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Trance

  • 2013
  • R
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
120K
YOUR RATING
James McAvoy in Trance (2013)
An art auctioneer who has become mixed up with a group of criminals partners with a hypnotherapist in order to recover a lost painting.
Play trailer1:39
24 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyPsychological ThrillerCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

An art auctioneer mixed up with a group of criminals partners with a hypnotherapist in order to recover a lost painting.An art auctioneer mixed up with a group of criminals partners with a hypnotherapist in order to recover a lost painting.An art auctioneer mixed up with a group of criminals partners with a hypnotherapist in order to recover a lost painting.

  • Director
    • Danny Boyle
  • Writers
    • Joe Ahearne
    • John Hodge
  • Stars
    • James McAvoy
    • Rosario Dawson
    • Vincent Cassel
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    120K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Danny Boyle
    • Writers
      • Joe Ahearne
      • John Hodge
    • Stars
      • James McAvoy
      • Rosario Dawson
      • Vincent Cassel
    • 265User reviews
    • 406Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos24

    Theatrical Version
    Trailer 1:39
    Theatrical Version
    "The Drill"
    Clip 1:59
    "The Drill"
    "The Drill"
    Clip 1:59
    "The Drill"
    Trance: Clip 1
    Clip 1:58
    Trance: Clip 1
    Trance: Clip 4
    Clip 1:33
    Trance: Clip 4
    Trance: Don't Be A Hero (French Subtitled)
    Clip 0:58
    Trance: Don't Be A Hero (French Subtitled)
    Trance: They're Going To Kill Me (French Subtitled)
    Clip 1:29
    Trance: They're Going To Kill Me (French Subtitled)

    Photos184

    View Poster
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    + 179
    View Poster

    Top cast30

    Edit
    James McAvoy
    James McAvoy
    • Simon
    Rosario Dawson
    Rosario Dawson
    • Elizabeth
    Vincent Cassel
    Vincent Cassel
    • Franck
    Danny Sapani
    Danny Sapani
    • Nate
    Matt Cross
    Matt Cross
    • Dominic
    Wahab Sheikh
    • Riz
    Mark Poltimore
    • Francis Lemaitre
    Tuppence Middleton
    Tuppence Middleton
    • Young Woman in Red Car
    Simon Kunz
    Simon Kunz
    • Surgeon
    Michael Shaeffer
    Michael Shaeffer
    • Security Guard #1
    Tony Jayawardena
    Tony Jayawardena
    • Security Guard #2
    Vincent Montuel
    • Handsome Waiter
    Jai Rajani
    • Car Park Attendant
    Spencer Wilding
    Spencer Wilding
    • 60's Robber
    Gursharan Chaggar
    • Postman
    Edward Rising
    • 60's Auctioneer
    Kimberly Barrios
    • Office Assistant
    • (uncredited)
    Gioacchino Jim Cuffaro
    • Auction Punter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Danny Boyle
    • Writers
      • Joe Ahearne
      • John Hodge
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews265

    6.9120K
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    Featured reviews

    tr91

    What the hell have I just watched?

    This has got to be the most confusing film I have ever seen, and yes, I have seen Inception. I only came across this film because it starred James McAvoy, it sounded interesting so I decided to give it a go.

    The film starts off straight in the action and is one of them films where you are completely hooked from the start to the finish, even though you're not completely sure what is going on. It got to the point where I didn't know if certain scenes were the present day or flashbacks, truths or lies, I just didn't know, but my God it was gripping. There was also some pretty grim scenes in this film.

    In the end it did make more sense but you really have to think about it. I would highly recommend this film to anyone, although I think it may take more than one viewing to really appreciate how good this is.

    8/10
    7billygoat1071

    Snazzier Art

    Danny Boyle returns to his mind boggling roots, such as Sunshine and 28 Days Later, with Trance. Trance has a thought provoking concept that might bring some memorable mind blowing amazement on screen. It shows its high concept pretty well and it lets the audience fascinate from start to finish. Further on, the story develops a strange twist which leads to an awkward conclusion. Despite all odds, the film is thankful to have Boyle creating a brisk style throughout the experience and a set of brilliant performances making it more than entertaining. It's a little disappointing, but most of the film is really worth watching.

    The plot is simple, but the idea beneath it is what makes it sound more than just simple. It begins with a stylishly shot heist sequence that gives so much promise to the picture. It gets even more interesting when it introduces its hypnosis. It shows plenty of smart ideas to it. There are some point that may remind you of Inception but the film also finds some clever ways to make it look unique. It eventually becomes twisted and tells some unpredictable revelations. Twisted and unpredictable are good until the sudden plot twist comes along. It shifts from dangerous to ridiculous. Well, mind bending films are best when it makes no sense at first then it lets you try to put the pieces together afterwards, but the random involvement of one character to the core conflict of the story is somehow exasperating.

