Run movie review - Breakfast All Day
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- čas přidán 19. 11. 2020
- Christy Lemire (RogerEbert.com, @christylemire), Alonso Duralde (TheWrap, Linoleum Knife, Who Shot Ya?, @aduralde), and Matt Atchity (Moviefone.com, @matchity) review Run, directed and co-written by Aneesh Chaganty and starring Sarah Paulson, Kiera Allen, and Pat Healy.
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aneesh chaganty is one of the best young talents in hollywood . he is 29 and made two great original thrillers
Loved the review, loved the movie, loved your insight, just loved it all. 6:19 is the best.
I'm totally with Matt! I was very excited and eager for this young girl to get hers! She was amazing
Saw this a month ago at Nightstream Film Festival and it was great!
I just watched it and it's a corker! Those 2 lead performances alone elevate it to way above average. Sarah Poulson is always superb and Kiera Allen should have a bright future in film ahead of her if there's any justice.
I loved this movie and think Chaganty is the next Spielberg. One thing I didn't understand was why Chloe didn't tell the pharmacist the real reason she wanted to know what those pills were?
She didn't knew it.
Really hated the ending to this, all of the pieces were there for something great but they just decided to go by the numbers.
Isn't this basically a film version of The Act on Hulu?
The last 15-20 minutes were awful but once the paint thinner came into play I was genuinely horrified.
Spoiler below...
Just watched it - it was fun, but it's not so much a munchausen movie as it is a suspense movie like Misery. Once Chloe begins to have suspicions, she very quickly realizes and accepts what's happening to her. She has no lingering conflicted emotions towards Diane at all. And Diane is definitely channeling Kathy Bates' character from Misery. None of this is plausible unless you begin with the assumption that this isn't about the complicated emotions in a warped parent/child relationship, but is rather a simple, suspenseful tale about a girl who is kidnapped by a monster.
One thing I didn't understand was why Chloe didn't tell the pharmacist the real reason she wanted to know what those pills were?
@@squatch545 I just saw it... I’m guessing because she was afraid no one would believe her?? Since the pharmacist knew the mom well.
@@Krueger303 The pharmacist was on friendly terms with Chloe and would have likely believed her. But even if she didn't, I'd take the chance anyway. At least it would be on the record with a witness and the pharmacist would know, in case anything happened to Chloe That scene didn't make sense to me. If I thought my life were in danger, I'd definitely try to tell someone.
@@squatch545 You're right, it didn't make sense. I think maybe the assumption was at that point she was in shock and still didn't fully realize how serious the situation was. But the movie didn't communicate that very clearly.
I liked the movie up until the ending. Kinda lost it for me.
i'm tired of the Munchausen by proxy movies/tv shows. We already saw a perfected version of this disorder in the TV Show Sharp Objects, we don't need multiple other movies and tv shows about it. At some point the plot is repetitive. If you need to watch something about this concept, Sharp Objects is enough. This movie was average at best imo.
I loved this movie, but I find that I can't stand Sarah Paulson anymore.
She's so over the top, she could give Nic Cage a run for his money