For the first half-hour of The Falling, we’re in what feels like a quiet English drama about a girls’ school in the late 1960s. But after the beautiful popular Abbie (Florence Pugh) dies and her best friend Lydia (Maisie Williams) and other girls begin fainting without cause, it becomes something much stranger and darker. Writer/director Carol Morley’s film is a moody exploration of every-day horrors through the eyes of girls and women.
In the Loop: Out of the Loop
Average time until the loop begins (mean): About 16 minutes The cause of the loop or inciting incident: I watched The Map of Tiny Perfect Things and decided to do this Number of time loops (at least the ones I counted): 213 Lessons learned: Time […]
In the Loop: Repeat Performance
For the last movie for In the Loop, I decided to go with the earliest one I could find — Repeat Performance from 1947. It’s also a slight cheat since there’s really only one time loop, but it still counts. (I’m not claiming this is the first time loop movie — just the earliest one I could find.)
In the Loop: The Fare
For the majority of The Fare, there are two characters — Harris (Gino Anthony Pesi), a cab driver; and Penny (Brinna Kelly, who wrote the movie), his mysterious passenger. The set is the inside of Harris’ cab. That’s it. That’s essentially the movie.
In the Loop: Timecrimes
Most time loop movies follow the Groundhog Day formula — a “bad” person becomes “good” through trial and error, repeating things until they manage to get it right. But would that always be the case? In Timecrimes, if there’s a wrong choice to be made, Héctor is going to make it. And he’s going to keep making it over and over.