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True Fiction

2019

Action / Horror / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Julian Richings Photo
Julian Richings as Lenny Rupert
Julian Black Antelope Photo
Julian Black Antelope as Peter Lavigne
Sara Garcia Photo
Sara Garcia as Avery Malone
John Cassini Photo
John Cassini as Caleb Conrad
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
888.72 MB
1280*566
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 36 min
P/S ...
1.78 GB
1920*848
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 36 min
P/S ...
887.55 MB
1280*560
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 36 min
P/S 1 / 1
1.72 GB
1904*832
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 36 min
P/S 1 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by wandernn1-81-6832746 / 10

The Rewrites????? Huh???

We begin with a snow covered cabin in the woods where we find a masked guy with a big knife pounding on his chest motivating to do bad things. We hear screaming in the background begging for help! Credits Roll..

+1 Star I really liked the opening to set the mood.

Next a job interview.. An aspiring writer? Looking for a job as a writer's assistant. I like the interview.

Later....this interviewee she's on some talk show talking about her book. Apparently this is some dream or vision of her aspirations.

She got the job! She's an assistant. When she arrives at her job, apparently a live in job, dude takes her phone away. 'No Distractions!' he says. Well he didn't take away the record player in her cabin? That seems a distraction!!! Ruh Roh theres a locked door she finds in her big cabin. She's immediately afraid of it. Probably for good reason!!!!

She meets CALEB...her name is Avery. Introductions are made. Caleb introduces her to a 'game'. A controlled experiment in FEAR. Haha. And she is going to be the subject of this GAME.

So the experiment in fear begins. Water turning on in her cabin. Sounds from under the bed... oh no its dreams! Already?? Waking to creaking from the floor inside her cabin....

Haha trapped in some kind of wrapping she really starts to freak out. She can hear Caleb typing. Oh my she's been trapped in that cocoon thing and having weird visions.

Caleb has a woman chained up in a room and pretends he can't see her when Avery is freaking out about her. Avery runs and tries to break out of the cabin but the windows are break proof. Caleb has her locked up real good!!!! Caleb parades Allison as an actress to try to get Avery to cooperate. Avery doesn't fall for it. And Caleb gets upset.

Avery comes forward knife in hand to confront Caleb while he is typing. Caleb reads a portion of what he has written to her. Caleb allows Avery to chain him up. Caleb says 'The Sooner We Finish The book, the sooner you can go home.'

+1 Star here this is actually quite fun.

So Avery has a knife, in the dark the masked man we saw in the beginning approaches her. Avery stabbed the hell out of him. Haha. I guess he is dead.

Avery and Caleb have a long discussion, where Caleb tells Avery how he predicted her every move. Avery attacks Caleb and captures him. Caleb's friend comes to the scene and Avery apparently kills her also with a knife. I wonder if Caleb saw this coming????!!!!!!

Avery starts going through all of Caleb's stuff. His safe. His photos. LOL Caleb confesses to Avery that he's really not Caleb Conrad, and that he's an actor. This is funny stuff. That this has all been a setup from the beginning. Haha apparently he's lying! Nice Try tho!!! Really nice one!!! Avery has Caleb Conrad chained up!!!!

Caleb is finally acting like he's in real danger now. He's missing fingers. He finds his dead masked friend in the bed. Caleb and Avery have fight! Is this it???

So at the end, Avery is still alive. Cracks a horrible joke in an interview and the interviewer / talk show host cracks up laughing and so does the 'audience' / laugh track. Whoa I was stymied by how lame that joke was with the canned laughter and actually.....

-1 Star for the lame ending.

Final. 6/10 But definitely not a movie for everyone. Haha.

Reviewed by kosmasp7 / 10

Writing a novel ... is hard

And "deadly" - for your sanity and other "things". Now the German title of the movie got a tag line that some may say is quite the spoiler ... at least it indicates something that already gives you a view into what you are about to watch. German title "givers" like to do stuff like that ... explaining or spoiling a movie ... it is what it is.

