Take Shelter

  • México Atormentado (más)
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Sinopsis(1)

Un marido y padre de clase obrera llamado Curtis LaForche comienza a sufrir una serie de sueños aterradores de los que no cuenta nada a su familia, por lo que empezará a centrar su ansiedad en la construción obsesiva de un refugio en su casa por miedo a una tormenta apocalítica, comportamiento en apariencia inexplicable que ccomenzará a preocupar a su familia. Pero la tensión que se irá creando en su matrimonio y en su comunidad no pueden compararse al miedo de que sus sueños se puedan llegar a cumplir. (Avalon Audiovisual Esp.)

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Videos (6)

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Reseñas (8)

Goldbeater 

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español Un drama muy inquietante sobre un incipiente trastorno psicológico (o quizá no, pero no nos adelantemos) y la consiguiente desintegración de una vida familiar hasta entonces pacífica. Michael Shannon está impresionante en el papel principal y Jessica Chastain le secunda hábilmente. Me quito el sombrero especialmente ante el personaje interpretado por Jessica, que salva la cara incluso bajo el peso de las pruebas de la vida y permanece paciente y cariñosamente junto a su hombre. Algunas de las secuencias oníricas de esta película distan mucho de ser de terror, y ver a Shannon enloquecido es de verdad una agonía. Todo esto presagia la escena final, realmente poco alegre, a la que todo conducía. Depresión instantánea de dos horas. [KVIFF 2018] ()

DaViD´82 

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inglés Facing the captivating depths of madness through the thunder in Ohio… Hard to say what to praise more. Whether an unprecedentedly magnificent tangible subliminal tension, Shannon's performance as a true family-based hard worker who realizes that he's almost certainly succumbing to schizophrenia, but "what if he doesn't". The result is the most disturbing, most realistic and, last but not least, by far the best film version of the biblical story of Noah. I have perhaps the only minor complaint related to the conclusion. This is a type of movie that can only end in two ways. And Nichols went the way of being more cinematic and stylish. However, I cannot shake the feeling that the latter would get even more under the skin and would be richer in terms of interpretation. ()

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J*A*S*M 

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inglés I didn’t know anything about this film beforehand (other than an outline of the premise and the good reviews), and I would recommend you the same, so stop reading, now :). Very unique take of the sub-genre of “the protagonist is (maybe) crazy”. Michael Shannon is married to Jessica Chastain (by the way, great performances by both) and has a deaf-mute daughter, he also has apocalyptic visions about a super storm that doesn’t bring anything good. Jeff Nichols (director and screenwriter) chose an interesting approach, leaving the main character to doubt himself. But crazy people usually don’t think they are crazy, which raises a fairly legitimate fear in the viewer that something is really going happen in the end. But don’t expect a catastrophe movie, Take Shelter is mostly an oppressive conversational drama spiced up with an almost horror scene here and there. In the final fifteen minutes I felt a (un)pleasant chill several times, largely due to the excellent soundtrack. The very last scene can debated at length (how much to take it literally or what it symbolises), which also deserves praise. Very satisfied, but this is not something for everyone. 9/10 ()

Lima 

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inglés The best of the American indie scene of the last few years. I love it when as a viewer I don't know what I'm in for, and when the director plays with me like a cat with a mouse. That's exactly what this film does. It's extremely atmospheric, full of paranoia and growing fear, where at the beginning you don't know if the main character or his surroundings are crazy, but thanks to your logical reasoning you gradually lean towards the more "sensible" option, only to come to a conclusion that's like a punch in the face. And Michael Shannon deserves an Oscar. ()

Marigold 

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inglés This got to me. A game with the viewer on the border of panic, paranoia, stealthiness and self-flagellation. A motif of uncertainty built by an unreliable narrator and layered hints, so that one is trapped somewhere between reading the film as a social-family drama about erupting schizophrenia and a chilling apocalyptic parable about a decaying world. The two planes are perfectly connected, and thanks to this, the conclusion (however on the edge) feels appropriately mystical. Elegantly, without awkwardness and with ease, Nichols filmed something that M. Night Shyamalan has been pathetically trying to film for years. A film about foreboding, fear, vulnerability and the end of civilization, a smooth rendition of many disaster visions and feelings of the near demise of the world as we know it. This film is a major event in both the thriller and psychological drama genres. ()

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