User Reviews (53)

Add a Review

  • A film I've always admired is David Cronenberg's A History of Violence (2005), which features two graphic sex scenes between Tom Stall (Viggo Mortensen) and his wife Edie (Maria Bello). The first is a beautifully shot scene of two people madly in love; it's tender, gentle, playful, and erotic. The second takes place after their comfortable life has imploded because of his past deeds, and it's brutally rough, void of affection; just two people having sex on a staircase with no carpet. In these two scenes, the themes of the entire film are spelt out perfectly, encapsulating how catastrophically wrong things have gone and the degree to which their love has been compromised. So if ever there was a film with thematically justified sex scenes, it was here. In the same sense, explicit but crucial rape scenes can be found in films such as Irréversible (2002), Lilja 4-ever (2002), and Import Export (2007). And now so too Holiday. Director Isabella Eklöf's debut film, Holiday features an explicit rape that pushes all kinds of boundaries, and that will prove too much for some. No doubt it will be labelled gratuitous, exploitive, and voyeuristic, (accompanied by the usual asinine claims of "worst film ever"), when in actual fact it's the opposite - a narratively pivotal and thematically essential provocation.

    Telling the familiar story of a sybaritic gangster's moll who realises she's in a bad situation, Holiday delights in upending generic norms. In this sense, it's thematically similar, although tonally different, to Coralie Fargeat's mesmerising rape/revenge thriller, Revenge (2017), which tackles all manner of androcentric tropes, subverting some, inverting others. Eklöf has cited both Gaspar Noé and Ulrich Seidl as influences, and as in much of their work, it's difficult to tell whether she's trying to convey a point about an inherently aggressive, territorial, and amoral human condition, or if she is just daring the audience to be offended. Co-written by Eklöf and Johanne Algren, the film is cold and hard, clinically detached from its subjects. But is it a post-MeToo narrative or an exploitative recreation of the male gaze and a validation of the worst elements of toxic masculinity (and toxic femininity)? And, yes, there are some problems - it eschews narrative momentum and conventional character arcs, and has no interest in eliciting pathos - but this is an impressive debut feature. The rape scene will limit its exposure beyond the festival circuit, we will definitely be hearing more from Eklöf in the future.

    The film tells the story of Sascha (Vic Carmen Sonne), a young woman holidaying with her older boyfriend, successful drug trafficker Michael (Lai Yde), and a group of his employees at a villa in Bodrum. Shortly after arriving, she meets Thomas (Thijs Römer), a Dutch tourist who is clearly smitten with her, and soon they're hanging out together. However, Sascha never mentions that she has a boyfriend, nor that he is violent when people don't do as he says.

    As mentioned, Holiday reminded me of Revenge. Both are the first feature of a young female filmmaker, both play with genderised tropes, both turn androcentric paradigms on their head, both feature graphic violence, both are set in an almost exclusively male milieu where aggression is central, and both are highly confrontational (in Revenge, Fargeat makes the audience complicit with the male gaze by visually commodifying the body of the only women in the film, whilst in Holiday, Eklöf forces the audience into the position of a passive witness to a horrific rape). Thematically, the films are also connected, albeit by way of inversion - Revenge is about a woman fighting back against the men who have exploited and abused her; Holiday is about a woman who is either unable or unwilling to engage in such a fight.

    In terms of the rape scene, filmed in a single shot at a removed distance using a stationary camera, is Eklöf saying something about male-on-female violence and sexual violation, or is the scene fetishising the very things she seems to be condemning - treating Sascha's body in much the same objectifying manner as Michael does. Is the scene redolent of a wider commentary on the behaviour it depicts, or is it simply cold observation of man's cruelty unto (wo)man? Either way, it's pivotal to the film, with Eklöf presenting Sascha as someone who internalises the violence done to her. Two key scenes in this respect come immediately before and immediately after the rape. When one of Michael's employees, Musse (Adam Ild Rohweder), returns from a drug deal to tell Michael the buyer never turned up, Michael is furious, telling Musse the police could have been watching and followed him back to the villa. He and his other employees then beat Musse for his stupidity. The rape happens next, and in the following scene, we see Musse, desperate to work his way back into the group's good graces, handing out expensive gifts. The point is clear; just as Musse becomes more loyal after a violent reprimand, so too does Sascha slide more and more into her role as sexual plaything for Michael.

