Warner Bros. must be reading the writing on the wall, or smelling the money in their pocketbook, because they have just released this second entry in their Raw Feed direct-to-video series. (Actually, WB premiered the movie earlier at the Cinequest Film Festival, 2007, but close enough.) The movie's title, "Sublime," may sound overly optimistic, but if you think back on Raw Feed's first film, "Rest Stop," this newer effort looks positively award-winning. Not that it's really that good, but it is a distinct improvement on what came before.
As the series' name, Raw Feed, implies, these films are strong on horror, or at least on things "raw." So it's no surprise that "Sublime" is bloody, at times even head-turning, which is probably why the version I watched was unrated. Understand, though, that most of the blood in the movie isn't really horrifying or scary, just bloody. Let me explain.
In several places among the bonus materials, director Tony Krantz tells us that his main theme in "Sublime" was the exploration of fear. But not just any kind of fear; not the usual horror-film fear of mad slashers, demons, or things that go bump in the night. Oh, no. Krantz is more ambitious than that, exploring the fears of a typical white, upper-middle-class American male just turning forty. Krantz's main character fears growing older; fears the emptiness of his life; fears job loss; fears for the behavior and attitudes of his teenage children; fears that his wife no longer loves him; fears generational change; fears societal change; fears change and innovation in general; fears minorities, especially blacks and Iranians; fears gays; and fears doctors and hospitals. Among other fears. Whew! That's a lot of fear for one movie to convey, but this is Krantz's first film as a director, so we can cut him some slack.
The trouble with attempting to do so much in a single shocker is that a viewer could easily wind up seeing the film as merely shallow and pretentious. Well, it's not. It's just dull, which is a far greater sin in a horror flick. Krantz packed in so many metaphors, he forgot the horror. He went so far out of his way to make the movie meaningful, he forgot to keep his audience interested. The fact is, the central character is superficial and dull, and one could care less about him. As a result, it's pretty hard to generate any sympathy for somebody like that or to create any tension or suspense around his situation.
The main character is George Grieves (Thomas Cavanagh, of TV's "Ed," "Scrubs," and "Love Monkey." Like almost everyone else in this movie, he's a TV guy). Things begin for George at his fortieth birthday party, where his wife (Kathleen York, of TV's "CSI-NY" and "Smallville") takes a snapshot of him and his guests in the manner of Da Vinci's "Last Supper." This is supposed to be our clue that the movie is going to be prophetic and allegorical, the photograph a raft of Christian symbology and a portent of Protestant guilt to come (the wife portrays Judas in the photograph).
The day after his birthday, George goes into the hospital for a routine procedure, a colonoscopy, an examination for colon cancer that most doctors recommend for men of his age. Once in the hospital, everything goes wrong, and after the procedure George gets caught up in an ever-expanding nightmare. He wakes up in a sweat, he's drugged out, and he's got a three-inch scar on the side of his abdomen. What's going on? The hospital screwed up, that's what's wrong. And an infection is setting in. And they have to carve into his chest and amputate his leg and, and, and....
And, of course, the question we as viewers have to ask is, Is it really happening or is it a dream? We know the hospital has highly sedated George. Is he hallucinating? Or is all of it just a big mid-life crisis built up from a white-male guilt complex in disguise? He and the viewer get increasingly more confused.
The plot moves along as in a slow dream, with about thirty minutes of material stretched to almost two hours. The gore comes in the surgical operations the movie shows us rather than springing naturally from the intrigue. Thus, there is nothing scary, nothing frightening, about the picture, only one's dread of having to watch another bloody incision. To further aggravate things, the director insists on a multitude of soft-focus and slow-motion shots to intensify the surreal effect, and he utilizes only two sets--George's hospital room and his living room--for most of the story, further lending to the film's static tedium.
As the series' name, Raw Feed, implies, these films are strong on horror, or at least on things "raw." So it's no surprise that "Sublime" is bloody, at times even head-turning, which is probably why the version I watched was unrated. Understand, though, that most of the blood in the movie isn't really horrifying or scary, just bloody. Let me explain.
In several places among the bonus materials, director Tony Krantz tells us that his main theme in "Sublime" was the exploration of fear. But not just any kind of fear; not the usual horror-film fear of mad slashers, demons, or things that go bump in the night. Oh, no. Krantz is more ambitious than that, exploring the fears of a typical white, upper-middle-class American male just turning forty. Krantz's main character fears growing older; fears the emptiness of his life; fears job loss; fears for the behavior and attitudes of his teenage children; fears that his wife no longer loves him; fears generational change; fears societal change; fears change and innovation in general; fears minorities, especially blacks and Iranians; fears gays; and fears doctors and hospitals. Among other fears. Whew! That's a lot of fear for one movie to convey, but this is Krantz's first film as a director, so we can cut him some slack.
