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An unemployed aspiring "writer" Bill (Jeremy Theobald) has a peculiar hobby, shadowing strangers at random in the streets of London. When Cobb (Alex Haw), a man Bill has been following, catches him in the act, Bill is drawn into Cobb's world of breaking into flats and prying into the personal lives of their victims. In Bob, Bill finds a strange companion - part mentor, part confessor and part evil twin. With an ingenious structure that involves flash forwards and doubling back, the film tests our knowledge and understanding just as the protagonist is being duped into an elaborate triple-cross. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (8)

kaylin 

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English Christopher Nolan is a brilliant director and personally I look forward to every film he comes out with. Yes, "Batman" is mainly responsible for that, but his "Memento" got me hooked already. However, with "Inception" I was somewhat disappointed. Even though it is visually intriguing, it has great performances and a good script, it just didn't grab me. ()

lamps 

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English If there's one thing Christopher Nolan really knows how to do, it's to grab attention with a uniquely constructed story, which is exactly the case with his wondrous Following. Nothing expensive, nothing overly ambitious, and certainly nothing bursting with ideas, but you can get a lot out of even a little, and you can get even more out of it with your own skill and care. Of course, in terms of overall quality, this is only a minor creative warm-up for the far richer Memento, but Nolan proved himself in his debut to be such a skilled cinematographer, such a great screenwriter with a unique sense of timing, and, most importantly, such an excellent director that Following deserves no condemnation at all alongside all the Batmans and Inceptions. But you’ll have to see for yourselves. :-) 75% ()

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3DD!3 

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English Excellent. Nolan works skillfully with storytelling, he knows when to tell and when not to tell, if you know what I mean. The whole time you’re following him, breathing down his neck, but he knows full well that you’re there and so he changes direction to confuse you and then disappears all of a sudden, only to reappear behind you and push you under a train. And the only thing that crosses your mind as you fall under the wheels of the express is... surprise. ()

DaViD´82 

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English Nolan’s low-budget feature-length debut, where he used a storytelling style similar to The Prestige. You can easily recognize the themes and means of expression that he eventually develops to absolute perfection in his later work. Following has a lot to offer even when you already know later, more famous movies from this director. It perfectly captures atmosphere of the London suburbs perfectly, has decent actors and, most importantly, a very well written and original screenplay. Jeremy Theobald is definitely worth mentioning, who already appeared in Nolan’s short, Doodlebug. It’s a terrible shame that, with exception of those two, he never appeared in anything else, because he is a really good actor, has charisma as well and his voice is specifically his, like few others. ()

Isherwood 

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English At first, it appears like Nolan is going to explore the depths of the soul of one miserable voyeur. After a while, however, he deftly twists the plot into a dark thriller, where the viewer cannot be sure even of the focus of the characters, let alone the next few minutes. The artful editing (the story takes place over three time planes) and the director's work as a precise turner create a film for which I can’t help but nod my head in approval. The ending can also shake hands with Singer's The Usual Suspects, no question about it. ()

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