Set in the near future, private detective David Carmichael is hired by Marlon Veidt, an eccentric businessman, to track down his missing daughter. David teams up with Jane, a highly advanced... Read allSet in the near future, private detective David Carmichael is hired by Marlon Veidt, an eccentric businessman, to track down his missing daughter. David teams up with Jane, a highly advanced A.I. to solve the mystery.Set in the near future, private detective David Carmichael is hired by Marlon Veidt, an eccentric businessman, to track down his missing daughter. David teams up with Jane, a highly advanced A.I. to solve the mystery.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson
- Mr. Russell
- (as Johannes Haukur Johannesson)
Olwen Fouéré
- Royale
- (as Olwen Fouere)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
It's a fun Bladerunner knockoff, but that isn't a bad thing.
The villain wasn't good, across from Guy Pierce, who is a great actor.
It could have been more visceral, but it wasn't. It could have been great, but it wasn't.
Still worth the watch.
The villain wasn't good, across from Guy Pierce, who is a great actor.
It could have been more visceral, but it wasn't. It could have been great, but it wasn't.
Still worth the watch.
Zone 414: A Blade Runnerish SF thriller set in near future UK. Guy Pearce is David, in the Deckard role and at one stage kills an android but that isn't his real job. He's hired by a billionaire to track down his missing daughter, Melissa. Matilda Lutz is a pleasure model android, more advanced than most, philosophises a lot about her predicament, sees a counsellor. But Lutz is no passive victim, she aids David when he arrives in Zone 414 where humans and android are allowed to interact. Thus begins a dark journey where both human and android life don't count for much. Olwen Fouéré is suitably sinister as the madam for the pleasure models. The budget wasn't quite high enough to achieve a full Cyber Punk aesthetic in Zone 414 (or the cities) but it's suitably run down and grim . A couple of plot twists and some rather violent scenes. Directed by Andrew Baird from a screenplay by Bryan Edward Hill. Saw it on Virgin Media Movies. 7/10.
This film has good potential but misses the mark frequently.
The major criticisms are: some average acting (from all actors), linear plot, no connection to the characters, and a desire to push victim mentality throughout the film.
The film is clearly influenced by Blade Runner, however, I would say that it's quite different to Blade Runner as this film focuses mostly on characters rather than creating a detailed world. In theory, this should work, however, the dialogue is mostly exposition rather than giving you a sense of the characters. This isn't helped by average acting.
It's borderline as to whether or not it's worth watching. If I cared about any of the characters, it may be different.
The major criticisms are: some average acting (from all actors), linear plot, no connection to the characters, and a desire to push victim mentality throughout the film.
The film is clearly influenced by Blade Runner, however, I would say that it's quite different to Blade Runner as this film focuses mostly on characters rather than creating a detailed world. In theory, this should work, however, the dialogue is mostly exposition rather than giving you a sense of the characters. This isn't helped by average acting.
It's borderline as to whether or not it's worth watching. If I cared about any of the characters, it may be different.
I found almost every element in this movie just slightly undercooked. The director has done well to hide an obvious low budget but where it suffers is in the story elements. Obvious comparisons to Blade Runner aside it is not a good detective story, they go here, they go there, they meet whacky weird characters, but no real sense of intrigue or suspense. The main character is a half baked unoriginal copy, the a.i. Character is done well but again, nothing original innovative or different, though very well acted. It was just so very MEH, when the bones were there for something surprising and different i am left knowing i will forget it very soon.
Worth a watch for scifi fans. This one was not the right fit for Travis Fimmel (Ragnar Lothbrook in Vikings), whose makeup was even more distracting than the weird Viking accent which seemed fake and melodramatic here. Still, there were some redeeming aspects, including the "brother" played by Jonathan Aris, who stole the show as the most interesting character, and overall a high quality production with a cast of other excellent actors worth mentioning: Guy Pierce, Colin Salmon, Ned Dennehy and Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson, all of whom saving it from being a complete disaster.
Did you know
- TriviaPrincipal photography was supposed to start in December 2019. Travis Fimmel was attached to play the lead role, but due to scheduling conflicts with Die in a Gunfight (2021), which was shooting in November and December, he dropped out, Guy Pearce replacing him. After the shooting of the film was moved to January 2020, Fimmel re-joined the project taking a supporting role.
- How long is Zone 414?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- 獵殺414區
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $6,250,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $3,703
- Runtime
- 1h 38m(98 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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