Triangle
"Terror comes in waves."
When Jess sets sail on a yacht with a group of friends, she cannot shake the feeling that there is something wrong.
"Terror comes in waves."
When Jess sets sail on a yacht with a group of friends, she cannot shake the feeling that there is something wrong.
Melissa George
Jess
Liam Hemsworth
Victor
Emma Lung
Heather
Rachael Carpani
Sally
Michael Dorman
Greg
Joshua McIvor
Tommy
Henry Nixon
Downey
Jack Taylor
Jack
Bryan Probets
Driver
When Jess sets sail on a yacht with a group of friends, she cannot shake the feeling that there is something wrong.
**Fantastic Psychological Thriller!** If you're browsing for movies to watch, go into this movie cold; without watching the trailers or any other reviews. A skillfully made thriller that reveals more details upon rewatching. If you enjoy mindf**k movies or science-fiction/psychological thrillers, you will love this film.
Loopy Looper! Triangle is written and directed by Christopher Smith. It stars Melissa George, Liam Hemsworth, Michael Dorman, Jack Taylor, Joshua McIvor, Henry Nixon, Emma Lung and Rachael Carpani. Music is by Christian Henson and cinematrography by Robert Humphreys. After their boat is damaged during a weird storm, a group of friends board a drifting ocean liner to find it seemingly deserted. One of the group, Jess (George), has the distinct feeling she has been on the ship before... It at first glance seems to be a standard ghost ship type of film, where a group of pretty people are in serious peril, but this is much more. It proves to be complex piece, one in fact that kind of demands a second viewing to fully appreciate the twisty nuances within. Beautiful photography highlights some of the teasing imagery, which ascentuates the etheral tone to proceedings. Then once the story starts to reveal itself, your undivided attention is sought to fully grasp the deep psychological barbs at work. 8/10
This review may contain spoilers. I liked the beginning and end. The problem is the middle - I just felt like I was watching the same movie over and over. And over. 🙄 She didn't develop much as a character and not enough changed or happened to keep it from dragging on. Just a lot of her running around with the same expression on her face and slamming Hemsworth's head into the coat hook (ick). Most importantly of all: get get a real bird to fly about or don't have one at all.
**_If you’re going on a sea trip, don’t cheat Charon_** Off the coast of the Sunshine State, a yacht excursion is threatened by a sudden storm wherein the survivors seek succor on a passing vessel, but it turns out to be no ordinary ship. "Triangle” (2009) is a mystery/fantasy mixed with horror that inserts the myth of Sisyphus into the present-day scenario of a yacht outing, combining “Ghost Ship” (2002) and the contemporaneous “Dark Country” or, going back decades, "Haunts of the Very Rich" (1972). The TV flick "Ghost Voyage" came out over a year earlier and covered similar terrain. While “Triangle” had ten times the budget I slightly prefer “Ghost Voyage” due to the emphasis on character and possible redemption, despite its cartoonish CGI. This one’s lonelier and bleaker but has its points of interest, including Melissa George as the lost, joyless protagonist. Yet it’s the brilliance of the concept and how it’s executed that scores the highest marks. When it’s over, the more you reflect on the details, the more impressed you are. However, it's a one-of-a-kind flick and not everyone will appreciate what it offers. I should add that the movie has zero to do with the Bermuda Triangle à la “Satan’s Triangle” (1975). ‘Triangle’ is simply the name of the sailboat. The film runs 1 hour, 39 minutes, and was shot entirely in Queensland, Australia. GRADE: B/B-
Triangle (2009) follows Jess (Melissa George), Greg (Michael Dorman), Sally (Rachel Carpani), Downey (Henry Nixon), Heather (Emma Lung), and Victor (Liam Hemsworth) as they go on a boat trip. About 15 minutes in, Downey asks, “Is that normal?” while pointing at a fauxminous CGI cloud and accompanying CGI lightning. Well, that depends on your definition of “normal.” Unfortunately, slipshod VFX has become the norm rather than the exception. A sudden storm capsizes the titular boat. Heather is swept away, but the others climb onto the overturned sailboat when the storm clears. A conspicuously computer-generated ocean liner called the Aeolus approaches, and they board it. Wrecked by a shoddy visual effect, saved by another — how poetic. On board, they find a photograph of the selfsame ship and learn that “Aeolus was the Greek God of the winds and the father of Sisyphus, the man condemned by the Gods to the task of pushing a rock up a mountain only to have it roll back down again.” While not a god but a mortal whom Zeus favored, an Aeolus was indeed the keeper of the winds. However, this Aeolus is not the same Aeolus who fathered Sisyphus. If writer-director Christopher Smith was so eager to name-drop Sisyphus, why didn’t he name the boat the “Sysiphus”? Or better yet, the “Prometheus”? According to my calculations, not only could Sisyphus actually be related to Prometheus (his great-great-grandson), but Prometheus’s punishment, wherein his liver regenerated overnight after being eaten by an eagle the previous day, is closer to what goes on in this movie. More importantly, Prometheus was eventually freed. Our hapless heroes roam around the ship and, except Jess, get picked off one by one, which thankfully puts an end to their tiresome bickering — until the Aeolus reapproaches the overturned Triangle and new (or old?) versions of the characters reboard the ship. Lather, rinse, repeat, yawn. If Jess were Prometheus, her friends would be the regenerating liver. Why is there more than one Jess, though? And why does she have no recollection of any of this — which apparently has been going on for a while — other than a sense of deja vu? Neither Prometheus nor Sisyphus were caught in some sort of hazy time loop. They didn’t go, “gee, this feels oddly familiar” as they were pushing up a rock or having a bird of prey dine on their internal organs. They were fully aware of their situations, which only made their punishments worse. Moreover, when Sisyphus made it to the top of the hill, he didn’t find a bunch of other Sisyphi up there waiting for him. Smith really should have let this Greek myth stuff be subtext. It appears that Jess is being punished for physically abusing and accidentally killing her autistic son — which, of course, reduces autism to a mere plot device — but what about the others? What did they do to deserve this? Unless they’re not real — you know, like the storm and the ocean liner. If this is Jess’s personal limbo, why does she disappear from the action now and then? Why are there scenes featuring any combination of the other characters when everything should be perceived and experienced from Jess’s point of view? And the answer is, to mislead the audience. In the end, we know what’s happening and why, and that it will continue to happen ad infinitum. The lingering question mark is, who is really being punished? Jess or the viewers? No time-loop film should conclude with the loop going around again unresolved for the simple reason that that’s not a proper conclusion — what good is a revelation without an epiphany? The only reason to watch Triangle is to see Jess break the cycle; otherwise, it’s as pointless an exercise as, well, you know where I’m going with that.
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