Four (2011 film)
Four | |
---|---|
Directed by | John Langridge |
Produced by | Craig Conway |
Written by | Paul Chronnell |
Starring |
Martin Compston Craig Conway Kierston Wareing Sean Pertwee |
Music by | Raiomond Mirza |
Cinematography | Adrian Brown |
Edited by |
John Langridge Ben King |
Production company |
Oh My! Productions Ltd |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £500,000 |
Four is a British independent film directed by John Langridge and released in 2011.
Plot
A jealous husband hires a movie-obsessed detective to kidnap his wife's lover and bring him to a derelict factory to administer some 'rough justice.' Once there, the husband discovers the detective has a revelation of his own. He has kidnapped the husband's wife as well.[1]
Cast
- Martin Compston as Lover
- Craig Conway as Husband
- Kierston Wareing as Wife
- Sean Pertwee as Detective
- George Morris as Sergeant Walker
Reviews
The film was critically panned upon release. It has a 17% critical score and 8% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes and 4.1 score on IMDb, which, together forming an average of 22.0, make it (ironically) the fourth worst reviewed major release British film of 2011.
Total Film's Paul Bradshaw wrote, "With just four actors, a single setting and more twists than a bag full of pretzels, John Langridge’s grimy lo-fi debut is almost smart, taut and nasty enough to bid for the Tarantino comparisons he’s obviously after."[2] The Evening Standard's Derek Malcolm found the film "over-ambitious", starting "as an offbeat thriller with pseudo-Pinterish dialogue" and ending up "much like a horror movie."[3]
The Guardian called it "confusing and boring",[4] while The Independent wrote that the script "meditates on male insecurity and possessiveness", acknowledging however that "the attempt at menace unwisely borrows quotations from Hollywood movies, [a fact] that make [the movie] sound rather wannabe in consequence.”[5]
Time Out's Tom Huddleston wrote that "the cast make the best" of a script that is "as uninspired as the plot, all muttered threats, cockernee slang and an initially amusing, increasingly wearying overuse of the F-word."[6]
References
- ↑ "Finished projects", TenSixtyEight.com, 2011
- ↑ Four, Total Film, 19 October 2011
- ↑ Four review The Evening Standard, 21 October 2011
- ↑ Four, The Guardian, 20 October 2011
- ↑ Four, The Independent, 21 October 2011
- ↑ Four DVD review, Time Out, 19 September 2012