Roar (2009) Poster

(2009)

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precise
Kirpianuscus31 March 2019
A precise short thriller, working in admirable manner, using a smart twist, good actors, Christmas in inspired way as scene and the details in a sort of Hitchcock style. An old fashion film, reminding classics for the iinspired use of each piece. Short, a real nice surprise. And great job of Russel Tovey.
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10/10
Phenomenal!
kate-hill-908-83191927 November 2010
Beautifully filmed with a BRILLIANT twist.

Almost Hitchcock like in style.

Very cleverly done. Roar has the feel of a full length feature movie even though it is only 15 minutes long. A story with many layers. You pick up something new with each viewing.

The acting is superb - a haunting performance from Russell Tovey in particular.

It is set at Christmas - there a is a wonderful ice-skating scene - which makes the tale even more memorable.

Recommended - you will not stop thinking about it for weeks afterwards......!
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4/10
Bearable little horror/crime story that needs too long to get going
Horst_In_Translation25 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Roar" is a 16-minute live action short film from Britain and this one is from 2009, so as of today it is just two more years until it will have its 10th anniversary. The director is Adam Wimpenny and writer is J.S. Hill and for both it is among their more known career efforts, also because of the solid deal of awards attention this one here has received. But there is really only one reason why it has received a boost in popularity these days and this is because the biggest female role is played by Jodie Whittaker who has just been cast as the new Doctor Who, actually the first woman to play the doctor. Back to this short film here. I thought the scenes at the end inside the house are pretty tense, atmospheric and well-filmed. But almost everything before that was relatively unnecessary and did not make an impact at all in my opinion, especially the phone call that really just felt for the sake of it. So the forgettable is certainly more frequent than the memorable here and I would give this film a thumbs-down overall. It gets better in the second half (also thanks to Whittaker), but it simply isn't enough. Watch something else instead.
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