The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Barry Hertz
Radwanski creates a visceral, impossible-to-ignore document of one man’s fraught reality. It is creative, bold and even dangerous filmmaking.
Canada · 2015
1h 15m
Director Kazik Radwanski
Starring Erwin Van Cotthem, Ashley Kate Butler, Seth Kirsh, Deragh Campbell
Genre Drama
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Follows a middle-aged married man who finds his only outlet is online gaming.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Barry Hertz
Radwanski creates a visceral, impossible-to-ignore document of one man’s fraught reality. It is creative, bold and even dangerous filmmaking.
The Film Stage by Ethan Vestby
Though following this man as he wheezes, snoozes, and snacks on fatty foods, we don’t feel sympathy for him, and we don’t even get the self-satisfied feeling of laughing at him, but we do, at least to some degree, get the impression of some sort of understanding.
The New York Times by Glenn Kenny
Whatever investigation it’s attempting, the movie is leaden in its pacing — the first 15 minutes feel like an hour — and its constricted shooting style, practically all hand-held almost close-ups, is transparent in its contrivance of realism.
The Hollywood Reporter by John DeFore
Van Cotthem's performance is wholly convincing, which might not be something to brag about, and the film flatlines right along with him.
First he was her prince... now he's her hero.