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Predicament

Predicament (2010)

August. 26,2010
|
5.3
| Comedy Crime

Naïve teenager Cedric Williamson, conspires with two misfits to photograph and blackmail adulterous couples. When the scam goes wrong they end up with blood on their hands.

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Reviews

Marketic
2010/08/26

It's no definitive masterpiece but it's damn close.

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InformationRap
2010/08/27

This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.

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FirstWitch
2010/08/28

A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.

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Mandeep Tyson
2010/08/29

The acting in this movie is really good.

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pricklepants
2010/08/30

Ronald Hugh Morrieson's novel Predicament is a humorous, dark tale of the seedy underbelly of a small New Zealand town. This movie keeps the humour and tone of the book while also adding to it a modern freshness to make it relevant to today's audience.The lead cast all turn in excellent performances, not only to give the movie a great dramatic feel but also to deliver truly comedic moments that lighten what could otherwise, at times, be a pretty dark tale. Hayden Frost is perfect as Cedric, the awkward, friendless, and yet good- hearted teenager. Heath Franklin delivers a great performance as Mervyn, a manipulative and at times slightly threatening bludger. Tim Finn provides some special moments as Cedric's befuddled dad. But for many the highlight will be Jemaine Clement's creepy and yet deeply funny Spook. A great script and terrific performances aside, this movie also looks fantastic. The art direction and costume design are impressively stylish and make the 30s look like a pretty cool time to be around. On top of this, the cinematography delivers a movie with lush colours and, at times, a darkness that is just perfect for the tone of the movie.I thoroughly enjoyed my night out seeing this movie during the film festival, and the rest of the audience did too. This movie is bound to become a New Zealand classic and must be seen on the big screen to be truly appreciated.

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kingstonkid
2010/08/31

Predicament was a thoroughly enjoyable film. Set in 1930's small town New Zealand and adapted from a Ronald Hugh Morrison novel of the same name, Predicament is a hard film to categorize as it touches on many genres. The overall theme of the film is a crime drama, with a fantastic comedy element woven throughout, which kept the plot intriguing and the characters quirky. What makes the casting and story really interesting is that the main character Cedric (film newcomer Hayden Frost), even when partnered with two fantastic comedy heavyweights Flight of the Conchords Jemaine Clement, and Heath (Chopper) Franklin, never gets lost in the cast or upstaged as the main character. Both Spook (Jemaine) and Mervyn (Heath) provide lots of character personality, features & flaws that Cedric's character doesn't have, which creates an unlikely trio of mischief that never lets up from the opening to the closing credits. All the supporting actors are great too, including kiwi icon Tim Finn, who plays a great character that adds to poor Cedric's woes. I love fun films and that is exactly what Predicament delivers - by the spade full. Amazing sets, cars & costumes all come to life in the rich vivid colourful directing by Jason Stutter.My whole family watched predicament when it opened the NZ film festival, and we all loved the film, including my "tweenage" kids who would have been some of the youngest in the audience, yet they too said it was now one of their favourite films. Predicament is a gem of a movie in that it delivered everything I could want from a film - great story, great laughs, great suspense and set to a fantastic musical score, with a catchy new Tim Finn song "Predicament" that I have been singing in my head ever since.

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marc ashton
2010/09/01

Great to be taken on a good old fashioned, tongue in cheek, dark comedic ride.. Stand out performances from lead and support cast just add to the roller coaster!Encouraging to once again see a New Zealand film designed and shot with the cinema screen in mind, a credit to all involved!The film makers have obviously 'made the most' of their resources, Predicament definitely has a big picture feelYet another example of the brave 'can do' ingenuity from independent NZ film makers.Fun to watch, having read the book!Thoroughly enjoyable, thank you!

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renaldo morris
2010/09/02

Ronald Hugh Morrison's novel 'Predicament' is a black comedy, a coming of age yarn of carnal knowledge (involving a schoolgirl), blackmail and murder. Set in the New Zealand in the '30s, the novel is infused with small-town seediness and repressed sexuality. Director/writer Jason Stutter shies away from this, neutering the story into inoffensive blandness, that feels closer to 'The Goonies' than 'Chinatown'.Stutter didn't exactly win the audience over at the gala premiere at the NZ Film Festival when he stated that he doesn't read much because he '...can watch forty films in the time it takes to finish a novel'. Still, adapting local literature has always been the easiest path for the venal to glean a few million dollars out of various funding bodies (did anyone pay to see the undercooked turkey that was last year's adaptation of 'Under the Mountain?). Watching 'Predicament', its obvious that he has no affinity for the material. Thus, his choice for his first 'real feature' gives off the stench of being merely a stepping-stone on his career path.The film is another ho-hum example of simply watching a storyboard filmed. It's a tedious sequence of badly sketched characters bounded in boxes. It highlights all the hallmarks of an amateur with delusions of auterism. "Predicament' is a catalogue of all the laziest contemporary tricks-of-the-trade; from the pointless Cinema-scope lensing (why? because Tarantino always frames in it, of course!), the constant camera movement (crane swoops down at the drop of a hat) and the bland, yet ever-present score (Plan 9 trot out trombones and xylophones), its the hollow artifice of stale technique trouncing the audience to not fall asleep. Never once, throughout all this visual Sturm and Drang does the story connect with its audience.Stutter utterly fails to convey a sense of time and place. He's so disinterested in the morals of the era and the vernacular of time, that at one point a character utters "You better harden the f*** up!". Its a cringe-inducing tip of the hat to the Guy Ritchie school, but not nearly so tragic as an earlier 'homage' (groan!) to 'Reservoir Dogs'. For Stutter, cinema was born in the 1980's. He's a total square, and like so many of his peers, actually stepping outside of the square is not a career option.The director is a 20-something prude. His screenplay performs a literal vasectomy upon the novel. Here is a writer so bereft of balls, that he visualises a sex scene as a pair of female legs kicking the air... replete with off-screen moaning. The material needs a Verhoven, not a shrinking violet virgin. Here is so milquetoast a director, that he climaxes an off-screen decapitation by...tracking into the screaming mouth of the woman who witnessed it. Being hackeneyed is too good for this hack .The worst is saved for last. The novel's climax is a frittered affair, but consulting his preferred bed-side reading tome, (screen-writing guru Syd Field's bible on How-To-Construct-a-Screenplay, perchance?), Stutter- the writer who doesn't read much, 'ties up all the threads' and achieves 'resolution' in the most trite fashion (as dictated by Field's soulless formulae of cliché). It's risible, and how wretched it is, to suffer through the dull spectacle of a director ticking off a check-list -('turning point'-Tick!...) when all one wanted was a for story to unfold or to be mildly entertained. Watching this adaptation is like paying to watch an illiterate spitting on Morrison's grave...after the polite applause died off, (which was well before the kowtowing "Extra Special Thanks to Sir. Peter Jackson..." credit), the audience shuffled out. At these events, the standard response mustered from the unimpressed is a tactful "Well, it wasn't TOO bad...". Yet, after 'Predicament', not a single person I spoke to had anything positive to say. The consensus was that the film never connected, the actors never stood a chance, their characters never came to life on-screen.I predict box office death for this cynically produced, misguided mess.

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