NOTE IMDb
4,8/10
3,4 k
MA NOTE
Deux copains travaillant à la caisse d'un supermarché font face à une incroyable série d'évènements en tentant de se rendre au spectacle hip-hop de leur vie.Deux copains travaillant à la caisse d'un supermarché font face à une incroyable série d'évènements en tentant de se rendre au spectacle hip-hop de leur vie.Deux copains travaillant à la caisse d'un supermarché font face à une incroyable série d'évènements en tentant de se rendre au spectacle hip-hop de leur vie.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Steven Sawicki
- Bouncer
- (as Steve Sawicki)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesChester Tam wrote this script in 2008, 4 years after his car was stolen via Craigslist. He also plays 'Jay' in the film and directed it on a $2M budget from Netflix.
- GaffesWhen Chris hugs Chester in the grocery store, the arm pit sweat marks on Chester's shirt disappear.
- Citations
Officer Peterson: [to Carlos] Better lawyer up. I always wanted to say that.
- Crédits fousThere's a brief scene with Chris and Greg after the credits.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Flix Forum: Take the 10 (2019)
- Bandes originalesAttak ft. Danny Brown
Written by Daniel Sewell and Russell David Whyte
Performed by Rustie
Courtesy of Warp Records
By arrangement with Zync Music Group LLC
Commentaire à la une
I'm writing this review in the week that Netflix's stock surged by 10% as they beat market predictions, moving away from their 'rent-a- DVD' model to concentrate on original, quality content. Normally, this one would have slipped under my radar, but I saw it was picked up by distribution by Netflix and thought: let's give it a go.
I would describe this movie as being a sort of cross between Clerks and Superbad. It's a day in the life of two low-achieving shelf stackers at a Wholesome Foods (definitely not 'Whole Foods') store somewhere in the urban sprawl of LA. Their goal is to obtain tickets for a sold out concert, and they are not short on schemes to do so: be it ripping off a drug dealer, stealing cash from their boss, counter-ripping off a ticket forging older brother, and so on.
This movie's great strength - its random, weird, unpredictable nature - is also its greatest weakness. When watching any one scene, you have no idea what is going to happen. However, it also means the film struggles to find a consistent tone. Some characters (mostly the freeloading Chris) are very wacky and cartoonish. Others, like the conflicted Chester are more maudlin, and it doesn't work very well together. The movie's best and most consistent performance is without doubt the psychotic drug dealer Jay, played by Chester Tam, who was also the movie's writer and director. Every time he's on screen, he's like a force of nature. I was strangely reminded of Joe Pesci in Goodfellas, if he was a 6'5" tattooed Korean.
Oddly, the moments that worked the best were the more dramatic ones. The comedy sort of fell flat in a lot of places, probably due to the aforementioned problem of the film not really having a clear idea of how many feet it wanted to keep in reality. A scene where two guys dodge incoming bullets driving down the freeway in a battered Corvette does not play well with a scene where the same two guys have a serious and frank discussion about where their friendship and lives are going.
In summary, Take The 10 will probably play well for the late-night comedy (read: 'stoner') crowd, but never guns any higher than that. Bonus points for a cameo role from Andy Samberg ('The Lonely Island') who proves he can make just about anything funny.
I would describe this movie as being a sort of cross between Clerks and Superbad. It's a day in the life of two low-achieving shelf stackers at a Wholesome Foods (definitely not 'Whole Foods') store somewhere in the urban sprawl of LA. Their goal is to obtain tickets for a sold out concert, and they are not short on schemes to do so: be it ripping off a drug dealer, stealing cash from their boss, counter-ripping off a ticket forging older brother, and so on.
This movie's great strength - its random, weird, unpredictable nature - is also its greatest weakness. When watching any one scene, you have no idea what is going to happen. However, it also means the film struggles to find a consistent tone. Some characters (mostly the freeloading Chris) are very wacky and cartoonish. Others, like the conflicted Chester are more maudlin, and it doesn't work very well together. The movie's best and most consistent performance is without doubt the psychotic drug dealer Jay, played by Chester Tam, who was also the movie's writer and director. Every time he's on screen, he's like a force of nature. I was strangely reminded of Joe Pesci in Goodfellas, if he was a 6'5" tattooed Korean.
Oddly, the moments that worked the best were the more dramatic ones. The comedy sort of fell flat in a lot of places, probably due to the aforementioned problem of the film not really having a clear idea of how many feet it wanted to keep in reality. A scene where two guys dodge incoming bullets driving down the freeway in a battered Corvette does not play well with a scene where the same two guys have a serious and frank discussion about where their friendship and lives are going.
In summary, Take The 10 will probably play well for the late-night comedy (read: 'stoner') crowd, but never guns any higher than that. Bonus points for a cameo role from Andy Samberg ('The Lonely Island') who proves he can make just about anything funny.
- jpt-154-298566
- 21 janv. 2017
- Permalien
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- How long is Take the 10?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 20 minutes
- Couleur
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By what name was L'autoroute (2017) officially released in Canada in English?
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