#SAFE NETFLIX PLUS#
The film gives you a little bit of info here and there, plus the effectiveness within the offscreen performances and Julianne Moore's onscreen performance keep you adequately invested in the story of Carol White, but immediate development is mighty lacking, and gradual exposition isn't too much meatier, resulting in considerable underdevelopment that ends up going a longer way than you might think in distancing you from a story which is too minimalist to afford you falling out.
I can joke all day, but I do actually like this film and found it to be adequately exciting, but the fact of the matter is that what marketing that went behind this project made it appear flawed, and sure enough, this film isn't "safe" from some complaints. Come to think of it, the way that weird person on the poster in question is walking, coupled with a pretty concealing outfit, makes him look kind of like Bigfoot getting ready to fence, though that doesn't exactly raise the excitement all that much, because even though Bigfoot is cool and all, of all types of sword fighting styles he could be exploring, he's taking up fencing. Ouch, that's actually kind of harsh, because this film does indeed raise quite the standard in terms of not being seen, and I can't say that I'm surprised, not just because this film was on a mighty low profile when it came out, but because the poster is so unappealing that it looks like some unpolished, amateur photograph. No, this film isn't that underwhelming, but environmental messages and Julianne Moore trying to keep from getting sick don't exactly make this film quite as exciting as the "Safe" with Jason Statham, even though this film has been about as watched as 2012's "Safe". or at least that's what this slow, two-hour-long dramatic "thriller" is telling me. Seriously though, no place is safe here, as there is no escaping the horrible vengeance of the mighty one we've wronged. If you don't know about "Game Change", then you sure don't know about this early Julianne Moore vehicle, unless, of course, you do know about, and the reason why you're not reading this article is because you find the looks of it so bland that you're just not really bothering to look into it, even though, at it's core, it's a chillingly suspenseful dramatic thriller of intense proportions, or at least that's what the critics say. After pursuing the truth for so long, Jenny then decided to keep schtum after all and didn't implicate Sophie in the school fire and deaths.Huh, I reckon Sarah Palin really should have watched what she said about the environment, because here she is suffering the consequences of environmental problems, and if you don't get that, well, it doesn't matter, because you're probably not aware of this film enough to be reading this article. She was finally reunited safely with her father when he and his lover/dead wife's friend made an ill-judged rescue attempt, which resulted in Bobby's suicide. He decided to pay a visit and ended up killing Helen, setting fire to her house and, somehow, also kidnapping Jenny. Unfortunately, Helen had called Bobby, giving him a heads-up that their grisly secret had arisen once more.
#SAFE NETFLIX TV#
Related: Michael C Hall on playing British in new Netflix thriller Safe and being part of two TV game-changers Admitting she couldn't go home to face her dad about the various issues she was dealing with (his bugging her phone, for example), Jenny hid at Helen's place.Ī day later, she discovered Chris Chahal ( Freddie Thorp) was killed and that she might be a suspect, so continued to stay with Helen. She spent the night away from home in the train station and decided to confront Helen about the truth. Jenny, unaccompanied, went to Heaven in the evening but Bobby wasn't there. (Before they made their way there, the couple attended the doomed party at the Marshalls that is.)
#SAFE NETFLIX FULL#
With her soon-to-be-dead boyfriend Chris Chahal (for some reason, only ever referred to in Safe by his full name), they tracked down Bobby and discovered he ran the aforementioned '80s bar. It's here she spotted a VHS tape (we're surprised she even knew what it was) and subsequently nabbed it and used boyfriend Chris's video player – they discover it's the CCTV footage from the night of the fire in the school from 1990.
Her diary hinted at an "incident" so she visited neighbour Helen (Karen Bryson), whom Rachel had telephoned on her last day alive. Causing her dad Tom all sorts of problems, Jenny went on a quest to uncover the truth after her mother Rachel told her about "people dying" from her death bed.