Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Watch Online Free ‘The Animal Kingdom 2010' Hollywood Movie | Download English Movie The Animal Kingdom 2010 Review


Animal Kingdom (2010) " English Hollywood Film Released on 13 Aug 2010, 2010

 Animal Kingdom (2010) Documentary  movie story Hollywood movie Online movie trailer Animal Kingdom (2010) Documentary  Movie review English   movie Online

                     CREW:
                                            Director: David Michôd
                                            Screenwriter:  David Michôd  
                                            Release Date: 13 Aug 2010, 2010 (limited)
                                            Genre: Drama
                                            Studio: Screen Australia Porchlight Films
                                            Runtime:112 minutes
                                           
                     CAST:
                                    Ben Mendelsohn, Jacki Weaver, Guy Pearce, Luke Ford, Joel Edgerton, Sullivan Stapleton, James Frecheville, Daniel Wyllie, Anthony Hayes, Laura Wheelwright

Animal Kingdom (2010)Plot Summary


Animal Kingdom, Michod’s feature directorial debut, is a story about the intense loyalty, or lack thereof, among a family of professional criminals faced with their own undoing when the police  stop playing fair.  It is chock full of grossly understated tragedy, slowly bubbling from simmering tension to a roiling boil by the end. The film opens with 17-year-old Josh, helplessly sitting beside his mother as she silently dies of a heroin overdose. He is then taken in by his grandmother, known to her family as Smurf, who lives with her four sons, all partners in crime. Though the crimes for which they are wanted are never actually shown, it is suggested by stills from a bank robbery over the opening credits.

Animal Kingdom (2010)Story

Animal Kingdom is the gritty and violent debut feature from talented writer/director David Michod.   Set in the dangerous Melbourne underworld, Animal Kingdom revolves around a young man thrust into a family of crime and the severe consequences that result.  Michod has crafted a near great yet slightly flawed film.

Animal Kingdom (2010)SYNOPSIS

 Welcome to the terrifying Melbourne crime underworld, where tensions are on the brink of exploding between felons and renegade cops - the Wild West played out on the city's streets in broad daylight. ... read more read more...The Cody brothers, a gang of armed robbers, are in the process of initiating their teenage nephew Joshua 'J' (James Frecheville) into their frightening world after the death of his mother and under the watchful eye of his matriarchal grandmother, Smurf (Jacki Weaver), a modern-day Ma Barker.

Ben Mendelsohn plays Pope, the oldest brother of the Cody clan, who tries unsuccessfully to come to terms with the fact that his partner and best friend, Barry 'Baz' Brown (Joel Edgerton), wants out of the game. Craig (Sullivan Stapleton), the middle brother with a hair trigger, deals and does cocaine while the youngest brother Darren (Luke Ford) fights with his conscience as he participates in the family business. All of them are adored, sustained and supported by Smurf, who seems to be pulling the strings.

J quickly comes to believe that he is a player in this world, but soon discovers that the entire situation is far larger and more menacing than he could ever imagine. Guy Pearce plays senior police officer Nathan Leckie, who, recognizing that J's youth and inexperience might well prove to be the key to finally conquering the Codys, tries to lure him into the fold after the death of a close associate. In order to survive, J must determine how the game is played and choose his place in this cunning and brutal animal kingdom.
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Animal Kingdom (2010) REVIEW

David Michod’s Animal Kingdom starring Ben Mendelsohn, Jacki Weaver, Guy Pearce, James Frecheville had its final screening at the Sundance Film Festival Thursday afternoon, leaving more than a few dozen disappointed wait-listers stuck until this summer to check out this terrific, seething crime drama.  Luckily, this tireless minion of ScreenCrave was present and is here to whet your appetites for what’s surely going to be regarded as one of the best films to come out of Australia since John Hillcoat & Nick Cave’s The Proposition.  Check out the review after the jump…

Animal Kingdom, Michod’s feature directorial debut, is a story about the intense loyalty, or lack thereof, among a family of professional criminals faced with their own undoing when the police stop playing fair.  It is chock full of grossly understated tragedy, slowly bubbling from simmering tension to a roiling boil by the end. The film opens with 17-year-old Josh, helplessly sitting beside his mother as she silently dies of a heroin overdose. He is then taken in by his grandmother, known to her family as Smurf, who lives with her four sons, all partners in crime. Though the crimes for which they are wanted are never actually shown, it is suggested by stills from a bank robbery over the opening credits.

As they divide up their shares from the heist, they hear rumors that the task force assigned to shut down their operation is on the verge of being disbanded for failing to accomplish their goals. All they’ve got to do is lay low, and all their problems will disappear. However, just as he is forming an exit strategy from his life of crime, one of the brothers is gunned down by the police with no more warning than a casually shouted, “He’s got a gun!”  Thus begins a back and forth of acts of revenge between the criminals and the police.

Caught in world in which he doesn’t belong, Josh finds himself being used by both sides in ways that could cost him more dearly than he can imagine.  With no refuge or respite, Josh must look over both shoulders to protect himself from the police who will stop at nothing to win their war, and his psychotic, desperate uncles who stand to lose everything.

The performances in this film are so subtle, subdued, and engaging that it is easy to get lost in the deep and complex emotions wrought by the events, and every turn of the plot comes as a complete surprise.  Each character’s sly machinations come off so naturally that the eventual barbarity of their outcomes is utterly shattering.  James Frecheville, as Josh, shuffles through each scene, sullen and somber, with the weight of the world saddled upon him, barely able to conceal his terror.   Jackie Weaver’s Grandma Smurf sustains a sweetness and unconditional love for her boys that only gets scarier as the film goes on.  Guy Pearce plays the former angle of the good cop/bad cop duo so sublimely that his manipulative intentions practically go unnoticed.   The standout performance of the film, however, belongs to Ben Mendelsohn as the eldest brother, Pope.  Quiet and calculating, his demented, unhinged rage is barely concealed below his frighteningly blank surface.

Like every other aspect of the film, Adam Arkapaw’s photography is staggeringly inconspicuous.  It allows Melbourne to be a unique setting, while maintaining the notion that such brutal actions could take place anywhere in the world.  The violence in the film is always unexpected, abrupt and hideous, without any lingering examination or glorification.  The film is eliberately paced, the ever-mounting tension prevents the film from dragging or feeling slow at any point.  It is more than fair to say that Michael Mann could learn a thing or two from the craftsmanship of this film.

Animal Kingdom is a truly great film.  Wrenching and tragic, this film takes the crime drama away from the crime itself and into the heart of the dynamics of families that, depending on your perspective, have too much or not enough love to allow each other to go on the way they have.  Perfectly crafted, Animal Kingdom leaves the audience feeling like a frog in a pot of water, who couldn’t notice that the water was boiling until it was already too late.

Animal Kingdom (2010) Trailer






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