    The rape scene is also important insofar as it's an excellent example of showing rather than telling. At one point during the scene, which takes place in the villa's living room in broad daylight, someone appears at the top of the frame, coming down the stairs, although we only see their legs as they stop and retreat. This character, whoever it is, is thus doing something that Eklöf refuses to allow the audience to do - close our eyes to the horror of what we're witnessing, pretend it isn't happening. This speaks to a societal instinct to evade that which causes repulsion, with Eklöf suggesting that closing one's eyes to suffering and violence doesn't mean that suffering and violence go away. This is why the scene can't be dismissed as exploitative or gratuitous, a hollow attempt to shock.

    Of course, although Sascha is blameless when it comes to the rape, in other ways, she's complicit with her own exploitation. Crucially, she's more concerned with accruing materialistic trappings than with the humiliations she must endure in order to accrue them. This is not a story about a woman too beaten down to try to leave, it's a story about a woman who knows that if she leaves, she will lose her meal ticket. In this sense, the film is partly a critique of consumerism and materialism. Important here is that Michael's group represent the worst kind of vacuous sybaritism - lowlife classless scumbags with no interest in anything other than their own wealth.

    Aesthetically, the film is extremely controlled. Perhaps too controlled. For around an hour, next-to-nothing of consequence happens. There is method in Eklöf's restraint, however, with the narrative somnolence in the first half meaning that when it comes, the rape hits with even more force. Undoubtedly, the lack of incident will drive some people around the bend, but for me, everything is so tense, it doesn't matter that little of note happens.

    The tendency to defamiliarise the mundane and render it unsettling is introduced in the opening shot, which sees Sascha walking through a seemingly empty airport, the sound of her high-heels reverberating throughout the building. There's nothing remotely threatening about the scene, but it's just off-kilter enough to instil trepidation, and this tone is maintained throughout. A karaoke session, in particular, is almost unbearably taut as we wait for an explosion of violence that may or may not come. Here, and elsewhere, Eklöf plays with and manipulates audience expectation, especially genre conditioning; we're used to seeing things kick off in films about drug dealers, so we expect the same from Holiday.

    In terms of problems, the lack of forward momentum will lead some to find the film boring or "pointless", whilst the lack of character arcs will see others accuse it of being underwritten. Some people will also see the rape scene as unnecessarily degrading. And although all of these issues are by design, it has to be said that Eklöf does push non-incident slightly past breaking point, and her refusal to develop the characters does make it difficult to empathise with anyone. This is especially troublesome with Sascha herself, as she is, for all intents and purposes, hollow.

    These problems notwithstanding, Holiday is an impressive first feature. Essentially about a woman who can adapt to anything so long as she has a credit card, it's bleak and difficult to watch, but it's also masterfully constructed and thematically complex. Presenting the group's milieu with the detachment of a nature documentary, we witness the physical violence and psychological brutality that's endemic to this world. Pushing the boundaries of how a woman's body can be used on-screen, Eklöf asks all manner of questions without providing much in the way of answers. Finding them is our job.
  • I get what Holiday is trying to do but it took far too long to get there. The world we occupy is not the same for all people. Indeed, people are compartmentalized and some simply belong together for better or worse.

    In this case a sadistic Danish gangster and his seemingly innocent, young, gold digging, lover are not so far removed from one another as first impressions may suggest. Neither is normal. They share a violent, at times sadistically abusive, dysfunctional relationship that feeds off itself and binds them together. Much as they might resemble normal people they can't make the adjustment to the world outside of their twisted dynamic. When one of them tries, it ends badly and bloodily.

