travelingtimely-68279
"Now why don't y'all stop it with all this".
"This is like just a normal room".What a bad, bad movie. Not anything special, but more un-special in every way. And how did the coffee mug dissappear in the beginning? Were they trying to say older brother was brainwashing? Or did he stick a mug with coffee into his pocket? I'll take coffee to go over this movie any day.
jtncsmistad
I like atmospheric. I like edgy. I like esoteric. I just don't like to be bludgeoned into a stupor with it. That's what watching the mega-weird murder mystery drama "The Strange Ones" conspired to do to me.The only remotely redeeming aspects to recommend here is the spooky score by a pair of killer flutists and the performance of the great character actor Gene Jones. The rest of this plodding trash can be tossed deep into that creepy cave and abandoned.
lavatch
Early in "The Strange Ones," there is a crucial scene in which the two main characters, the twenty-something Nick and the teenage Sam, are on the road, clearly running away from their past. Sam's home has been burnt to the ground, and, inside, the body of his father has been found, not a victim of the fire, but of being bludgeoned to death. Nick and Sam arrive at a motel with an inviting swimming pool. The kind lady proprietor offers them free lodging during the off season. But then, the young kid Sam has a conversation with the woman, in which he calls his "brother" a liar and suggests that the woman may be in danger due to the brother's penchant for violence. Afterwards, Nick and Sam make a quick exit from the motel after the woman has likely shown them the door.What are we to make of Sam's advice to the hotel manager? Was he telling the truth about his psychotic older friend? Or was he lying because he himself is the psycho and is only behaving like the sadistic little kid that he is?The film keeps the audience guessing about the true nature of the road buddies, and it does so with psychological symbols and archetypes, such as the black cat, the cave, and the Oedipal complex.One might argue that the film is overly manipulative of its audience. In one scene at a wilderness retreat for young people, the wily man who heads up the program asks Sam to recount his recurring nightmare. The audience views the nightmare in which Sam kills his father. But is the dream a distortion of reality, or was this a true depiction of the murder?One of the strengths of the film is the evocation of a sinister mood. An ominous feeling hovers over most of the scenes and the characters. While walking through the woods, Nick and Sam encounter a middle age couple, and the mundane conversation is filled with dark undercurrents. Sam arrives at the children's camp and observes a couple of the boys engaged in theft or some activity that is verboten; they insist to Sam that he not reveal what he saw to the camp manager. Is this really recreational camp for youngsters, or is it a penal colony/rehab center for juvenile delinquents? In the most bizarre scene of all, a female classmate of Sam has invited him to live in her home after the death of his father. But the scene in the bedroom with two teenagers is grotesque, unwholesome, and disturbing, especially when the young woman reveals that she covered for Sam when telling the police that he was just joking when he texted her that he wanted to kill his father! She also waxes philosophical when saying that "You never really know a person, you know." And yet, she seems to know all of the intimate details of the troubled history of young Sam. In the scene following the bedroom conversation, Sam hightails it out of the house with his backpack, heading back to the wilderness.This ominous road picture about two young males who at best are pathological liars and at worst cold blooded murderers and arsonists, may be summed up in this snippet of dialogue:--"Where are we?"
--"Nowhere."Indeed, the state of mind of the two strange ones may not be found on any traditional road map, but only in the deepest, darkest caverns of the human psyche.
Michael Ledo
Nick (Alex Pettyfer) and Sam, you can call me Jeremiah (James Freedson-Jackson) are traveling away from...? something to do with a fire. We watch them talk, eat, sleep in their car, get a motel room, get their car fixed, and other boring things for 50 or so minutes until we discover what the heck the film and fire were about. And it didn't help. Guide: No swearing or sex. Male butt nudity.