Trance

  • France Trance
Trailer 2

Plots(1)

A fine art auctioneer mixed up with a gang joins forces with a hypnotherapist to recover a lost painting. As boundaries between desire, reality and hypnotic suggestion begin to blur the stakes rise faster than anyone could have anticipated. (Fox Searchlight Pictures US)

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Trailer 2

Reviews (11)

kaylin 

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English Okay, it's true that this movie is very convoluted and that I wanted to see it mainly because Rosario Dawson is in it and she really shows a lot. A gorgeous woman. "Trans" is cluttered and something could be cut out, but the rules are clearly set and the truth can be anywhere. It's up to you whether you accept the message of the film or not. And I accept it, especially when the actors are this great. Danny Boyle is once again very brave. ()

POMO 

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English “What we are is the sum of everything we've ever said, done and felt all wrapped up in one unique thread, which is constantly being revised and remembered. To be yourself, you have to constantly remember yourself.” Trance is a sophisticated game with the audience that doesn’t make much sense (it has put too much on its shoulders), but is unpredictable from start to finish and damn entertaining, mysterious and sexy. Danny Boyle is having fun here with a kaleidoscopically varied perception of events and confused character motivations, and reveals his weakness for Brian De Palma’s fast-paced thrillers. ()

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3DD!3 

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English Knock! Knock! Knock! A cute crime movie, cut precisely to suit today’s fashion. It’s just that hypnosis isn’t so central as PR tried to imply and the painting isn’t absolutely what this is about. Sanity, lies, anger, love and hate. Boyle mixed this cocktail following his own traditional recipe and his signature is apparent in almost every shot (the beaker thrown at the camera), maybe the trailers gave away too much. Cassel excellent, Rosario Dawson super smooth and McAvoy masterfully swaps roles and is the inconspicuous puppet master of the entire Trance. Delightful and not completely stupid. Rick Smith supervised the creation of the first-rate music. ()

novoten 

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English An overcooked start. There is a voiceover, an unreliable narrator, an attractive plot, and expensive art. After twenty minutes, only a hint of the original idea remains, which surprisingly, even by Danny Boyle's standards, fails to reach a sufficiently high level with its piercing visual and thunderous musical accompaniment. I am all for surprising twists or the denial of clichés through lively passion. However, all of this must not happen at the expense of the viewer's engagement. ()

gudaulin 

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English Danny Boyle is a director whose work cannot be overlooked. He handles the craft perfectly, he is creative and playful, and able to surprise us with technical tricks and film effects. Whether he works in any genre, he can create an impressive spectacle and his directing skills often overshadow weak screenplay foundations and outweigh banal subject matter. Trance is, at first glance, a crime film about a heist that, after the initial success, gets stuck and turns into a nightmare for its participants. The heist was successful, but the question remained: where is the loot, who is trying to blind everyone, who is being manipulated by whom, and who is pulling the strings? Although I understood that Boyle was primarily playing with me as a viewer, I easily engaged in the game and I can say for myself that I enjoyed it probably more than all three of Danny's previous films combined. For the average summer movie theatergoer, Boyle's thriller is probably too complicated, resembling a complex strategic board game where most players expect a lively party game without excessive mental strain. However, I very much enjoyed all the twists where the view of the earlier plot and its actors fundamentally changed, and I don't mind that in reality, hypnosis wouldn't work like this. In my opinion, Trance is one of the few films that can be enjoyed repeatedly and even appreciated more during subsequent screenings. Overall impression: 95%. ()

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