
Which is a shame, because this was tight as hell. The set up takes its time letting you work out what's going on without telling you directly, so even describing the basic concept sort of results in the opening of the movie being less an intriguing mystery and more a puzzling get-to-the-point exercise, but roughly speaking, five criminals (including a parkour dude) take two security guards hostage so they can loot a shipment of laptops. Meanwhile, police escorting the head of an Albanian organized crime syndicate are ambushed; all but three of them are killed. They take refuge...inside the warehouse the criminals are robbing. All of them end up joining forces to try and withstand the siege.
The script is a lean, mean, efficient machine, never letting tension ease for a fucking second; the characterization and emotional moments are all serving two points -- if there's an intensely emotional moment, odds are it's also giving us a key piece of information, serving to move the plot forward, or distracting us from realizing what's about to happen next. It definitely doesn't have any intention of being anything more than a hella intense action-thriller, but the sheer purity of that purpose makes it immensely satisfying to watch.
No matter how awesome, buzz does not exist.
ReplyDeleteTell me about it. I am positive that I've seen this, like House/Hausu, on the IFC or Sundance listings, but didn't bother watching because the two-line cable guide description did nothing to pique my interest. More fool me.
Even better, Netflix's plot description is hilariously wrong.
ReplyDelete" Samy Naceri, Benoit Magimel, Nadia Fares, Pascal Greggory and Sami Bouajila star as the ruthless members of three warring gangs who end up hiding out in the same warehouse. Although it's gargantuan, the place isn't nearly big enough for all their egos, grudges and baggage. Everyone's jostling for control, and worse, they're all armed with weapons to ensure they wind up at the top of the bloody heap. Who will end up in the seat of power?"
BULLSHIT. Only the fucking warehouse bit has ANYTHING to do with the damn movie.
People up in Washington use hella?
ReplyDeleteYeah, pretty much constantly. I didn't even notice till a coworking from New York started laughing at us for using it.
ReplyDeleteIt does sound wicked retarded.
ReplyDeleteWe thought that about dude when I was in high school, and now look at us.
ReplyDelete