    Its an interesting concept but its overly long lead in, where the ground is always shifting between perceived normalcy and sudden, abrupt brutality, is overdone. When this film does finally get where it inevitably has to go, its dissipated a lot of its energy, leaving the ending feeling a little anti-climatic.

    In short, there's a lot to like here its a well crafted, unsettling experience but its approach needed to be reworked. In a sense it over explains itself and could have had more impact had it been shorter and more succinct. 6/10 from me.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Many other reviewers on this list have split into two camps: Those that find this film an exploitative waste of time. And those who find it a masterpiece of art cinema. The truth probably lies in-between. This is a beautifully filmed portrait of the seedy low-life of a Danish mobster family in a Turkish tourist town, as seen through the eyes of Sascha, the king pin's blond arm candy and sometimes courier. In the style of Refn's Pusher II, also about low-life gangsters from the island Amager south of Copenhagen, their lifestyle is portrayed in its unadorned proletarian dullness. No witty one-liners or criminal honour here, just tedious boozing, brawling, and boasting. Not to mention awful fashion taste. But unlike Refn's preference for grainy tinted images through shaky hand-held cameras, Eklöf lets us witness this depravity in splendid technocolor and careful lingering shots. The sophistication of the script lies in the way it plays with our feelings for Sascha. At first she seems a naïve victim in deep waters. She is left to wait for her contact at an unbearable family hotel, and is punished disproportionally for spending a tiny amount of money without prior permission. Clearly, she is at the very bottom of the family hierarchy. But soon we learn that, even if she often feels above the unsophisticated mores of her fellows, she is very much an integral part of the family. The infamous explicit rape scene is hardly very shocking to anyone accustomed to recent Danish film making. To those largely indifferent to the on-screen display of genitalia or sex, it is not anywhere as shocking in context, as is that infamously grueling rape scene from Irreversible. At this time in the plot Sacha has already been drug raped at least once within a few days and has simply accepted it as normal fare. And obviously she submits to her rapist without much quarrel or protest, as if this is routine to her. In some scenes, it seems she even enjoys being abused by her sugar daddy. What is shocking, if anything, is the implied normalcy of this. Sascha, like her fellow minions, willingly subject to the king pin's strategies of domination. In turn he lavishes them with ridiculous gifts, in turn he rapes them or savagely beats them up, while the family kids watch tv shows in the adjacent room. Always he expects their compliance and gratitude. This is simply regular crime family life. As a side character finally calls Sascha out on her complicity, she responds by demonstrating her personal callousness and temper. Life goes on, as the family helps clean up the mess. What remains disturbing as the end credit rolls, are the mixed emotions the viewer is left with. Were we tricked into caring for a callous manipulative minion, simply because she is pretty and naïve? Or did we witness the ultimate perversion of a fragile young woman at the hands of an evil sadist? The film offers no definite answers. Herein lies its primary quality.
  • "Sunny but frigid" describes the feel that runs throughout this bleak character study of a young girl mixed up with unsavoury types. Overall I found it engrossing with plenty of subtle and creeping tension, quite disturbing at times but also a little redundant and oversimplified in its storytelling. Most of the characters are one dimensional almost to the point of being caricatures of gangsta tropes (the alpha male, the henchman and the women and children in the periphery). I sometimes found it hard to tell whether the shallow dialogue was down to lazy writing or whether it was intentionally lacking in depth, which I suppose did add to the cripplingly superficial tone of the film. Are they gangsters? Or just wealthy businessmen? Is there a difference? All very deep stuff. The bad side of patriarchy in general amongst wealthy Europeans, the ones that keep their family around like tokens of their power, holidaying lavishly in large groups and disturbing their surroundings.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I just came back from the first European screening of Holiday at the Gothenburg film festival and I am still very agitated with the makers of this film. It features characters with no depth, a script that is all over the place, no explanations for important character behaviour and an extremely provocative rape scene that is absolutely not necessary.

