Agrega una trama en tu idiomaHeld up in an office restroom during an active shooter situation, three women find their trust tested when they start looking for holes in a fellow victim's story.Held up in an office restroom during an active shooter situation, three women find their trust tested when they start looking for holes in a fellow victim's story.Held up in an office restroom during an active shooter situation, three women find their trust tested when they start looking for holes in a fellow victim's story.
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Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIt's clear that the three women in the bathroom don't know anything about guns. At the very least, everyone should know the 4 basic rules of gun safety. (a) Treat every gun as if it is loaded until you have personally inspected it to verify it is empty. (b) Keep your finger off the trigger until ready to fire. (c) Always know what is behind your target, to ensure innocent bystanders or property is not damaged. (d) Do not point the gun at anyone or anything you are not willing to destroy. Always have your gun pointed in a safe direction.
- ErroresEveryone in that bathroom would have either lost their hearing, or had irreversible hearing damage from the gunfire that took place within. Even the single shot to Dale's groin would have given everyone at the very least strong ringing in their ears and most likely a headache from the sound of the gun going off. This is further exacerbated by the bathroom having many reflective surfaces, so sounds are amplified since the sound waves can constantly bounce back and forth from surface to surface until they are inaudible (this is called reverberation, or reverb). In the end when the shooter comes in and unloads his fully automatic weapon, no one's hearing would survive that high of a level of gunfire for that prolonged time. Also, since the shooter had been outside of the bathroom shooting indoors, he would have sustained more damage to his hearing, and would most likely be deaf by the time he went into the bathroom at the end.
Opinión destacada
If you are happy with an entirely serviceable little film that makes no attempt to be anything more than the ultra-low budget expanded short film that this movie feels like, than you might enjoy watching this one. It's short. There's always that. And to give credit where it's due, the cinematography is excellent, the score is good, the sound is decent, and direction is efficient if you only judge it visually - but more on that in a bit. The production design (assuming they built that one solitary set) is very good and the actors do a decent-to-very-good job with what they've been given. But I am frustrated by how little effort the filmmakers put into trying to make the film anything more than the easiest thing it could be. Four people in one bathroom. The basic idea is actually quite interesting, and the idea of them suspecting that one of them might be the shooter, opens the script up to a variety of deep possibilities if the writer was willing to tackle them. But he's not. In fact, he more or less chickens out on daring to delve too deeply; if someone is gonna get hurt then they are naturally going to deserve it somehow - which is actually the exact OPPOSITE of what most mass shootings teach us. So there is only one person to blame for all the inherent weaknesses and massive missed opportunities and that's the writer/director. The film is technically well-made and his visual use of the camera in the confined space is good, but he doesn't push for anything more than a surface "twist" or two (both of which could be seen coming from a mile away) but he also ignores everything else that makes a movie good. He sets up interesting dynamics amongst the four characters but cannot develop them believably within the context of the situation. It's like they repeatedly forget that an active shooter might be right outside the door. That they are in a life and death situation. They also seem to become progressively less intelligent about their situation the more time passes. If that was done as part of an overall theme showing the lack of natural instincts or the ability to act in a threatening situation compared to the "accepted" qualities of office politics than it would serve a purpose. But it doesn't. Those aren't things this filmmaker wants to address. He just needs people to be stupid or to act out of character. And maybe he doesn't understand how forensics works, or how to blockade a room, or that bleach sprayed into someone's eyes actually does damage, it doesn't just sting - but a decent writer/director would care enough to find out about them, if he was interested in making a good movie!
And one final note: how many credits does one guy need? A film with four people in one bathroom and he needs credit as Location Manager AND Casting, while at the same time acknowledging he needs an assistant to cast those four people? And he needs a credit for carpentry and collecting props? I have seen several micro-budget films where the directors literally not only designed everything but constructed special props and special effects, did their own lighting and often ran the camera themselves, and never felt the need to be given credit other than writer/producer/director/designer. Maybe if the creator of Active Shooter had been less concerned with telling people every little thing he had a hand in (which is the NORM for low budget indies) and been more concerned with having something to say with his film, it would be more than tolerable.
- zandertowne
- 2 ene 2021
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By what name was 8th Floor Massacre (2020) officially released in Canada in English?
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