film 'Halloween' and its 1981 follow up 'Halloween II'. Starring Jamie Lee Curtis reprising her role as Laurie Strode from the 1978 original, the 1981 sequel and the 2018 reboot, with Nick Castle and James Jude Courtney also reprising their roles as the knife wielding maniac killer Michael Myers and Anthony Michael Hall, Judy Greer, Nancy Stephens, Charles Cyphers and Andi Matichak. Originally scheduled for an October 16th 2020 release, this has been delayed by a year until October 15th 2021, with the final third instalment 'Halloween Ends' now pushed back until October 2022.

This week we have five latest release new films to tempt you out to your local Odeon on a chilly mid-Winters day in late July. We kick off with the story of a road rage incident that turns very ugly as one man starts a relentless pursuit against a female driver who cut in on him at a red stop light. We then turn to a love story surrounding a pair of single dog walkers in their sixties who get to know each other over the course of a year while out walking their pooches; and this is followed up by a tale of the effect that positive thought has on one young widow as a result of a stranger coming into her life, but he harbours a secret that could have a lasting impact on her life. Next up is a film about a bunch of teenage rebels who fight against the system and who unleash their own brand of justice upon the bad people they come across; before closing out the week with a Spanish foreign language offering telling the story of a struggling single mother juggling her cancer ridden mother, a legal case at work where she is employed as Deputy Legal Counsel and a new love interest.     

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the five latest release new movies as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release or as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are most welcome to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and in the meantime, enjoy your big screen Odeon outing during the week ahead.

'UNHINGED' (Rated MA15+) - this American thriller film is Directed by Derrick Borte whose previous film making credits take in 2009's 'The Joneses', 2013's 'Dark Around the Stars', 2015's 'H8RZ', 2016's 'London Town' and 2019's 'American Dreamer'. Costing US$33M to make, the film has had its cinematic release date pushed back and brought forward several times in the hope of being amongst the first to test the waters as cinemas reopen. The film opened in Europe, Latin America and Asia mid this month, in Australia this week and is slated for its US release sometime in August, and has so far grossed US$252K.

Here Tom Hunter (Russell Crowe) stalks and harasses single mother Rachel (Caren Pistorious) who is running late for work, and her young son Kyle (Gabriel Bateman) in his car as a result of a road rage incident at a red stop light. Following this altercation, Rachel finds herself and everyone she loves at the mercy of a man who considers himself almost invisible and is looking to make one last mark upon the world by teaching her a series of deadly lessons. What follows is a dangerous game of cat and mouse that just goes to show that you never can tell who's in the car next to you and the extent they're prepared to go to to make a point.

'23 WALKS' (Rated M) - in his first feature film outing in twelve years, here Director and Writer Paul Morrison has followed up his earlier works 'Solomon and Gaenor', 'Wondrous Oblivion', and 'Little Ashes' with this heart warming romantic comedy drama of love discovered later on in life. Starring Dave Johns as Dave and Alison Steadman as Fern who are both in their sixtes and who get to know one another over the course of walking their dogs twenty-three times during one year, and mostly on London's Hampstead Heath, and gradually begin to fall in love. Also starring Tilly (Dave's dog) and Harry (Fern's dog) amongst other human characters. 

'THE SECRET : DARE TO DREAM' (Rated PG) - this American drama offering is Directed and Co-Written for the screen by Andy Tennant whose prior movie making credits include his debut in 1995 'It Takes Two' followed by the likes of 'Anna and the King', 'Sweet Home Alabama', 'Hitch', 'Fool's Gold', 'The Bounty Hunter' and 'Wild Oats' in 2016. Based on the best selling self help book from 2006 by Rhonda Byrne 'The Secret', the film tells the story of Miranda Wells (Katie Holmes) who is a hard-working young widow struggling to raise three children on her own. A powerful storm brings a devastating challenge and a mysterious handyman, Bray Johnson (Josh Lucas), into her life. Bray's presence and his belief in the power of positive thinking re-ignites the family's spirit, but he carries a secret, which could change everything. Also starring Jerry O'Connell and Celia Weston.

'JUVENILE DELINQUENTS' (Rated MA15+) - Directed, Written and Produced by Neil Goss in his film making debut, the story here follows a bunch of broken late teenagers facing incarceration for a crime they were forced to commit. As a disparate and desperate group they decide not to accept their destitute destiny and so set about making a new one by forcing redemption onto bad people. The Juvenile Delinquents (JD's) form a new dysfunctional family as they manoeuvre around problems brought about by their youth, competitive spirit, irrational behaviour and the horror at times of their new lives. Starring Demitra Sealy, Silvia Dionicio, Sean Stolzen, Amanda Greer, Corynn Treadwell, Phil Blevins and Cha-tah Ellem.

'LITIGANTE' (Rated M) - this 2019 drama film is Directed, Written and Produced by Colombian film maker Franco Lolli in only his second feature film outing which opened the Critics' Week at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival. Silvia (Carolina Sanin) is a single mother (by choice) raising her five year old son Antonio (Antonio Martinez) with daytime childcare help from her gay best friend Sergio (David Roa), as well as her sister, Maria-Jose (Alejandra Sarria), and mother, Leticia (Leticia Gomez). But the rapidly-metastasising return of Leticia's lung cancer, means the juggling act for Silvia and her family will be even harder. Added to this, she's been swept along by a simmering corruption charge at the municipal department where she's employed as the deputy legal officer, and there is a budding new romance occurring with radio journalist Abel (Vladimir Duran), which only adds to the pressure and the strain that she's under. Something's gotta give!

With five new release films this week to tempt you out to your local Odeon, remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephile friends afterwards here at Odeon Online. In the meantime, I'll see you sometime somewhere in the week ahead, at your local Odeon.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-