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I really wish I could have enjoyed Jacob Bilinski's short film about
reality shifting and perceptions of romance in the end, but with the run
time and premise often foggy both in its intent and ability to deliver
its hook, "Obsolescence" often feels instead like a practice in
monologue reading than it does an actual short film. From minute one I
found myself fairly unimpressed by the line reading that occurs as
"Obsolescence" is much more focused on the hook that leads in to the
final confrontations than it does actually telling its story about a
romance that may or may not have been pre-orchestrated to fit a goal for
its characters to focus on.
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When Nick refuses to let go of
his lost love, he begins to kidnap local friends and
confidants prior to his tragic loss and torture them in
hopes of garnering some grasp of his loss and figure out why
his memories are suddenly betraying him. As he delves deeper
and deeper in to his past with his lover's life, he begins
to figure she may have just been an illusion. Is he just
losing sight of his sanity, or are there darker forces at
play. While I would have enjoyed watching "Obsolescence,"
much of its seems too centered around the final dialogue to
really be considered a true effort at a short film. |
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While the performances are strong,
"Obsolescence" is that film you can tell was originally just one scene
built in to a movie for that purpose. And when Bilinksi leads in to the
big confrontation, you can sense this was the entire purpose. I'm not
saying "Obsolescence" is a bad film, it's just not one I felt compelled
or all too impressed with by the time it was finished. And while it does
intend to have shades of Phillip K. Dick, with plays on memory and the
unconscious, it's not anything to write home about once the credits have
rolled.
It's a shame
because Jacob Bilinski is a very good director who creates a fairly
unimpressive and underwhelming short science fiction film that could
have stood more extrapolation and depth in the end. "Obsolescence" left
me basically blank and I had to collect my thoughts by the end of the
film.
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