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Ladyworld

2018

Action / Thriller

9
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten52%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled28%
IMDb Rating3.410474

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Maya Hawke Photo
Maya Hawke as Romy
Odessa Adlon Photo
Odessa Adlon as Blake
Annalise Basso Photo
Annalise Basso as Piper
Ryan Simpkins Photo
Ryan Simpkins as Dolly
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
813.64 MB
1280*544
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
P/S ...
1.46 GB
1920*816
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
P/S 2 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by paul_haakonsen1 / 10

Oh dear lord, this was bad...

Right, well I should have stopped and looked at the rating of this particular movie on IMDb before venturing out and sitting down to watch the 2018 thriller "Ladyworld".

And why is that you may ask. Well, because this movie was atrociously boring and unappealing. I managed to endure 35 minutes of the torture that the movie turned out to be. And during those prolonged, excruciating 35 minutes I also managed to drift off towards the land of sleep.

Wow, this movie was a snoozefest. The storyline was so incredibly boring that it was just unfathomable. And it didn't really help one bit that the characters in the movie were equally boring and pointless. Nor were the strange annoying sounds throughout the movie making it better.

"Ladyworld" from writers Amanda Kramer and Benjamin Shearn was just a massive swing and a miss. I was bored throughout the 35 minutes that I managed to suffer through. And let me just be the first to say that I am not - never ever - returning to watch the rest of the movie. Because there simply was nothing worthwhile to watch here.

My rating of "Ladyworld" is, without a shadow of a doubt, a single star out of ten. This is one of the worst and most boring movies I had ever had the chance to sit down and watch. Do yourself a massive favor, and give this movie a wide, wide berth.

Reviewed by BandSAboutMovies4 / 10

Little earthquakes

What if Lord of the Flies only had women? That's pretty much the question posed by this 2018 movie, which was directed by Amanda Kramer.

The film begins with a disorienting earthquake that soon finds eight teenage girls trapped in a house together. As supplies begin to run low, so does their grip on reality and sanity.

One of the characters, Dolly, says "We're not boys. We're not brutal." That's not true. After all, I've had numerous young boys punch me in the face and I can't remember their names, while the slings and arrows of women hurt you way worse and are so much more memorable.

Soon, Olivia (Gert from Marvel's Runaways) and Piper (Annalise Basso, Oculus and Ouija: Origin of Evil) are vying for leadership over the pack of girls, who are soon dressed in increasingly strange and more fashion-forward costumes. Their world is dominated by worries of further earthquakes and the potential of a man who may have snuck into the house.

Ryan Simpkins, who was the young co-lead alongside Maggie Gyllenhaal in Sherrybaby, plays Dolly. Maya Hawke, who was such a breakout actress on the most recent season of Stranger Things, also appears.

The film comes off as quite similar to a stage play. Your willingness to deal with its long pauses and extended takes will determine how much you enjoy it, as well as how much you can deal with artier films. Don't go in expecting a slasher movie.

Reviewed by I_Ailurophile10 / 10

Mislabeled, misunderstood - marvelous

I'll watch almost anything. Sometimes that works in my favor, sometimes it doesn't. It's hard not to notice the poor reception this movie has garnered, but I've watched others, just as low-rated, and found them a marvel. I tried to approach 'Ladyworld' with an open mind, ready for anything.

Much more than I thought could be the best case scenario - I actually really like 'Ladyworld.' I know I hold a minority view here. That's okay.

I appreciate the opening: As introductory credits appear as white text on a black screen, we're treated to a great cacophony of sound, representing whatever calamity it was - seemingly a massive earthquake - to set the story in motion. For that matter, from a technical standpoint, the sound is rather pristine. I also enjoy Callie Ryan's score - sparse and shifting, at times an ambient soundscape, at others a discordant arrangement of non-lyrical vocals, but always lending its substantial uneasy atmosphere to the film. Honestly, I enjoy the music so much I'd love to be able to download it, or in some other way add it to my collection. Hats off to the wardrobe and makeup departments, too, for some fine work.

