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Bypass

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Bypass (2014)

September. 14,2014
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5.6
| Drama Thriller
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Tim has no job, but Tim ‘works’, selling stolen goods... In the face of mounting internal and external pressure, how far will he go to keep his head above water and protect those he loves?

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Reviews

Clevercell
2014/09/14

Very disappointing...

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SpuffyWeb
2014/09/15

Sadly Over-hyped

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Intcatinfo
2014/09/16

A Masterpiece!

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Marva
2014/09/17

It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,

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Mike Forshaw
2014/09/18

In a cinematic landscape dominated by superhero franchises, BYPASS provides a platform for the kind of characters the peerless Alan Clarke regularly gave a voice too. Set in a community that has been decimated by industrial decline, the film follows Tim (George MacKay) as he struggles to hold the last fragments of his family together. Much like Jérémie Renier's character in L'Infant (2005), Tim lives on the fringes of society and survives through petty crime. When faced with the reality of losing his family home, Tim is left with no option but to follow the path that led is older brother (Benjamin Dilloway) to jail – and his circumstances are further complicated by his rapidly deteriorating health.Although BYPASS is set amongst a social-realist landscape, Hopkin's has infused Tim's world with a striking aesthetic - were dialogue is sparse and the cinematography and sound design propel the narrative. David Proctor's cinematography is beautiful, and as Tim's life spirals out of control the imagery carefully immerses the audience in his increasingly desperate situation. As the central protagonist George MacKay (FOR THOSE IN PERIL, SUNSHINE ON LEITH, PRIDE) is a revelation, and his scenes with Lester (Matt Cross) in particular, bristle with tension and menace.BYPASS isn't what David Fincher calls popcorn cinema; it demands its audience to engage with its themes, and asks them to reflect long after they have left the cinemaBYPASS is a confident and provocative film which despite another 5 years of potential privatisation, is optimistic for its characters futures. If you truly care about British independent cinema then please ignore the critics, watch BYPASS on VoD* and make up your own mind*http://www.bypassthefilm.co.uk/

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Warren Harrison
2014/09/19

Having watched Bypass twice (and I suggest other reviewers do likewise) it seems that many have come to this film and not been aware of their own prior expectations and 'ways of seeing'. Of course many will have certain expectations given Hopkin's first feature Better Things, but they may have wrongly expected more of the same, and thus not been open to the ideas and themes that the film presents. It can be read in a typical and might I suggest, lazy way, which is one which will result in missing the richness that the film offers. Concerning the visual style that Hopkins (and his cinematographer, David Procter) employs, many have discussed the lyrical/poetic nature of it, yet what seems to have been missed is the shot-size selection and rhythm created by it. The film favours the Close-up, with sparing use of wide-shots, so that when wide/er shots are used they are used to communicate a narrative point without the need for dialogue; they tell us something (Tim standing in the empty bedroom once occupied by his mother is one such example). In scenes where mid-shots are employed, they are shot on the long-end of the lens so that the space around Tim and others is compressed. Proctor's camera is constantly on Tim's shoulder so that we relate closely to an almost POV. This visual style works in conjunction with what we are told, or rather what is withheld from us in certain scenes; we are never given omniscient knowledge, but restrained so that we know no more than Tim does; his illness and the precise machinations of the criminals remain unclear; because Tim is only a bottom of the food chain foot-soldier. As such, the camera brings us close to experience events that are just as muddled to us as they are Tim. Here we are seeing Hopkins continue to explore cinematic form as any person claiming to be a film-maker should. It's approaches such as this that appear to have gone unconsidered as many critics have decided to look for what they know, not found it, then uncritically dismissed the film unfairly. Yes the film is poetic and lyrical in its depictions, but the style is doing more in terms of story than it has been given credit for. A thematic concern that is worth consideration is the notion of fathers; the absent and the becoming, which at the same time speaks of children, protection, encouragement, safety and security and a hope for something better than what is at hand. Here it is not only Tim, his sister and older brother who feel loss, but they are representative of a generation, not just themselves. This generational comment is most profoundly communicated in Tim's fit; this is not just the unidentified illness taking its toll on one young man, but upon a generation who have no arsenal of family, contacts or qualifications with which to fight the uncertainties of the modern age; this is the convulsion of a generation played out alone, unseen and uncared for (where, if we are honest, we'd sooner it stayed). Here then, Tim should be considered as an archetype. The ending of the film has also been misread; it's only happy for a fleeting moment that surely Tim deserves, and will soon be gone when he returns to the estate to try against the odds to provide as a father. Some people have dismissed Bypass as being too heavy-handed in the rapid chain of dismal events that befall Tim and his fiends and family, that Hopkins has laid them on too thick. Not so. If you have not yet seen Bypass, go and sit in a pub in an estate like the one Hopkins depicts (if you dare, or if you can find one open), and listen to the life-stories on offer, then watch it. You may well find that Hopkins has not gone far enough. If you have watched it, look again, but only after you have given your predispositions and prejudices a Greg style right-hook.

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gedgibson
2014/09/20

Watching Bypass really brought me into the lives and experiences of Tim and Lilly, played respectively by George Mackay and Charlotte Spencer. The feeling of being helpless to whatever fate befalls you is enduring, and a reflection on the current malaise of Britain's youth who have been abandoned by today's ambitious, quick fix society. The film was well crafted, with excellent cinematography, soundtrack and foley that helped to create the atmosphere and prevailing sense of unease, and which was complemented excellently by the superb performance of George Mackay, and actor who will surely achieve great things. There is no generic start or ending to Tim's story, but a snippet of the lives of the characters that surround him, and it leaves you with a feeling of compassion for the characters and their future.

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jackiecouchman
2014/09/21

A Q&A session with the producer directly after the screening just reinforced my view of the movie. It was very self indulgent and, for me, missed the mark. The film techniques were very obvious and very contrived. The random, untied threads, that came and went without particular reason were nothing other than irritating. The story was a straightforward one and the subject matter interesting. However "Bypass" neither went anywhere worthwhile, nor offered hope or engagement. Rather a disappointing offering. The only thing that made it worthwhile was George MacKay's performance. He clearly inhabited the character; the pity was that for the viewer we didn't get to see inside his head or heart (or maybe he didn't have one).

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