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Open Windows

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Spain, United States · 2014
Rated R · 1h 41m
Director Nacho Vigalondo
Starring Elijah Wood, Sasha Grey, Neil Maskell, Iván González
Genre Action, Crime, Thriller

Nick's won an opportunity to go out with his favorite actress, Jill, but she flakes out on him. A mysterious hacker gifts Nick the opportunity to spy on Jill through the Internet, but both parties get more than they bargained for as the stakes rise to dangerous levels.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

50

Slant Magazine by Chuck Bowen

Timidity and perhaps fear, of visual confinement, of lingering emotional engagement, closes Nacho Vigalondo's most promising windows.

30

Village Voice by Chuck Wilson

The new thriller from Spanish writer-director Nacho Vigalondo (Timecrimes) is visually dazzling, but the story starts off silly and ends up a confusing, maddening mess.

42

The A.V. Club by David Ehrlich

Open Windows attempts to disguise a revenge movie by cloaking it in the flash of a voyeuristic techno-thriller, but the combined concepts are so high that the film resolves as Vigalondo reaches his Icarus moment, the corpse so mangled and unpleasant the project’s ambition can only be identified via dental records.

40

The Hollywood Reporter by John DeFore

It's pretty silly stuff, leaving the film to rely on more conventional car chases, woman-in-peril scenarios and mistaken identity to keep things interesting -- all seen on that laptop via security cameras and the like.

70

Variety by Justin Chang

A fiendishly inventive thriller built around an audacious if unsustainable gimmick, Open Windows elevates Hitchcockian suspense to jittery new levels of mayhem and paranoia.

78

Austin Chronicle by Marc Savlov

Open Windows has plenty to say about both the death of privacy and the dominion of the always-connected digiverse we now inhabit, and editor Bernat Vilaplana does a remarkable job of keeping the film’s frenetic pace rushing headlong toward an ending that you’ll never see coming.

40

The Dissolve by Scott Tobias

Vigalondo is shooting for something densely layered, an expression of the complexity and moral murkiness of the hacker sphere, but he doesn’t have the plot sorted out.

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