Afterschool (2008)

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Afterschool: Directed by Antonio Campos. With Ezra Miller, Jeremy Allen White, Emory Cohen, Michael Stuhlbarg. An Internet-addicted prep-school student captures on video camera the drug overdose of two girls.

“The daily routine of a boarding school spirals out of control and shifts to new policies after the death of two students by drug overdose in one of the many corridors of the place. And it was all videotaped by another student, Robert (Ezra Miller), who was using his camera for a school project. The story, actually, begins with him – a typical teenager, just a little more lonely than the usual barely talking to his roommate and constantly spending his days on the internet watching porn or school fight videos. Connect those events and you have a figure formed, a bomb waiting to explode. The movieu0026#39;s concern is in seeing how Robert will react with this tragedy while continuing with his project (now a memorial tribute for the dead girls), classes and involvement with his classmates. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eSo, it denounces the internet in a large scale and stays contrived while criticizing reality, real people and their sometimes useless values. Deals with real and poignant themes but the characters arenu0026#39;t so real, specially when you see the now familiar faces and voices of Miller and Michael Stuhlbarg. Good actors here and elsewhere but since the director is trying an almost documentary kind of film their performances get in the way. The themes explored were great, the presentation and the choices made were what killed its potential. Itu0026#39;s a suffocating experience. Itu0026#39;s right for the movie but that at no point cannot take the pleasure of the viewing.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eDirector Antonio Campos uses of static images that represent the voyeurish act of seeing things very distantly, rejecting close-ups and movements. Itu0026#39;s the vision of the kid of sees everything from a distance, the girls he canu0026#39;t reach present on the net videos, and also the ones he couldnu0026#39;t save because he was in a state of shock (weu0026#39;re fooled into this until a certain moment). Furthermore, itu0026#39;s slow and problematic in the sound department – and since I didnu0026#39;t have captions for it a few things were gathered with the help of IMDb boards. Thatu0026#39;s what the director tries to convey (it could be) but to me it was lazy filmmaking hacking from masters like Haneke and Van Sant, trying to be a higher (and updated) variation of u0026quot;Bennyu0026#39;s Videou0026quot; with u0026quot;Elephantu0026quot;. Fails on both accounts. Itu0026#39;s too mechanical. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWhy does it always have to follow through doubtful actions? Why it has to be inconclusive or misleading or going in several directions? And the ending? A real betrayal that almost destroyed the film. I saw film critics dissing films because the final image killed the experience and shifts the movie to an unexpected and unpleasant degree, and Iu0026#39;ve never understood much of that. Now I know. It didnu0026#39;t kill my enjoyment but I must recognize that it was very cheap. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eI liked u0026quot;Afterschoolu0026quot; because when it wasnu0026#39;t trying to be pretentious (and it is) it offered valid criticisms about adults negligence while dealing with kids and itu0026#39;s an intelligent and psychological radiography on todayu0026#39;s youth and all of its problems. Extremely manipulative and quite deceiving towards its final moments but gotta admit Mr. Campos managed to build tension in all scenes even the ones you give less importance like when the headmaster complains about Robertu0026#39;s expressionless video.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eSome people look at this as a critique of the America post 9/11, and thereu0026#39;s plenty of sustainable elements to confirm such view. I donu0026#39;t buy all that much but that can make your view something extra if you look carefully. Mindblowing. My message to the hipsters who believe this is one of the 10 best of the past decade: relax yourselves because thereu0026#39;s better out there. The directoru0026#39;s technique is poorly employed here. It works with other directors because they know what theyu0026#39;re doing and probably theyu0026#39;re not copying a style, theyu0026#39;re making a tribute and using a bit of their own craft. u0026quot;Afterschoolu0026quot; is simply a copy and paste. Good movie, far from great. 7/10”

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