In the category "The biggest gap between his preview section and the film itself", the prize goes to "Spider's Head"!
No wonder the film is at the top of the Netflix movie list - it has the hottest cast in Hollywood, a genre that invites mesmerizing creation and creators with a proven track record.
But the "spider's head" takes a promising ingredient cocktail, and strives not to keep it.
Netflix's new science fiction film seeks to take a place in the coveted competition, to create a dystopian reality in which people are controlled, tracked, or in our case used by human lab mice, for all that that implies: tyranny, control through the insertion of substances from two consciousnesses, and insanity to severe violence. .
Throughout the movie "Spider's Head" plays characters in the head but not really the viewers, the basics are unexplained and throws on the relationship between the scientist and the human lab mice the responsibility to captivate us to the screen - and it sweats from artificiality.
It is true that there is no such thing as a first impression, and there is an aesthetic cinema that focuses mostly on a sterile compound that stimulates viewers to see it, but it is a shell that is revealed to us very quickly and reveals in its depth not sufficiently deep and reasoned about the goals of social experimentation.
The all-too-good news is that Chris Hamsworth ("Turn") and the last Miles Teller from Topgan are definitely delivering the goods: Hamsworth is finally stepping out of his regular action hero role and convincing as the evil scientist, and Teller is simply an excellent actor.
To sum up: as a science fiction, the film sits on a likable idea.
But as a thriller - he does not even begin to be like that.
An episode of "Black Mirror" is shorter and definitely does the same job.
"Spider Head", Netflix
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