    I left the theater (for the first time) in the middle of 'the rape scene' because it was so provocative, uncalled for and not at all necessary.

    I went back in after a few minutes because i wanted to see if the film would in some way explain this scene. Why it was necessary. If the film wouldn't deliver, which it did not, i was going to ask the director in the Q&A. Which i did.

    The answer was: Because rape happens in real life, well. A lot happens in real life, but for me the important part is WHY? - WHAT do you want to tell with this scene and film? what drives her to undergo physical and emotional abuse and stay put. What is her background? what is his background? Nothing.

    I think it is extremely important to show rape and violence in relationships, as this is part of real life. But we need to understand the characters, what drives them to these acts, where does the 'damage' come from, how does it affect people. An amazing example of how you can and should portray this is 'Big little lies'.

    what is the story behind the film?! The answer from the Q&A: "It's about apitalism". Okay, so she gets some earrings and is intruiged by money, but is smitten by the 'middle class' dutch guy living on his sailing boat. right...



    2/10 Bad script, horrible decisions. the only thing this film has going for it is good cinematography , sets and costume design.
  • gizmomogwai3 March 2019
    Holiday, Bodil Award winner for Best Film of 2018, is an interesting work. Set in an idyllic paradise, we see feel-good scenes like topless sunbathing, waterpark excursions, ice cream and dancing (it's a holiday!) but we can never shake the vibe of disturbing undertones. The plot follows Sasha, a drug dealer's girlfriend, and gives us an understated window into the world view of a battered woman. That violence manifests itself in a shocking and unexpected way in the conclusion.

    Stylistically, this film is a triumph: Cheerful imagery with that sense of dread hanging over everything. The performances aren't at their best in English, but Holiday is worth some contemplation. I've seen viewers profess shock at its sexuality, but above all Holiday is a statement on violence.
  • You could describe the "Holiday" of the title as the holiday from hell as gangster's girl, Sascha, (Victoria Carmine Sonne), finds herself in perpetual fear of violence, (sexual and otherwise), from her brutal drug-dealing boyfriend in the gorgeous surroundings of the Turkish Riviera. Since the film was directed by a woman, (newcomer Isabella Eklof), I suppose you could argue it's some sort of feminist take on sexual violence; if made by a man it would be exploitative but being made by a woman it's 'honest'.

    Of course, that doesn't make it any less unpleasant and since it's singularly lacking in any real 'plot', it can't really be described as a thriller. On the other hand, Sonne is excellent as the beautiful and unfortunate Sascha and Lai Yde exudes just the right degree of menace as the drugs baron. What story there is basically revolves around Sascha's growing attachment to a guy she meets and whose presence only adds to her problems. What's lacking is any real tension; the people on screen aren't just dislikeable but dull and in the end, all the film has going for it is the scenery.
  • //Revelation Film Festival Review//

    If the six people that walked out during the screening are any indication, Holiday is going to provoke some polarising opinions. It's a tough watch, a film designed to get under your skin and features one of the most graphic rape sequences ever committed to screen. However, what's most shocking about the film is the realism in which everything is portrayed.

    The story, in short, is about the terrible things men do to women and that women allow men to do to them. While the plot meanders and never provides any definitive answers, the frustration it elicits is part of the film's effect. It's not for the faint hearted and in the "me too" era, Holiday is definitely going to provoke some fierce conversation. I didn't like the film but it got the exact reaction that it wanted out of me and it's been crawling under my skin for days.

    Summary: A tough watch designed to provoke audiences; Holiday has been crawling under my skin for days.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It amuses me when many commentors rate this low because of a rape scene. like movies should just ignore this kind of stuff like it never happens. suck it up butter cups. bad things happen in life. if you ignore them they dont go away.

    over-all this movie kept my attention as the lead actress made her journey from half innocent to full blown evil.

