Territories

September 1st, 2010







Advertisments





Territories

No valid json found

TerritoriesTerritoriesTerritoriesTerritoriesTerritories

Plot
Five friends return home from a marriage in Canada to the United States. Not far from the border, two customs officers stop them to check their identity.

Release Year: 2010

Rating: 5.0/10 (605 voted)

Director: Olivier Abbou

Stars: Cristina Rosato, Michael Mando, Roc LaFortune

Storyline
Five friends returning from a marriage in Canada return home to the United States. Not far from the border, two customs officers stop them to check their identity. Suspicious, they take their time especially with Jalil, a man of Arab origin. The situation worsens when a customs officer finds a small bag of marijuana in the luggage. Then things degenerate rapidly: a customs officer grabs the little dog that's part of the group and slits open its belly to be sure it's not a mule. When Gab makes a move, he's shot. The customs officer orders the surviving friends to undress and put on orange coveralls. Gradually, it dawns on the four tourists that they are in the hands of former torturers from Guantanamo.

Writers: Olivier Abbou, Thibault Lang Willar

Cast:
Cristina Rosato - Michelle Harris
Michael Mando - Jalii Adel Kahlid
Roc LaFortune - Samuel Torrance
Sean Devine - Walter Sotos
Nicole Leroux - Leslie Goldberg
Alex Weiner - Tom Goldberg
Stephen Shellen - Rick Brautigan
Tim Rozon - Gabriel Delgado
Vlasta Vrana - Sherif White
Caroline Redekopp - Doris
Nicola Woloz - Rebecca Brautigan
Lena Kleine - Rebecca's Mother



Details

Official Website: Official site [France] |

Release Date: September 2010

Filming Locations: Montréal, Québec, Canada

Box Office Details

Budget: $CAD3,000,000 (estimated)



User Review

Greetings from Guantanamo Bay, Canada

Rating: 5/10

Deranged and sadistic psychopaths kidnapping randomly unfortunate travelers in remote areas with as sole purpose to humiliate, torture and eventually massacre them. There have been SO many movies with this exact same plot outline over the past five-ten years that it has almost become a sub-genre on its own; a hybrid between hillbilly-horror and torture-porn. The only more thing directors of these films can do to distinguish their effort from the others is being as creative and extreme as possible in drawing the characters of the psychopaths. The crazier, blood-thirstier and more perverted, the better. Olivier Abbou clearly understood that message, as the villains in his film "Territories" are uncannily straight-faced and nihilistic killers who recreated their very own and private mini-version of Guantanamo Bay in a deep-hidden forestry region on the Canadian border with America. Dressed as border patrol officers, the two apprehend a car full of twenty-something Americans returning home from a wedding. Okay, they have a broken headlight and were carrying a small dose of soft drugs, but the main reason they stopped the car is because the driver of the group is called Jalil El-Haddad. The fake officers accuse Jalil of terrorism and before they properly realize, the entire group is locked up in separate cages in the middle of the woods. Although well-made and occasionally very atmospheric, "Territories" inevitably remains a derivative and forgettable effort. The first half of the film is admirably tense and contains a number of unsettling shock-moments (the interrogations with the prisoners who are weakening physically as well as mentally), but still you can't escape the impression you have all seen this a dozen of times before. Then, rather incomprehensibly, the tone swifts during the third act with the introduction of a completely new protagonist. A hired private detective is on the lookout for the missing tourists and all of a sudden the plot exclusively follows him around, even to restaurants where he seduces waitresses and his motel room where he stuffs up his veins with heroin. He confronts the kidnappers a couple of times, but the victims and their continuously deteriorating conditions suddenly don't seem all that important anymore. The acting performances are more than decent and the filming locations are very effective, but the main impression raised by "Territories" is déjà-vu.





Comments:

Comments are closed.


Advertisments










Searching...