Bloody camping

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Children. How can you not love them? Such little innocent creatures - they wouldn't even hurt a fly.

Oh no! Never in my life - this is what any caring parent will say about his children. It should be emphasized: caring! What if a child grows up in a pathological environment that does not adhere to exemplary upbringing and spits in the face of legal consequences resulting from neglecting parental responsibilities? What happens when a parent is not interested in changing the behavior of an adolescent teenager? This goes far beyond the well-known "stress-free upbringing". But let's get back to the movie itself.

[person = 96883] James Watkins [/ person], director of "Eden Lake", efficiently builds a tense thriller whose main characters Jenny and Steeve fall victim to degenerates. Best Free Movie Streaming Sites 2019 It promises to be another typical thriller. The creator, however, raises the level of emotions one star higher - a couple in love becomes a victim ...

noisy teenagers. That sounds funny, right? However, everyone will find that as the film develops, it is not so funny. From the initial sequences, the screen is flooded with a wave of senseless violence. A bunch of mannered, deprived of all human reflexes (sorry for the expression) shit, fooling around the god of spirit guilty couple. This leads to a tragic finale.

Everything starts with a triviality. Steeve and Jenny decide to take time off. So they leave the city in order to be able to fully enjoy themselves in the bosom of nature, away from strenuous vacationers (Steeve has serious plans for Jenny). It is surprising, however, why they choose a flooded closed open pit mine for their vacation? However nice at the beginning of the stay interrupts noisy company, which, in general, disturbs the peace of the young couple. The kind requests are useless. There is a row that causes the dog, a favorite of youth, to die.

It overflows a cup of bitterness and turns a romantic mood into a bloody nightmare. It should be noted at the outset that one should turn a blind eye to small shortcomings and gaps in the script, forgive the creators and actors of often comical naivety and be seduced by the dramatic plot. This is a guarantee of good fun for less than an hour and a half. On the one hand, Watkins's film is a large dose of entertainment for the undemanding viewer, but on the other, this sadistic and massacre "fun" hides a strong and emphatic journalistic cinema. The British film fits perfectly in the current discussion about the growing crime among young people. He bluntly shows the unimaginable scale of this violence.

However, he does not try to justify violent teenagers or find the basis for their aggression and degeneration. There is no moral flowing from the plot of the film. There are also no statistics typical of journalistic cinema.

The viewer is hit in the head with a head and it is not about the story presented in "Eden Lake" but about their own reaction. After the screening, he realizes that the creator mocked him, transferring all the aggression contained in the message to the recipient of the film. This interesting procedure, perhaps unnoticeable at first glance, was used more than once. It is worth quoting here some examples of films such as "Ils" (2006) by David Moreau and Xavier Palud (probably the closest thematically), "Mean Creek" (2004) by Jacob Aaron Estes, or "Nieznajomi (2008) Nieznajomi" (2008) Bryan Bertino. Each of them shares a perverse pleasure in showing violence. And this is definitely psychological violence, even though the screen drips with blood, and the situations presented are definitely marked by physical cruelty and bestiality. Their strength lies in the maximum involvement of the viewer's attention and bringing it to the extreme. Typical identification gives way to emotional interference in what is happening on the screen. The cinema viewer controlled in this way ceases to control himself, which is exactly what he is saying for or against such similar experiments. So this is not a movie for everyone. It doesn't take much for a muffled scream to turn into uncontrolled anger.

Where to look for an outlet for emotions? How can you vent perverse, destructive desires? My recipe: go to the cinema at "Eden Lake" and forget about the hardships of everyday life.



However, remember that film is one thing and reality is another. So let's control ourselves, regardless of how difficult the situation is.