Characters in 'Ladyworld' represent a variety of personalities, their mentalities increasingly deteriorating as time passes. Some characters are notably more dominant or submissive, while others strike a balance and try to keep the peace. Most distinct of all are Piper (Annalise Basso),forceful, mocking, and cruel; Dolly (Ryan Simpkins),unstable and despondent in her despair and emotional disturbance; and Olivia (Ariela Barer),reasonable and steady but struggling to maintain a semblance of order. Romy (Maya Hawke) seems to very quickly demonstrate the collapse of her mental state, even more so than the others - and even still falling farther as Piper splits the group and becomes ever more predatory.

Dialogue - interactions, and story beats generally - range from the mundane, to troubled outbursts or acting out; from philosophizing, to social commentary, and building to combative, venomous barbs of posturing. The depiction of these elements pointedly grows in ferocity as characters' mindsets crumble further. Cosmetics and assembled outfits are worn to exaggerated effect portending warpaint and tribal division. Aggressive displays of status increasingly turn violent - until at last the veil is lifted from the microcosm of necessitated self-reliance, and all are left shattered by what has transpired.

Through it all, I genuinely think every performance here is fantastic. The screenplay and characterizations require robust attention to nuance, even as the fractured upheaval swells in amplitude, and I think every young actress in the cast is more than capable. Far be it from me to single anyone out, but I think Hawke's role as Romy is especially built on subtlety - the timbre of her voice, the look in her eyes. And while I'm predisposed to liking Hawke based on what I've seen of her elsewhere, I think she particularly stands out in 'Ladyworld.' Again, though, don't take that as a slight against others; I'd love to see more films from everyone involved.

Film-maker Amanda Kramer serves both as writer, conjuring the narrative and all within, and as director, finding eye-catching shots and guiding the cast and crew in her vision. She has concocted a fine, compelling, artful examination of social order and the universal trend toward chaos. It's easy to read 'Ladyworld' as an adaptation, after a fashion, of 'Lord of the flies' - and that's very fair; parallels are obvious. But this film leans significantly more into an artistic expression than into a plain story.

As if any aspect didn't vividly drive that point home, the very setting and premise demand the same calculated suspension of disbelief as any play conducted on a theatrical stage. From our place in the audience, taking the film at face value would tell us these young women could easily break a window and escape their circumstances. But we don't take any other movie at face value, and it's to our detriment to do so here. And so the exceptional substance of the film flows from the one supposition it asks us to accept: That a disaster has led to confinement. Lights, camera, action.

I earnestly believe that 'Ladyworld' has been mislabeled, and marketed inappropriately, thereby inviting undeserved criticism. It's a thriller, technically and truly, but it's such an overwhelmingly underhanded, inventively crafted interpretation of a thriller that the term almost doesn't meaningfully apply. It depends ponderously on actors and their characters, dialogue and physical action, imagination and belief, in their most basic, deconstructed definitions. It depends on these root elements so much that it sincerely feels like a semi-esoteric short film - light on narrative, heavy on intent and meaning - extended with profound, surprising deftness to feature length. At that, it almost feels less like a feature length film, and more like a play, caught on film.

It's unquestionably dense, less than conventional in its storytelling, and markedly disorderly in its chosen medium. I couldn't begrudge anyone for disliking this movie who has engaged with it honestly; I can understand the difficulty. I have a hard time imagining who I might recommend it to, because the correct receptive audience is so extremely select. Yet for any comparison to other stories, any minor lack of refinement, any imperfection, I find this to be peculiarly outstanding.

I don't think it's entirely perfect, in terms of content alone. Yet the technical skill behind its construction - the unique, unforgettable music - and above all the momentous artistic challenge Kramer has undertaken all combine to elevate my opinion higher than it already would be. Misunderstood as I believe it to be, by no means is 'Ladyworld' for everyone. But it's absolutely for me.

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