Surveillance (2008 film)
Surveillance | |
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Directed by | Jennifer Lynch |
Produced by |
Marco Mehlitz Gary Hamilton Harrison Kordestani David Lynch |
Written by |
Kent Harper Jennifer Lynch |
Starring |
Bill Pullman Julia Ormond Pell James Michael Ironside French Stewart |
Music by | Todd Bryanton |
Cinematography | Peter Wunstorf |
Editing by | Daryl K. Davis |
Distributed by | Arclight Films, Wild Bunch Distribution |
Release dates | May 2008 (Cannes Film Festival) |
Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $3,500,000 (est.)[1] |
Box office | $1,001,871 |
Surveillance is an independent thriller that is set in the Nebraska plains of the United States (US). The film is directed by Jennifer Lynch and stars Julia Ormond, Bill Pullman, Michael Ironside, and French Stewart. The film premiered "out of competition" and appeared in a midnight slot at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival. Surveillance is Lynch's second feature film, following a fifteen-year break after Boxing Helena.[2][3]
Plot
A series of violent deaths and the disappearance of a young woman bring FBI agents Hallaway (Bill Pullman) and Anderson (Julia Ormond) to a town in rural Nebraska. They meet the three survivors of a mysterious bloodbath; the young Stephanie (Ryan Simpkins), the cocaine-addicted Bobbi (Pell James), and the foul-mouthed police officer Bennett (Kent Harper). Hallaway watches the trio's respective interviews with Captain Billings (Michael Ironside) and officers Wright (Charlie Newmark) and Degrasso (Gill Gayle), where they tell the story of what brought them there:
In a warped way to pass the day, officer Bennett, as his partner officer Conrad (French Stewart) watches (and both hidden from view), shoots the tires of cars driving along an isolated county road, then convince the drivers their tires blew out as a result of their speeding, and threaten them afterwards. They do so to one young couple then let them go.
A bit later, Stephanie, traveling on vacation with her family, sees a car (the couple's) with blood on it and tells it to her oblivious mother (Cheri Oteri). Bobbi, using drugs with her boyfriend Johnny (Mac Miller), is in a car right behind them. At a rest stop, both gals learn a pair of killers are responsible for a string of murders and likely the woman's disappearance. Stephanie's stepfather Steven (Hugh Dillon) supposedly speeds and their car's tire is shot by Bennett. Bobbi and Johnny are about to offer help, but the officers arrive and harass all of them, making Steven put Conrad's gun in his mouth and making Bobbi swear at Johnny. After all of this, Stephanie tells the officers about the bloody car she saw earlier. The officers leave to investigate.
Steven gets to work changing the tire, and Bobbi gets out to talk with Stephanie's family, who all feel violated by the officers. Simultaneously, after passing a white van, Bennett and Conrad find the car Stephanie described further down the road, with evidence of an altercation, and race back towards the van. The van plows into the back of Jimmy's car, killing him and Steven. A dead man is at the wheel and a live person, covered in a black bag, is sitting in the passenger seat of the van, who Bobbi tries to save. Bennett and Conrad arrive back at the scene. In the chaos Conrad is killed and persons emerge from the van wearing rubber masks and kill Stephanie's mother and brother, and knock Bennett unconscious. Stephanie and Bobbi take refuge in the police car.
Presently, Hallaway and Anderson are trying to figure things out when bodies are discovered in a motel nearby. Anderson takes Wright and Degrasso to the scene, leaving Hallaway with Bobbi, Billings, Bennet, and Stephanie, who whispers something in Hallaway's ear after Anderson leaves. Hallaway talks with the three others, while Degrasso discovers nude pictures of Anderson and Hallaway. Leafing through them in Anderson's backseat, Degrasso is shocked to see the agents with the body of a dead woman. Before he can react, Anderson shoots both Degrasso and Wright dead, then dumps both bodies by the roadside. Hallaway, meanwhile, reveals that he was at the bloodbath earlier, and reveals he and Anderson are in fact the killers. Hallaway kills Billings, and when Anderson returns Bennett and Bobbi are also murdered.
A phone message left at the police station reveals the bodies at the motel are those of the missing woman and two real FBI Agents. As Anderson and Hallaway drive away they see Stephanie standing out in a field by the side of the road. Hallaway relates to Anderson that the little girl was on to them all along so he let her go free. Anderson tells Hallaway, "I think that's the most romantic thing in the whole world." Stephanie watches their vehicle disappear into the distance.
Cast
- Julia Ormond as Elizabeth Anderson
- Bill Pullman as Sam Hallaway
- Pell James as Bobbi Prescott
- Ryan Simpkins as Stephanie
- Michael Ironside as Captain Billings
- French Stewart as Officer Jim Conrad
- Kent Harper as Officer Jack Bennett
- Mac Miller as Johnny
- Hugh Dillon as Dad
- Cheri Oteri as Mom
Background
Lynch stated that the original screenplay had been written by Kent Harper, who had started with an idea about witches. The title comes from surveillance cameras, and "how people change their stories based on what we see and what it is we assume about each other." The young female character was inspired by Lynch's own daughter, Sydney.[4]
Production
Different film stocks were processed in different ways to provide the varying states of minds and perspectives that belong to the various characters in the film: the two local police officers' POV is sepia toned, to reflect their power, while over-saturation was employed for the illicit drug-using couple, and a "super sharp and super clear" depiction for the young girl.[5]
Reception
Reviews of the film were mixed overall, with a 55% ("rotten") rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 71 reviews.[6] Metacritic gave the film a metascore of 31 based on 12 reviews, which indicates "generally unfavorable reviews".[7]
In October 2008, the film took the top prize at the Festival de Cine de Sitges.[8]
The film made history at the New York City Horror Film Festival when Jennifer Lynch became the first female to win the Best Director award and Ryan Simpkins became the first child to win the Best Actress award at the fest.[9]
See also
References
- ↑ "imdb.com". imdb.com. Retrieved 2011-07-16.
- ↑ Martin, Peter (2008-05-15). "Cannes Deal: Magnet Picks Up Jennifer Lynch's 'Surveillance'". Cinematical. Retrieved 2008-06-24.
- ↑ "Surveillance film details". Cannes Film Festival. Retrieved 2008-06-24.
- ↑ "q&a". The Hollywood Reporter, The Daily from Cannes (Cannes) (8): 6. 2008-05-21.
- ↑ Levy, Emanuel. "Interview: Surveillance with Jennifer Lynch". emanuellevy.com. Retrieved 2008-06-24.
- ↑ "Surveillance (2009) (T-Meter Critics)". Rotten Tomatoes.
- ↑ "Surveillance". Metacritic.
- ↑ http://twitchfilm.net/site/view/complete-list-of-sitges-winners-announced/[]
- ↑ http://fangoriaonline.com/home/news/9-film-news/560-bad-biology-leads-nyc-horror-fest-award-winners.html[]
External links
- Directorial announcement at SciFi.com(dead link)
- Surveillance at the Internet Movie Database
- Surveillance at allmovie
- Interview with Jennifer Lynch and Cast at FEARnet
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