A blind man who regains his vision finds himself becoming metaphorically blinded by his obsession for the superficial.A blind man who regains his vision finds himself becoming metaphorically blinded by his obsession for the superficial.A blind man who regains his vision finds himself becoming metaphorically blinded by his obsession for the superficial.
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- The Lawyer
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Directed Ido Fluk, from a script written by Fluk and Sharon Mashihi. "The Ticket" stars Dan Stevens (The Guest) as James, a man blind from youth, with a comfortable life with his wife Sam (Malin Åkerman) and son Jonah (Skylar Gaertner). One day he regains his vision discovering he's not happy or contempt with his life - grabbing a promotion at work, leaves his wife for Jessica (Kerry Bishé) an employee where he works, and mistreating his friend Bob (Oliver Platt) one of James's blind co- workers.
Dan Stevens as always is fierce and enigmatic as James. Stevens is careful not to have you sympathize with James and the choices he makes along the way - But to ponder on each choice and wonder what's driving him. See, like each character in "The Ticket" (And there aren't many) they all have something driving them - something they want. Sam is fine and happy with going dancing, rather than an eloquent restaurant. She's also tired and Malin shows this beautifully. James, however, wants more, and Stevens never slows down giving us a moment to blame James for his choices.
Director Ido Flunk beautifully directs, with a unique visual flare centering around James's point of view. Where the film falls would be the predictability of its plot and lack of motivation for its characters.
"The Ticket" is a well made film with a deeply moving performance from Stevens.
A serious movie, and sincere. The obvious thrust is the poster lines, and this is no spoiler—a man who has been blind for a decade gains his sight back. The metaphor here (and repeated throughout) is that it's like winning the lottery (hence the title of the film).
Now what?
Slowly (too slowly for most of us) the man goes through several broad phases as he reassesses his world, both personally and physically (viusally) around him. The euphoria, the wanting more, the doubts, the challenges, each section is simple (to the point of simplistic, I think) but heartfelt. The leading character (played by Dan Stevens) is compelling enough as a regular guy swept up with things bigger than most of us encounter.
It's maybe unfair to say this isn't enough—but it isn't. It's a lot, but there needs to be other layers, complications of plot, but also nuances of feeling that someone in this situation would experience. It would not and could not be an easy arc from one zone to another. Disruption should be really ruinous and ecstatic, not a dull slow ride.
Also, and an odd comment but needed to be made—the audio is weird. A lot of the film is murmured, as if people are conversing their inner best. But much of the time a gentle music also plays and it's just plain hard to hear! Mood triumphs over content, but it's not enough.
As for the ending: it's a blatant disregard of the ego; humans simply don't work that way. Just saying.
This will all eventually lead to predictable consequences, and the film became to me a very slow paced melodrama that I didn't really enjoy. The very vague and ambiguous ending certainly didn't help any either.
Did you know
- TriviaThe Ticket was filmed almost exclusively in Kingston (Ulster County) NY. Oliver Platt's character Bob addresses the homeowner audience in the basement hall of Clinton Avenue Methodist Church. The dance scene was filmed in the vintage 2nd floor social hall of St. Mary's Social Club: the room, with its retro globe light fixtures, hadn't been used for years and was re-vamped for the film shoot. Dan Steven's character James' modern apartment, after he regains his sight, was a rented Air BnB on lower Broadway. One location considered for the telemarketing office was a former IBM facility HQ in the adjacent town of Ulster.
- GoofsAt the second church meeting, James asks the audience a rhetorical question, "Does the bank care about your debt?" In the background an audience member can be seen shaking their head no as James speaks the word "Does", without knowing the question.
- Quotes
James: A man prays to God for 50 years. The same prayer every night. "God, please let me win the lottery". Year after year after year after year. "Please God, let me win the lottery". And finally, an angel goes to God and says: "God, this man has been praying so long. Why don't you let him win?" You know what God says? God says: "I'd love to help him out. I'd love to help him out. But he has never bought a lottery ticket".
- SoundtracksNeed Someone To Love
Written by Winfred L. Lovett
Performed by Norma Jenkins
Published by Sanavan Music Co. (BMI)
Courtesy of Westwood Music Group
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Language
- Also known as
- 더 티켓
- Filming locations
- Clinton Avenue Methodist Church, Kingston, New York, USA(Meeting Hall)
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Box office
- Budget
- $1,200,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 37m(97 min)
- Color