    6.2
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I had the misfortune to watch this movie at Revelation Film Festival this afternoon. Rev's blurb describes Holiday as 'deep, disturbing, and truly powerful'. Maybe they had to edit for space? 'Oh yeah, there's a rape scene as well. Very graphic. VERY graphic. We just thought we'd warn you in advance.' Yeah - I guess that line was considered superfluous. And this was the work of a woman director. Yay women directors! If a man had his name on this, I don't think deep disturbing and truly powerful would be the adjectives employed. In fact the whole movie is such a void that this vile scene seems to be there only to differentiate it (in the worst way possible) from all the other movies about brainless young women and their moody crim boyfriends. Skip this Holiday. Stay home!
  • This film is not for the prudish or weak-hearted: it contains the most graphic rape scene in Western cinema, and tells the story of a young girl who becomes involved with a Danish gangster while on vacation at the Turkish Riviera.

    The acting is superb, but the film is brutal in its honest depiction of violence (physical and psychological). There is not a lot of blood and gore, but the few violent scenes are so realistically filmed, that it has more impact than all the be-headings and slashing in Lord of the Rings.

    People complain about the lack of recognition received by female directors... Well, here is an example of a high-quality film made by a woman director with a female main character. Yet, it is so frank that it is disturbing. Definitely a work that will elicit many discussions about power games played among men and women.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    How does a rich man who has nothing going for him other than money ( no looks, no charm, no humour, no intelligence, extremely boring friends) maintain a very good looking young girl friend, who if she so desires can have any man she wants (at least for sometime because any intelligent guy would find her boring eventually).



    This movie is a tutorial on that subject, the drug lord boyfriend is aware of what he is dealing with and how he has to control her and he does exactly that.



    The fact that this movie has such poor reviews on IMDB shows how the audience are living in denial regarding the barbarian materialistic culture we have around us today.



    The movie is totally focussed on Sascha a danish girl who is obviously not very bright but has extreme attraction towards money, fashion and things money can buy. She is stingy about the hotels she lives in and believes she deserves a lifestyle and is having a lifestyle of a princess when in reality we as an audience get to see her facing humiliation on multiple occasions. She is obviously not someone who holds ambition of going to university hence sees living with her middle aged not so good looking rich drug dealer violent and abusive boyfriend as her only way of indulging in the rich lifestyle. It takes a lot to be part of that family and she along with other side characters will go through all the abuse to enjoy the lavish lifestyle that comes as being part of the family.



    Her character is explained very clearly in the first 10 minutes of the film where we are shown how she has a strong need to look attractive and will go to any extend to buy the things she needs in order to look attractive. She takes 300 euros from the 30,000 euros she is suppose to deliver to another dealer who is a business partner of her boyfriend with the hope that she can seduce him into letting her get away with it. Through his retort we are shown the worldview she nurtures and though she only gets humiliated by him, later we see she has a constant need to getting validation from good looking men regarding her own attractiveness and she very easily does get that attention.



    The dutch guy she gets attracted to during the Holiday with the boring family (the family in fact is so boring and mindlessly violent that it makes watching the movie excruciatingly painful and Sascha is often seen trying to find ways of getting away from them out of boredom and she is not even very bright herself) is a philosophical guy trying to find meaning in his life. He is seem talking about discontentment he had in the usual materialistic world and why he rather chose to live on a boat to enrich his soul.

    The boyfriend Micheal questions him on what he means by his soul, he can only think of the dutch guy to have chosen such a lifestyle in order to seduce more women, in his word worrying about enriching ones soul is quite an alien concept and as we find out later that he is right. As the movie later shows that we do live in the world where people live with one and only one agenda and that is to enjoy money as much as they can and no one really cares about their soul, and people like him really are just weak people who can be murdered so easily by strong people like Micheal the boyfriend.



    Sascha does make an attempt to set things right at one point by going to the police station but we are shown that the cops themselves are thinking of robbing a bank because unless they have lots of money they cannot hope to have an attractive wife. Seeing the cops she comes back to her senses and walks off without confessing anything.