The trouble with attempting to do so much in a single shocker is that a viewer could easily wind up seeing the film as merely shallow and pretentious. Well, it's not. It's just dull, which is a far greater sin in a horror flick. Krantz packed in so many metaphors, he forgot the horror. He went so far out of his way to make the movie meaningful, he forgot to keep his audience interested. The fact is, the central character is superficial and dull, and one could care less about him. As a result, it's pretty hard to generate any sympathy for somebody like that or to create any tension or suspense around his situation.
The main character is George Grieves (Thomas Cavanagh, of TV's "Ed," "Scrubs," and "Love Monkey." Like almost everyone else in this movie, he's a TV guy). Things begin for George at his fortieth birthday party, where his wife (Kathleen York, of TV's "CSI-NY" and "Smallville") takes a snapshot of him and his guests in the manner of Da Vinci's "Last Supper." This is supposed to be our clue that the movie is going to be prophetic and allegorical, the photograph a raft of Christian symbology and a portent of Protestant guilt to come (the wife portrays Judas in the photograph).
The day after his birthday, George goes into the hospital for a routine procedure, a colonoscopy, an examination for colon cancer that most doctors recommend for men of his age. Once in the hospital, everything goes wrong, and after the procedure George gets caught up in an ever-expanding nightmare. He wakes up in a sweat, he's drugged out, and he's got a three-inch scar on the side of his abdomen. What's going on? The hospital screwed up, that's what's wrong. And an infection is setting in. And they have to carve into his chest and amputate his leg and, and, and....
And, of course, the question we as viewers have to ask is, Is it really happening or is it a dream? We know the hospital has highly sedated George. Is he hallucinating? Or is all of it just a big mid-life crisis built up from a white-male guilt complex in disguise? He and the viewer get increasingly more confused.
The plot moves along as in a slow dream, with about thirty minutes of material stretched to almost two hours. The gore comes in the surgical operations the movie shows us rather than springing naturally from the intrigue. Thus, there is nothing scary, nothing frightening, about the picture, only one's dread of having to watch another bloody incision. To further aggravate things, the director insists on a multitude of soft-focus and slow-motion shots to intensify the surreal effect, and he utilizes only two sets--George's hospital room and his living room--for most of the story, further lending to the film's static tedium.
Warner Bros. must be reading the writing on the wall, or smelling the money in their pocketbook, because they have just released this second entry in their Raw Feed direct-to-video series. (Actually, WB premiered the movie earlier at the Cinequest Film Festival, 2007, but close enough.) The movie's title, "Sublime," may sound overly optimistic, but if you think back on Raw Feed's first film, "Rest Stop," this newer effort looks positively award-winning. Not that it's really that good, but it is a distinct improvement on what came before.
As the series' name, Raw Feed, implies, these films are strong on horror, or at least on things "raw." So it's no surprise that "Sublime" is bloody, at times even head-turning, which is probably why the version I watched was unrated. Understand, though, that most of the blood in the movie isn't really horrifying or scary, just bloody. Let me explain.
In several places among the bonus materials, director Tony Krantz tells us that his main theme in "Sublime" was the exploration of fear. But not just any kind of fear; not the usual horror-film fear of mad slashers, demons, or things that go bump in the night. Oh, no. Krantz is more ambitious than that, exploring the fears of a typical white, upper-middle-class American male just turning forty. Krantz's main character fears growing older; fears the emptiness of his life; fears job loss; fears for the behavior and attitudes of his teenage children; fears that his wife no longer loves him; fears generational change; fears societal change; fears change and innovation in general; fears minorities, especially blacks and Iranians; fears gays; and fears doctors and hospitals. Among other fears. Whew! That's a lot of fear for one movie to convey, but this is Krantz's first film as a director, so we can cut him some slack.
The trouble with attempting to do so much in a single shocker is that a viewer could easily wind up seeing the film as merely shallow and pretentious. Well, it's not. It's just dull, which is a far greater sin in a horror flick. Krantz packed in so many metaphors, he forgot the horror. He went so far out of his way to make the movie meaningful, he forgot to keep his audience interested. The fact is, the central character is superficial and dull, and one could care less about him. As a result, it's pretty hard to generate any sympathy for somebody like that or to create any tension or suspense around his situation.
The main character is George Grieves (Thomas Cavanagh, of TV's "Ed," "Scrubs," and "Love Monkey." Like almost everyone else in this movie, he's a TV guy). Things begin for George at his fortieth birthday party, where his wife (Kathleen York, of TV's "CSI-NY" and "Smallville") takes a snapshot of him and his guests in the manner of Da Vinci's "Last Supper." This is supposed to be our clue that the movie is going to be prophetic and allegorical, the photograph a raft of Christian symbology and a portent of Protestant guilt to come (the wife portrays Judas in the photograph).
