Sunday, March 19, 2023

Inside

I thought the trailer for Inside looked really intriguing so I decided to see it last night at the Broadway.  It was definitely thought-provoking!  Nemo (Willem Dafoe) breaks into the luxury penthouse apartment of an art collector to steal several valuable paintings.  As he attempts to leave, however, the security system malfunctions and traps him inside with no way out.  The owner is away on an extended trip so most of the utilities have been shut off, including water, and there is very little food.  He is completely alone with no way to contact the outside world beyond watching a housekeeper in the building named Jasmine (Eliza Stuyck) who appears on the security camera feed every day.  As the weeks turn into months, he struggles both to survive and to find a way out of the apartment while interacting with the owner's art collection.  Any survival thriller taking place in only one location has a tendency to become a bit one-note after a while but Dafoe has such a compelling presence that my attention never wavered because I wanted to see what he would do next.  Watching him slowly become unhinged is absolutely riveting (see also The Lighthouse).  The production design is brilliant because the apartment is almost like a character itself.  It is large, spacious, luxurious, monochromatic, and filled with priceless art but it is also cold and sterile and none of these beautiful pieces can sustain him.  I had to sit with this movie for a little while to determine what the filmmakers are saying about art and I've decided the message is that art might be beautiful and profound but it cannot take the place of human connection and that the price we place on it is excessive.  This is definitely not for everyone (the couple I spoke to in the lobby afterwards hated it and thought it was incredibly boring) and I don't think it is something I will ever watch again but it has stayed with me so I recommend it.

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