    There is no denying that the performance are great. James McAvoy finely balances his character's fear, rage, and charisma. Rosario Dawson is graceful enough for a hypnotherapist. One of the best here is Vincent Cassel. His character is generally suppose to be unlikeable but Cassel manages to be terrifying and so much fun to watch.

    We may complain about its weaker parts but it's still extremely entertaining. To be honest, this is probably Danny Boyle's snazziest film he has ever made so far. Though, there are better Boyle films out there, this one seems to be more energetic, and smartly shot and edited. His sense of style brings camp and surrealism that feels like you're in a perfect zone of trance. There are sequences that are simply magnificent which makes you just want to look around the exteriors, like a piece of art. The music score and soundtrack fits through the fanciness of the film.

    Trance embraces the point of being mind bending. It plays with your mind enough which is already a remarkable merit, it just could have been simpler in the end. The twist indeed affects a lot to what it was set up, but the best parts still took over the experience. The film's awesome craft and trippy effects immediately spellbind the viewers. It would have been a classier fabulous thriller. It's difficult to forgive its far-fetched conclusion, but again it is a snazzy piece of manic art by Danny Boyle that is definitely a cinematic joy.
    83xHCCH

    Boyle's "Inception" Without the Special Effects

    An art auctioneer suffers amnesia when a robbery of a Goya masterpiece went wrong. A hypnotherapist was recruited to jog the memory out of him. Thus begins the multi-layered puzzle that is "Trance". I could not say more about the story as this remains for you to watch the unfolding of each scene that complicates the one before it.

    Danny Boyle was very much in the news in the past few years because of his "Slumdog Millionaire" as well as his London Olympics gig. Now he returns to the big screen directing this Rubik's cube of a film, and that itself makes this film an event to witness.

    James McAvoy plays Simon, the art auctioneer with a huge gambling debt caught in a bigger web, with the necessary cluelessness and helplessness. In fact, I could imagine Boyle's "trainspotting" discovery Ewan McGregor in this role had it been done ten years ago.

    Rosario Dawson lends her exotic appeal as hypnotherapist Elizabeth Lamb. It was her character that provides this film that complex structure which would keep the audience wondering which is reality and which is just a trance. She was credible, treading that delicate balance between good and bad, realistically keeping the two other male characters guessing at her real intentions. Her brave moment of frontal nudity was key to how the story turns, not gratuitous.

    Vincent Cassel plays Franck, the ruthless mastermind of the art heist. His character would have been a one-dimensional bad guy in a lesser actor's hands. Here Cassel gives Franck another level of what seems to be vulnerability, or then again, maybe not.

    Fans of film noir, of films that make you think, will enjoy "Trance". I am sure many fans of this film will watch it again to try and get it the second or third time around. Boyle has given us "Inception" without the grand special effects. So good. Must-watch.
    6blanche-2

    sort of a suspense film turned horror

    Danny Boyle, a renowned director of stage and screen, not to mention a writer, directed the 2014 "Trance" -- and from a brief look at the reviews, people either loved it or hated it.

    I hated it.

    I'm always fascinated by films about art heists, but this time, I felt let down. That's not to take away from the originality of the story, but for me, it became too convoluted.

    In London, an auctioneer, Simon Newton (James McAvoy), helps a gang, headed by a man named Franck, to steal a valuable painting at the auction house. Simon gets into a car accident and claims not to remember where he hid the painting. The gang sends him to a hypnotherapist (Rosario Dawson), under an assumed name, and record him -- he doesn't say he's looking for this painting, obviously, since it's all over the news, so he says he's looking for his keys.

    The hypnotherapist turns out to be quite a character, and one can't really tell for a time if she's in league with the gang or trying to help Simon, as she plays both sides. It all gets kind of crazy from there, with murders, sex, car chases and hypnosis.

    I love the plot, and normally, I like a complicated, involved story, but I admit that after a while, I gave up and didn't know what was happening. It reminded me a tiny bit of Memento, but that film was a lot more straightforward. This movie started out suspense and toward the end turned into a crazy horror movie.

    The acting was good, with perhaps the exception of Rosario Dawson. First of all, she had an impossible role. Secondly, I am absolutely certain that in some scenes she didn't know what her attitude was supposed to be. It's not too much of a stretch that these actors lost their way in the script as well. I can't imagine anyone having to sit down and read it.

