Friday, July 27, 2018

'Calibre' one of best films on Netflix

By TERRY R. CASSREINO

After much thought, I am reviving my film blog, Sneak Prevue, a look at classic and contemporary movies overlooked, underrated and underappreciated by many people – including some of the leading critics.

About a week ago, I caught smart little import from Britain called “Calibre.” I first heard of the film from a recommendation author Stephen King posted to his Twitter feed. And King was more than right about this Netflix original film.

To be fair, Netflix original films have been hit-or-miss with most being a miss.

While production values of many of the streaming service’s films is on par with most theatrical films, the substance has been sporadic at best.  After all this is a company that signed Adam Sandler to a contract to produce several, painfully unfunny comedies.

Then again there is the hope that the next Martin Scorsese movie, “The Irishman,” will be a huge hit for Netflix – which is footing the budget for this gangster film starring Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesci and Al Pacino. I can’t wait.

But that is way down the road. Until then, carve out 101 minutes from your day to watch “Calibre” – a nail-biting thriller that plays as a smart, heart-breaking morality tale.  

The plot it simple enough: A Edinburg businessman takes his longtime friend to a remote village in the Scottish Highlands for a hunting trip. One accident places the friends in mortal danger that becomes increasingly complicated as the story unfolds.

I won’t say anything else about the plot because watching it unfold in a logical manner gives the makes it a haunting, frightening tale. Forget the boogeyman, the mad slashers, the monsters in the dark. Real horror is rooted in innocent people doing questionable acts.

Much of the credit goes to writer-director Matt Palmer who gives the film an edginess found in the best of Hitchcock. Even though Palmer wastes little time jumping head-first into the plot, he still finds a way to create memorable, sympathetic characters.

Leads Jack Lowden and Martin McCann are perfect as best friends who find themselves in the middle of a nightmare.

In some ways, “Calibre” reminded me of another brilliant thriller, Sam Raimi’s “A Simple Plan.”

Raimi’s film was based on a best-selling novel by Scott Smith. The film follows brothers who find a crashed plane filled with $4.4 million in cash buried in the snow in rural Montana; when they decide to keep the cash, they fabricate a lie to cover themselves.

When their plan starts to unravel, they find themselves concocting another lie to cover the initial one. They quickly begin a vicious, dangerous cycle by telling lie after lie after lie as they finding themselves falling deeper and deeper into a living nightmare.

As in “Calibre,.” Raimi, keeps the film a tight ship and the audience on constant edge. Sadly, “A Simple Plan” features one of the last roles by actor Bill Paxton who died almost 20 years later from a stroke at the age of 61.

You can catch “Calibre” now on Netflix. “ A Simple Plan” is available on DVD and Blu-ray and streaming now on Amazon Prime.