Four | |
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Directed by | John Langridge |
Written by | Paul Chronnell |
Produced by | Craig Conway |
Starring |
|
Cinematography | Adrian Brown |
Edited by | John Langridge Ben King |
Music by | Raiomond Mirza |
Production company | Oh My! Productions Ltd |
Release date |
|
Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £500,000[ citation needed ] |
Four is a British independent film directed by John Langridge and released in 2011.
A jealous husband hires a movie-obsessed detective to kidnap his wife's lover and bring him to a derelict factory to administer some 'rough justice.' Once there, the husband discovers the detective has a revelation of his own. He has kidnapped the husband's wife as well. [1]
Total Film's Paul Bradshaw wrote, "With just four actors, a single setting and more twists than a bag full of pretzels, John Langridge’s grimy lo-fi debut is almost smart, taut and nasty enough to bid for the Tarantino comparisons he’s obviously after." [2] The Evening Standard 's Derek Malcolm found the film "over-ambitious", starting "as an offbeat thriller with pseudo-Pinterish dialogue" and ending up "much like a horror movie." [3]
Writing in The Guardian Mark Kermode praised the film, acknowledging that "John Langridge's tortuously twisted warehouse-bound tale of a cuckolded husband seeking vengeance on his wife's lover does at least attempt to get the very most out of very little", [4] while The Independent wrote that the script "meditates on male insecurity and possessiveness", but that "the attempt at menace unwisely borrows quotations from Hollywood movies, [a fact] that make [the movie] sound rather wannabe in consequence.” [5]
Time Out 's Tom Huddleston wrote that "the cast make the best" of a script that is "as uninspired as the plot, all muttered threats, cockernee slang and an initially amusing, increasingly wearying overuse of the F-word." [6]
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