    In the end it is money and power that wins over human sensibilities a bleak view of the world we live in but a very realistic view coming from a Danish filmmaker as a critique on a society that claims to be extremely cultured and progressive but it seems the focus of beauty is only on the outside, while on the inside everybody's soul is either corrupt or has to be corrupted to fit into the glossy dignified veneer of an advance, aesthetically beautiful, hedonistic, materialistic society.
  • I kept waiting for something ANYTHING interesting to happen in this slow walking piece of cinematic dreck. Alas Nothing. Oh wait the heroine gets slapped three times! Not nearly enough for participating in this god awful mess of a film. Someone needs to shred everyones SAG card involved in this. Please don't waste your time here - I only wish I could have mine back. Life is far too short
  • kevin c19 July 2020
    A young gangster's moll in Bodrum is treated like an expendable sex toy, at one stage enduring a horrible rape (that a friend does nothing to stop).

    For a short film the director (Eklöf) is in no hurry to tell the tale. The tension really builds and you're fearful throughout. Some of the metaphors are a little clunky, but by the end you feel you know this young waif through and through.
  • achmoye28 February 2019
    Very pointless movie with random rape scenes, it's really an awful storytelling taste. Actually there is no real story neither characters, it's just random rich guys going in a holiday and abusing young girls. Waow.

    At least the photography is OK. That's where my only star belongs.
  • First full-length feature, Isabella Eklöf should be rightly proud and hopefully greatly encouraged. A multiple language film is always a challenge when it comes to audience take-up, but personally I'm happy to read subtitles if it adds to authenticity
  • From the beginning of this film the technique and quietness with bold visuals really had a feel that was Von Trier esque. From the awkward car scene in the beginning I was really enthused about where this film seemed to be taking me. When I heard this flick was "Disturbing" I immediately took time to see it. Starring Victoria Carmen Sonne a multilingual mid twenties actress who seemed as though she was born for this role. The camera angles and music for the film is also marvelous so what's my problem about this film "LAZINESS" the film had potential to really dig deep into the disturbing area it grew amazing long legs and just refused to stand up. Yes theres an Unsimulated sex scene that I'm pretty sure her whole family will never get over after watching and I'm pretty sure the R-rating doesn't cover this extreme scene that even shows fluids but besides that and another lack luster 1 minute scene this film was as tame as they cum... No pun intended. The movie also speaks atleast 3 different languages and the subtitles were in Dutch and there accents were so thick it was very difficult to keep up with there broken english. There wasn't really mystery involved but when you show a scene and there isn't any follow up to why things happened it's just creating a scene for the sake of a scene, No backstory No revelations that come later what the heck was that about is what it leaves you thinking. I think if you put this much effort into creating a nerving storyline to make people uneasy those like myself who are disturbing movie fans feel like you destroyed a character who could of become memorable andwaste. wasted a perfect opportunity. Oh well the form on that shot looked perfect but your shot was an airball. Such a waste.
  • If you think promising young woman is a work of genius then you won't get how brilliant this film is. PYW is a rich girl take on rape culture and feminism and is purely academic - non emotional. This film is the blueprint for several key elements to PYW. Mostly the pop like hyper colour aesthetic. With characters you will be challenged by. True depictions of rape and drug culture and a compelling story that doesn't pull any punches. It's uncompromising and has stayed with me in the years since I first watched it.

    A work of art.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Just to counter a the standard review with the usual simplistic female victimhood narrative, one can view it more as an exploration of the darker social dance between the genders that modern people dare not acknowledge. The 50 shades of complicity if you will, these women choose to be with "bad men", the strong willed, the daring, the brutal. In the supposed scene in question you can see a dance of push and pull, a game of no actually doesn't always mean no, its bidirectional compliance tests, active, passive, and submission, provocations to control, a dance of sadomasochism. People are all too willing to cast women as victims, but for every twisted man there must be his match, and this is their twisted love story.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I was looking though a list of the best foreign horror films of 2018. You had the typical fare, movies about demons and hauntings, and then I came across the description for this movie. I went in without seeing the trailer and I prepared myself for a really disturbing film.

