360 - Movie Review

  • 10 August 2012

Rating: 3 out of 5

Loosely based on Arthur Schnitzler's play La Ronde, this beautifully assembled film is easy to watch. But that's the problem: the subject matter should be much more difficult than this, as it's about having the courage to make unexpected choices.

In Vienna, British businessman Michael (Law) has arranged to meet Slovakian prostitute Blanka (Siposova) on her first night on the job. But the situation shifts, and Michael ends up thinking about his wife (Weisz) in London.
Meanwhile, she's having a fling with a Brazilian (Cazarre) whose girlfriend (Flor) is fed up with his infidelity. On her flight home, she meets a troubled British man (Hopkins) and a recovering sex-offender (Foster). Meanwhile, an Algerian dentist (Debbouze) in Paris is in love with his Russian employee (Drukarova), whose husband (Vdovichenkov) works for a hotheaded gangster (Ivanir).

And so on. The point is that all of these people are connected by relationships and encounters in Europe and North America. And the constant theme is that each person must make a decision that completely changes their life. Essentially the film is encouraging us to take the unexpected fork in the road, even if we must pay the consequences. But the script never follows through on this: the characters' decisions never have any real fallout.

Meirelles uses every trick in his impressive arsenal: whizzy camera moves, witty editing, inventive transitions and a clever use of reflections. He also establishes the settings beautifully, from Vienna and Bratislava to London and Paris, by way of the Denver airport and a 12-step meeting in Phoenix. Images are bright and glassy even as the characters battle against losing their moral or ethical balance. At least this gives the cast members plenty to work with.

There isn't a weak performance, with stand-out scenes for Flor and Marcinkova (as Blanka's sister). Weisz and Foster are terrific at conveying conflicting emotions, while Hopkins gets the big grandstanding scene with a lengthy monolog that brings the film to a shrieking halt. But everyone manages to inject subtlety into the thinly drawn characters, while Meirelles connects the strands inventively. But in the end, the message that we should take more risks in our lives feels more than a little simplistic.

360
Image caption 360

Facts and Figures

Year: 2011

Run time: 110 mins

In Theaters: Wednesday 25th July 2012

Box Office USA: $99.6k

Box Office Worldwide: $99.6 thousand

Distributed by: Magnolia Pictures

Production compaines: BBC Films

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 21%
Fresh: 15 Rotten: 58

IMDB: 6.2 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Fernando Meirelles

Producer: Andrew Eaton, Chris Hanley, Danny Krausz, David Linde, Emanuel Michael

Screenwriter: Peter Morgan

Starring: Rachel Weisz as Rose, Jude Law as Michael Daly, Ben Foster as Tyler, Anthony Hopkins as Older Man, Moritz Bleibtreu as Salesman, Jamel Debbouze as Algerian Man, Mark Ivanir as The Boss, Katrina Vasilieva as Alyssa, Peter Morgan as Salesman, Tereza Srbova as European Girl, Kelvin Wise as Airport passenger, Gabriela Marcinkova as Anna, Vladimir Vdovichenkov as Sergei, Riann Steele as Waitress, Sydney Wade as Ellie, Johannes Krisch as Rocco, Lucia Siposová as Mirkha, Sean Power as AA Secretary, Maria Flor as Laura, Shaun Lucas as Passenger / restaurant customer, Russell Balogh as Diner, Dinara Drukarova as Valentina, Gerard Monaco as Airport Official, Alex Sanders as Leonardo

Also starring: Andrew Eaton, Chris Hanley, Danny Krausz, David Linde