The movie may have a slow pace at the beginning, but once it gets going ... it really gets going! And yes there is only a binary choice when it comes to guessing where this leads ... so no cookie for you if you guess it right. Still this can be entertaining, while also straining and exhausting! Yes the main characters seem despicable to say the least ... or not likeable ... but if you wrap your head around that, if you suspend your disbelief ... this can be the horror/thriller you can dig and be entertained by (not literally, you know what I mean).

Reviewed by lucasnochez4 / 10

Film Review: True Fiction

The relationship between authors and their subjects has been very familiar territory for the horror genre. With classic horror films like The Shining and Misery, as well as contemporary horror favourites like 1408 and Sinister, True Fiction dabbles with the idea of controlled experiment in fear being the basis for murder, chaos and mayhem.

True Fiction is a physiological film, first and foremost. Blending the very blurred lines of reality, fantasy and toying with the perspectives of its two leads, the film becomes a feast for audience members to allow their imaginations to roam freely and vividly. A game of power and control, writer and director Braden Croft blends a familiar narrative of the cat-and-mouse game into a power struggle between accomplished author and his very polite, young and sweet test subject.

As the film opens, we are introduced to Avery Malone (Sara Garcia),an aspiring writer with some dark secrets about her past and her family, who is being interview for a position as an assistant to her favourite horror writer, Caleb Conrad (John Cassini). Seeing the opportunity as a unique experience to gain some writing tips and advice for her own, eventual work, she is given the opportunity to work with her idol, and accepts the position, almost blindly. Soon, she is picked up and driven to an isolated and secluded cottage, at an undisclosed location. Relinquishing her phone and her daily responsibilities, she is given the opportunity to explore the cottage, with the exception of a few locked doors. Shortly after, the highly mysterious and reclusive writer Caleb Conrad mysteriously appears in his study, where the two lay out the terms and agreements of their working relationship. Avery, without hesitation, signs over all consent to Caleb and quickly becomes his guinea pig, playing in his little, twisted game of analyzing fear and her deepest, darkest secrets. As time passes and the lines of reality and fantasy are blurred, Avery soon begins to question Caleb's methods as well as the truths behind why she is really there in the first place.

True Fiction may not be the work of a seasoned horror master, but explores very menacing ideas of identity, at times, making Croft's execution seem a little more confusing than it should. Croft's ability to use dream-like scenarios and reality, at times, are his downfall, extrapolating the expectations and experience of the audience with sometimes uneven narrative flow. We often question Caleb's intentions, as well as, who the true protagonist and antagonist really is. The film's pace trots along quite well in the first two acts, but stalls in the third.

What's really quite interesting about True Fiction is Croft's, as well as his cast's, ability to switch the power of each character's so effortlessly and without much accountability. With each passing scene, the audience becomes quite confused, various times, as to who the villain and hero really are. The idea of submitting to your captor really gets put into question with every scene, and sometimes takes away from the overall threat that Croft sets up so patiently in the beginning.

One of True Fiction's greatest achievements, is its commitment to the craft. While Canadian horror films aren't quite applauded as much as American horror films, with the exception, of course, of a good ol' Cronenberg film, the genre of horror in Canada is one that has been deemed, unfulfilled. I mean, sure, we have film like Ginger Snaps and Splice as well as a whole slew of co-produced American/Canadian horror films, but the genre is one that has yet to breakthrough and gain the respect from audiences and critics as much as American and Japanese horror films have.

Unfortunately, True Fiction does not have the muscle to become that film that really breaks out for Canadian horror. As its character Caleb Conrad states often to Avery, her character as well as the film itself, has an uncanny ability do what its told, and follow in the footsteps of so many before them. While True Fiction may be applauded for its ability to conjure up imagination, inspire interpretation and give audiences some bloody good fun, the shocks and chills are too short lived, the acting is a bit too Canadian-campy and the story does not stand on its own two feet long enough to question whether what we are seeing is truth, reality, or merely, unpolished storytelling.

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