Sunday, February 14, 2010

Barazilian Wax Thrush

Review of "The Triangle" ("Triangle" England - Australia 2009)

Synopsis: "Triangle" has a group of friends who are enjoying a vacation on a yacht are surprised by a major storm . To save life, they have to board a cruise ship that picks them up. However, the ship appears to be completely deserted inside clocks are stopped and one of the young, is believed to have traveled on this boat before.
Christopher Smith returns to the fray with this interesting film that mixes suspense with a flawless terror and the viewer gets to work trying to decipher a very neat script, which is uniting parts of a scene after scene for some time how not seen in movies of this genre. Therein lies the biggest surprise of a film very well told from the start, just in his impeccable script. Everything worked very well and almost no detail is off the hook for what ultimately will be a well-structured story.

The film begins by telling the complicated life that is Jess (played a fantastic and Melissa George), the mother of an autistic child, with all that that entails. One morning, after leaving her son at school, Jess decides to go sailing with some friends who have asked to have a good time for recreation. But the problems will soon arrive when the sailing ship that is caught in a terrible storm and must seek refuge in a ship dating from the 30's. Nightmares will be happening one after another without any apparent explanation. But what is real?

Christopher Smith (Creep, "" Severance ") was commissioned to write one of the most interesting and intricate scripts I've seen in recent times. Every scene, every dialogue and every situation of which take place in "Triangle" have a reason.

The film is arming for a bit (still very interesting in all your footage), as if it were a puzzle, with lots of psychological elements with temporal leaps that make a history to repeat scenes and again (great work of clearance) and a resolution that perfectly closes extremely well structured script and intriguing. While it is true that there are still some loose ends throughout the plot, is noteworthy how well the story is closed. Believe me it was not for nothing easy resolution of the film, especially the number of subplots and parallel options that were open during the course of the film. Good for Smith to provide a well structured script and thought like this.

Christopher Smith was also behind the camera to direct this little gem of horror and suspense. It is laudable his brilliant way to film some scenes, like the terrible storm that struck our protagonists in their morning walk, or some scenes inside the ship and bail them out, superbly filmed and very careful about camera movements and As for what to show and what not. Paragraph work deserves to be held in the editing room. Really spectacular.

When the viewer to see the movie, you will realize how difficult it can be mounted on a tape like this, where the script goes back and forth in time and recurring situations where at any time but from different angles. A job extremely well done and very rewarding to see.

With regard to the actions we have something quite interesting, indeed. All actions of the tape are correct, but it's Melissa George is frankly staggering. From there the rest of the protagonists seem horrible (which are not) compared to what this girl did on screen. The protagonist of "Triangle" had to spend on your character for all moods that one you can think of and more. A girl shows scared and affected by the illness of his son and that he must fight for all the tape from his own inner demons. His gestures, his gifts of heroin in a few moments of the film, their fears and psychological disorders have been broadcast on the screen in a perfect way for Melissa George. An actress who was able to take full advantage of a highly polished script in its overall structure.

Ultimately, "Triangle" is a very, very good movie. Halfway between suspense, thriller and horror, this film is a demonstration that films of this genre can boast a great script and not just to show gallons of blood on the screen. Highly recommended.

Movie Rating: Very Good. Read

Critical Triangle

in Muchocine.net

0 comments:

Post a Comment