    I think Danny Boyle is one of those people who, when he's good, he's fabulous, and when he's less than that, he's confusing.
    bob the moo

    Aims for complexity but is unnecessarily confusing – end result isn't "oh wow" but "oh for f's sake"

    I was quite looking forward to Trance; I had heard a critic say that it was a real effort by Danny Boyle to get out from under the "national treasure" status he had obtained by how well he opened the Olympics in 2012 and that as a result Trance was very much against that image. He was correct because this is a very graphic film in many ways but before that we get to the plot. The plot is simple – an art robbery goes wrong for some reason, with the painting lost when the inside man hides it but forgets where he hid it due to damage inflicted during the robbery. The gang go to a hypnotherapist to try to get it out of him and from here it only gets messy.

    I can see what the plot was trying to do because it is constantly twisting and turning as minds are messed with; actions may or may not be programmed; events may or may not be happening and those who appear in control may or may not actually be in control and, even if they are (or aren't), they soon won't be (or will be) because everything will change in a minute. I guess the aim is that the film was aiming for a narrative similar to that of Inception or Usual Suspects, where the story the audience is being told may not be the real story at all. At the end of both these films the effect is to be impressed by how well it did it and I'm sure for many like myself there was the desire to watch it again to be able to see the film in the new context you have. With Trance I did not have this feeling, when things did fall into place I only felt that it was such a messy pile that it had fallen into and I had not enjoyed or been engaged in the manner in which it got there or indeed where it got me at all. You can sense it wants to be smarter and more thrilling that it is, but where Usual Suspects is slick and stylish on its journey, this really just bumbles and blasts it way to the finish hoping it can carry you with it by force alone.

    This force comes in the style of Boyle's direction and mostly it is good from this point of view – it is a good looking film but it does really feel like he is forcing the excess for the sake of it rather than it being part of the film. So the very extreme scenes of gore felt like the complexity of the story – there for the sake of being there. Of course this is not to say that I didn't appreciate the extreme (almost "no holds barred") nudity from Rosario Dawson, but again even for the teenage boy in my head, it felt forced and unnatural (the use of her nude – not her as a nude). The cast go along with it the best they can. McAvoy is good while Cassel always has a mean presence. Support cast is decent but I am really not sure about Dawson. It is not that she herself is not good, it is just that the film asks too much of her character and it is clear that Dawson doesn't always know who she is be – in any one scene she can be what is required, but in terms of making it one whole character or making links between these scenes, she cannot do it. I do not think the fault is all her – I guess the relationship with Boyle didn't help with this aspect, but for sure her performance seems unsure and a bit erratic.

    Trance will try to bluster and bully you into thinking you're watching something really smart and well structured, but this is not the case. The film is confusing for the sake of it, excessive for the sake of it and ultimately tries to ride this to a satisfying conclusion but in the end you will not be left with feeling that you immediately want to see it again but rather the lingering doubt as to whether you should have bothered in the first place.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      All the actors underwent hypnosis as part of their preparation for the film. James McAvoy claimed that his hypnotism session was successful and left him unable to move his hand during the duration of the session.
    • Goofs
      When Franck steals the painting from Simon in the beginning, he is not wearing gloves. He continues not wearing gloves until he jumps into the yellow plastic tube from the roof. Suddenly he emerges in the dumpster wearing gloves.
    • Quotes

      Elizabeth: We keep secrets from lots of people, but most of all we keep them from ourselves. And we call that forgetting.

    • Crazy credits
      After the closing credits have rolled, the audience hears the familiar five taps on the glass window that was an iconic audible signature throughout the film.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Graham Norton Show: Quentin Tarantino/James McAvoy/Alan Davies/Emeli Sandé (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Hold My Hand
      Performed by Unkle

      Written by James Lavelle, Richard File, Chris Goss, David Catching

      (contains a sample of "Be My Wife" written by David Bowie)

      Courtesy of Surrender All Ltd & RZO Music Ltd

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Trance?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 27, 2013 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Facebook (Brazil)
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • En trance
    • Filming locations
      • Chapelle Notre-Dame-du-Haut de Ronchamp, Ronchamp, Haute-Saône, France
    • Production companies
      • Fox Searchlight Pictures
      • Pathé
      • Cloud Eight Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $20,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,328,743
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $131,145
      • Apr 7, 2013
    • Gross worldwide
      • $24,261,569
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 41m(101 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Atmos
      • SDDS
      • Datasat
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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