Showing posts with label Calibre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calibre. Show all posts

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.