Apocryphal (2022) Poster

(2022)

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9/10
Very well written
rod-temple17 February 2023
In Apocryphal, we follow Oliver and his small group of friends, whom we quickly discover are all heroin addicts. The actors all do a fine job in the opening acting obnoxious, and I found myself instantly not liking them. I enjoyed this approach in the storytelling because as the film progresses, the true nature of Oliver and his friends is revealed. In one scene, Oliver is struggling through a job interview. The stakes are high, if he doesn't land this job he's going to lose his apartment. During the course of this scene, Armstrong peels back the layers of Oliver and we come to find out that he's a brilliant scientist who manufactured drugs but has sadly succumbed to the temptation of his own creation. I soon found myself siding more with Oliver, wanting him to get out of the hell hole his life is. Very good story design there.
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9/10
Drugs addicts and aliens
paul_bassett1 June 2023
Can we trust the words of a drug addict? What is fact? And what is 'the truth'? Initially, we see Oliver spending his days and nights getting high in an abandoned concrete structure with other addicts Renn (Emily Tucker) and Charlie (Alex Arnold). Their over-the-top chalky faces make them look like extras from a cheap zombie movie, removing them from a naturalised reality. This paradoxically grants them more humanity than most dramatised depictions of drug addicts, the make-up allowing the warmth of their personalities to shine through. Then, out of nowhere, Oliver has a job interview to attend - though it is sabotaged deliberately in comical fashion, an homage to Trainspotting perhaps? All of a sudden Oliver is back in the interrogation room pouring his heart out in a serious monologue about the tragedy that led to his addiction. A tonal pendulum swing. But because the audience weren't allowed enough time to get lost in the previous scene, instead of a four o'clock to eight o'clock swing, we have a five to seven. The desired contrast is thus not apparent and emotions become muddied and indistinct. From there the film dances between the realms of grief and extra-terrestrials. The narrative throughline is clear, but the audience continually doesn't get to spend long enough in any scene to connect with it, leading to a sense of tonal dissonance.
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