    Then I waited.

    and waited.

    And waited.

    Nothing happened for 50 some-odd minutes. Seriously, some domestic violence, a young "sugar baby" taking advantage of her daddy, unattractive pale, tan-less people being obnoxious and rude. It was like watching an European family movie. Just tedious, boring stuff. But at that 50 minute mark, you get a full on porn-style sex scene that lasts maybe 3 minutes, but it's unsimulated and really not that shocking, considering hwo easy it is for anyone to access porn these days. Anyone who has watched a porno movie in the last, oh I don't know, 30 YEARS has seen a scene like that in some way, shape or form. The sad part is that a woman would debase herself in such a way to not have to work a day in her life says a lot more about her than it would ever say about him.

    We get more boring, obnoxious people, and some more domestic violence for about another 20 minutes.

    Then finale has a scene that genuinely shocked me, and the movie was over.

    So, here's what you get with this "movie";

    First 50 minutes- Boring, trite and tedious. Really, everyone is insufferable.

    Minute 50 - minute 55- "Shocking" rape scene that is just a truncated porn scene

    1 hour- 1 hour, Ten minutes- "Shocking" scene

    The end.

    It's just not worth it, folks. It really isn't. It doesn't work as a piece of "female empowerment", it doesn't work as a piece of entertainment, and it certainly doesn't work as anything other than what it is; a lame attaempt to shock audiences in the #metoo era. Avoid this movie and let's never speak of it again. Truly awful and repugnant, but not for the reasons you have been told it is.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    While it does seem too slow and trivial in places, the ultimate resolve of this movie pays off when our protagonist, Sasha, delivers the astounding message: oppress me but don't call me stupid. A tremendous psychological feature that dealt me, the unaware viewer, a huge blow.
  • kosmasp11 November 2019
    A very weird character piece with a central character that is tough to describe and quite self destructive. Now violence against women in general is something that is more than appaling. Violence in general that is uncalled for is something that I find despicable.

    Now it is important to remember this is just a movie and certain things are heightened. This movie is not supposed to entertain in that way. If you actually get excited by those things, something might be wrong with you. And I say might because there is still the fact that I don't necessarily think everyone will take this as real life lesson. Again, this is a movie with a female main character that is beyond a certain edge/reach. Her character is complicated and while she lets herself being abused, that does not mean she does not have a mind of her own. Some people relish in certain things or are just plain crazy ... again this is complex to a degree that you could contemplate a lot of things and accuse the movie also of a lot of things. There is grounds to discuss - if you are willing to endure the pain of watching certain things (not so much explicit violence but more of the mind twisting kind)
  • Don't go with reviews down below saying. Movie is a terrible waste of time. You'll never get your 80mins back
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is an unsettling movie which stays with you days after you have seen it. I kind of disliked this picture - there is not a single sympathetic character here - and yet the movie has had an impact on me, for which it gets 6 points.

    There is a girl, living in a Turkish resort with extended group of her Danish narco friends. She is badly treated and yet she does not escape... and at the end she kills a man who was that one of another world but was sincere enough to hurt her feelings. That killing is like a sacrifice which is a gate for her being fully accommodated by her criminal friends - they help her to get rid of the body. Afterwards, they experience for the first time an idyll on the board of cruising yacht. They are all in Paradise now.

    That killing poses a dilemma. Why didn't she kill her abuser but just a man whose words directed to her were entirely understandable? Does she therefore truly belong to evil ones...?

    Well, the movie starts and ends with the song that tells a story of a sinner whose only recourse is the Devil: "Sinnerman... where you gonna run to...(...) sinnerman, run to the Devil"
  • sjkvn3 March 2019
    Warning: Spoilers
    So shallow ID, its not concern anything,, terrible i cant describe..... waste my time
An error has occured. Please try again.