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Blind pianist Sofia (Natalie Dormer) overhears a struggle in the apartment above hers that leads to the death of her neighbor Veronique (Emily Ratajkowski). It is the start of a journey that pulls Sofia out of her depth and brings her into contact with Veronique's father, Milos Radic (Jan Bijvoet). A Serbian businessman accused of being a war criminal, Sofia is drawn into a dangerous world of corruption, investigating police, hitmen and the Russian mafia--a world with links to Sofia's own hidden past and a path of revenge she has kept hidden until now.
Rating
NR
Director
Anthony Byrne
Studio
Vertical Entertainment
Writer
Anthony Byrne, Natalie Dormer
- Give this taut thriller a chance! Natalie Dormer's performance as the blind pianist Sophia is worth the ticket price alone!Reply
- Even though I didn't understand some parts because I watched it without subtitles, my bad, I still quite enjoyed the flick. Good acting and a classic revenge story. It was quite intense in the beginning.Reply
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- In Darkness increases the tension with dramatic and extreme angles, extreme close-ups, and a play on sound that dramatizes even the simplest of scenes.Reply
- In Darkness is certainly watchable and, as dull as the proceedings might be, checks many of the boxes that one looks for when trying to ignore turbulence on an airplane. It's fast-paced, good-looking and Dormer has the ability to carry a movie.Reply
- Flawed but with glimmers of inspiration, In Darkness will probably be remembered best for the platform it gave to Dormer...Reply
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- Ms. Dormer and the cast remain dedicated to the story, and that helps the audience do the same. Still, even if you don't entirely agree with where they've taken you, the ride alone is worth your time.Reply
- While "In Darkness" doesn't exactly bring anything new to its genre, the star makes the most of a platform she's long deserved - and that she apparently had to build herself.Reply
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- The screen's greatest "man-eater" is ferocious, even as the alleged blind prey of killers, in this just-smart-enough thriller.Reply