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Trance (2013)

April. 05,2013
|
6.9
|
R
| Drama Thriller Crime Mystery
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A violent gang enlists the help of a hypnotherapist in an attempt to locate a painting which somehow vanished in the middle of a heist.

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Reviews

Stellead
2013/04/05

Don't listen to the Hype. It's awful

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Beanbioca
2013/04/06

As Good As It Gets

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CrawlerChunky
2013/04/07

In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.

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Juana
2013/04/08

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

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Michael Ledo
2013/04/09

Simon (James McAvoy) is an art auctioneer who participates as the inside man in an art heist. He double crosses his partners and hides the painting himself. However, due to a nasty bump on the head he gets amnesia and forgets where he stashed the painting. After some unsuccessful torture, his partners in crime take him to see hypnotherapist Elizabeth Lamb (Rosario Dawson) as a way to restore his memory. Elizabeth quickly figures out these guys are the art thieves and wants a piece of the action when they recover the painting.Now at this point the plot develops layers. People go in and out of trances and see things and you try to figure out what is real and not real. This film is a crime/mystery/thriller/drama that keeps you thinking. Franck (Vincent Cassel) is the ring leader and wants the painting. Worth a view.Parental Guide: F-bomb, sex, full frontal celebrity nudity (Rosario Dawson)

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Myriam Nys
2013/04/10

There is a disconnect between the gravity and violence of the events depicted and the sleek, shiny, over-stylish packaging. Moreover, the story is so complicated that it becomes difficult to understand. It is one thing to expect the viewer to pay attention, it is another to pour a bottle of champagne in the viewer and let him loose in a maze-shaped hall of mirrors.The story concerns the disappearance of an unusually ominous painting by Goya called "Witches in flight". There is a rich vein of symbolism here that might have been better mined than is the case. (But then, I suppose that the makers of the movie realized that the stark horror of the painting would not go well with the glossy, stylish look.) At one point in the movie - I'm trying to avoid spoilers - it becomes clear that the Goya has been kept hidden under tragic circumstances. These circumstances were also deeply deleterious to the painting. As a result one would expect the painting to be damaged, possibly even damaged beyond recognition. But no, it remains just as beautiful as ever. And to think that there are crown jewellers, art historians, restorers,... etc who would only approach such a masterwork according to a strict protocol. The fools !All of the above is pretty sad, since the movie also boasts some fine performances, especially from the two protagonists. There are also moments of whimsy and (very dry) wit. So. Did I ever tell you how I forgot my Rubens at the tobacconist's ?

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charleswjoke
2013/04/11

This film starts with an interesting premise but slowly surprises with many other layers. The movie starts with an enrapturing sequence, that is manipulated by the director/ the storyteller and thus keeps us invested in the plot. The story similar to inception (in a good way) delves into the human psyche, memory and the mind. This subject matter makes the audience feel intelligent and invested as well as the masterful performances of James McAvoy, Rosario Dawson and Rene Cassel keep your eyes attached to the screen. The ending gives the audience one of the greatest and most heartbreaking revelations in movies that changes how one views the protagonists and the plot.

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Bryan Kluger
2013/04/12

Danny Boyle is one of my favorite and one of the great modern filmmakers of the last twenty years. His unique style and ability to make a film in a different genre each time he gets in the director's seat has not only proved successful and earned him critical praise and awards, but it shows that he has limitless talent to entertain a wide variety of audiences across the globe. With his latest film, 'Trance', Boyle shows he still has what it takes to make a modern noir movie with so many twists and turns, that eventually you will give up trying to figure what's going on in the story, and fall into Boyle's "trance" of betrayal, thievery, and sex in this art heist thriller.The main focus here is on an auction house employee Simon (Jame McAvoy), who is cahoots with three criminals to steal a painting from the 1700s by Goya, which in the film was auctioned off for over $41 million. In an elaborate scheme to pull off this heist, Simon's partner in crime Francis (Vincent Cassel) hit him with a shotgun in the head, leaving Simon in the hospital for a few days with a case of amnesia. What we find out is, Simon hid the painting before making the handoff and now cannot remember where he stashed it.After a bit of brutal torture on Simon, Francis and his two thugs believe he has no idea where he hid the painting and thus tell him to seek hypnosis therapy to see if he can trigger his memory loss. He seems to choose random name out of the phone book of American therapist Dr. Elizabeth Lamb (Rosario Dawson), who is smarter than she thinks and figures out quickly that Simon is in trouble and that his cohorts are listening in to their sessions secretly. Dr. Lamb convinces the group to join for hypnosis sessions and after she realizes what's at stake, she insists on an equal cut of the prize.From here, things spiral out of control into a frenzy of betrayal, lies, sex, and regaining painful memories that seem to advance the story on who really is in charge of this whole set up. For the most part, it seems that Dr. Lamb is in charge as she is the one conducting the therapy sessions with everyone, and things get a bit comical when Francis' thugs are hypnotized in a therapy session, which is to showcase their biggest fears. Dawson's performance of Dr. Lamb might be her greatest role to date as she exudes so much confidence and commands a very powerful performance, that we fall under her spell and are never cured.McAvoy turns in some brilliant work as does Cassel in their very flawed but emotional characters. Particularly Cassel, as at first he seems to be just a basic criminal out for money, but there is more to him than just greed, and we really sympathize with him. And that is what Boyle does so well here. He captures the very human side of an epic crime, one of which we are thrown into a maze of deceit and blood, to which we may never come out of. The camera tricks and use of stylized colors here make every character pop and show their very different sides and motivations from Dawson's full frontal nude scene to McAvoy's descent into madness.There has never been a heist movie told quite like this before, and even though we might not know what the hell is going on until the final moments of the film, it's a gut wrenching visceral experience. One that you won't soon forget.

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