The day after his birthday, George goes into the hospital for a routine procedure, a colonoscopy, an examination for colon cancer that most doctors recommend for men of his age. Once in the hospital, everything goes wrong, and after the procedure George gets caught up in an ever-expanding nightmare. He wakes up in a sweat, he's drugged out, and he's got a three-inch scar on the side of his abdomen. What's going on? The hospital screwed up, that's what's wrong. And an infection is setting in. And they have to carve into his chest and amputate his leg and, and, and....
And, of course, the question we as viewers have to ask is, Is it really happening or is it a dream? We know the hospital has highly sedated George. Is he hallucinating? Or is all of it just a big mid-life crisis built up from a white-male guilt complex in disguise? He and the viewer get increasingly more confused.
The plot moves along as in a slow dream, with about thirty minutes of material stretched to almost two hours. The gore comes in the surgical operations the movie shows us rather than springing naturally from the intrigue. Thus, there is nothing scary, nothing frightening, about the picture, only one's dread of having to watch another bloody incision. To further aggravate things, the director insists on a multitude of soft-focus and slow-motion shots to intensify the surreal effect, and he utilizes only two sets--George's hospital room and his living room--for most of the story, further lending to the film's static tedium.
As the series' name, Raw Feed, implies, these films are strong on horror, or at least on things "raw." So it's no surprise that "Sublime" is bloody, at times even head-turning, which is probably why the version I watched was unrated. Understand, though, that most of the blood in the movie isn't really horrifying or scary, just bloody. Let me explain.
In several places among the bonus materials, director Tony Krantz tells us that his main theme in "Sublime" was the exploration of fear. But not just any kind of fear; not the usual horror-film fear of mad slashers, demons, or things that go bump in the night. Oh, no. Krantz is more ambitious than that, exploring the fears of a typical white, upper-middle-class American male just turning forty. Krantz's main character fears growing older; fears the emptiness of his life; fears job loss; fears for the behavior and attitudes of his teenage children; fears that his wife no longer loves him; fears generational change; fears societal change; fears change and innovation in general; fears minorities, especially blacks and Iranians; fears gays; and fears doctors and hospitals. Among other fears. Whew! That's a lot of fear for one movie to convey, but this is Krantz's first film as a director, so we can cut him some slack.
The trouble with attempting to do so much in a single shocker is that a viewer could easily wind up seeing the film as merely shallow and pretentious. Well, it's not. It's just dull, which is a far greater sin in a horror flick. Krantz packed in so many metaphors, he forgot the horror. He went so far out of his way to make the movie meaningful, he forgot to keep his audience interested. The fact is, the central character is superficial and dull, and one could care less about him. As a result, it's pretty hard to generate any sympathy for somebody like that or to create any tension or suspense around his situation.
The main character is George Grieves (Thomas Cavanagh, of TV's "Ed," "Scrubs," and "Love Monkey." Like almost everyone else in this movie, he's a TV guy). Things begin for George at his fortieth birthday party, where his wife (Kathleen York, of TV's "CSI-NY" and "Smallville") takes a snapshot of him and his guests in the manner of Da Vinci's "Last Supper." This is supposed to be our clue that the movie is going to be prophetic and allegorical, the photograph a raft of Christian symbology and a portent of Protestant guilt to come (the wife portrays Judas in the photograph).
The day after his birthday, George goes into the hospital for a routine procedure, a colonoscopy, an examination for colon cancer that most doctors recommend for men of his age. Once in the hospital, everything goes wrong, and after the procedure George gets caught up in an ever-expanding nightmare. He wakes up in a sweat, he's drugged out, and he's got a three-inch scar on the side of his abdomen. What's going on? The hospital screwed up, that's what's wrong. And an infection is setting in. And they have to carve into his chest and amputate his leg and, and, and....
And, of course, the question we as viewers have to ask is, Is it really happening or is it a dream? We know the hospital has highly sedated George. Is he hallucinating? Or is all of it just a big mid-life crisis built up from a white-male guilt complex in disguise? He and the viewer get increasingly more confused.
The plot moves along as in a slow dream, with about thirty minutes of material stretched to almost two hours. The gore comes in the surgical operations the movie shows us rather than springing naturally from the intrigue. Thus, there is nothing scary, nothing frightening, about the picture, only one's dread of having to watch another bloody incision. To further aggravate things, the director insists on a multitude of soft-focus and slow-motion shots to intensify the surreal effect, and he utilizes only two sets--George's hospital room and his living room--for most of the story, further lending to the film's static tedium.
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