Murderball co-director Henry Alex-Rubin's dramatic debut Disconnect (Lidell Entertainment) has a deliberately ironic title for a movie that falls into the same format as Crash, Magnolia and others in telling three interconnected stories of people whose lives are greatly affected by being online. Max Thierot plays a young man who has been roped into the world of online porn who meets a reporter (Andrea Riseborough) who befriends him and gains his trust to write a story about his situation. Jonah Bobo plays a high school outcast named Ben who is pranked by two fellow students pretending to be a girl on a social network who likes him, something which goes horribly wrong leading to him trying to kill himself. The strongest story of the three has Alexander Skarsgard and Paula Patton as a married couple who lost their baby and become the victims of identity theft when their bank account is cleaned out by someone she met online.
Brian De Palma would seem like the perfect fit for an erotic thriller like Passion, a remake of the French workplace thriller Love Crime, this one starring Rachel McAdams and Noomi Rapace as Christina and Isabel, the boss and underling at a major cell phone corporation. It follows their relationship as they create a bond which is broken when Christine steals her employee's idea and takes credit for it herself and Isabel returns the favor by sleeping with her boyfriend (Paul Anderson). Rapace probably comes off the best of the relatively weak European cast that De Palma assembled and McAdams just isn't very good in the role previously played so well by Kristen Scott Thomas. To be honest, the original movie wasn't that great, but De Palma's remake is just terrible because it keeps all the lame plots twists that never really worked and then adds even more craziness like dream sequences, dead twins and other ridiculous ideas. It then tries to mask how silly it all is with gorgeous cinematography (by José Luis Alcaine, the man behind the camera of some of Almodovar's greatest thrillers) and a bombastic score, but it never lives up to the shocks of some of De Palma's sexier thrillers like Body Double, Dressed to Kill and even Femme Fatale. It's fairly disappointing to see an often original filmmaker like De Palma making a movie that's literally beat for beat the exact same movie we've seen before, which is why Passion was probably one of the biggest disappointments of TIFF after Neil Jordan's Byzantium.Latest Headlines:
Timecop Planned for Big Screen Reboot
Check Out Red and Green Band Trailers for We're the Millers
Check Out the Trailer for Metallica Through the Never
Things Get Apocalyptic in a Red-Band TV Spot for This is the End
A New Set Photo Hints at Godzilla's Path of Destruction
Elijah Wood is a Maniac in a New Trailer
CBS Brings Bad Teacher to Series
Todd Haynes to Direct Cate Blanchett & Mia Wasikowska in Carol
Check Out the Trailer for Joseph Gordon-Levitt's Don Jon
Interview: Luke Evans on Giving the Fast & Furious Franchise a Nemesis