Kimi – Rear Window-Like Tech Thriller In 2022, With A Great Performance By Zoë Kravitz

A new face in the world of cybersecurity, Zoë Kravitz’s performance is that of an actress torn between fear and love. Her character has all the hallmarks familiar to a Kimi – Rear Window-Like Tech Thriller In 2022, With A Great Performance By Zoë Kravitz.

Kimi - Rear Window-Like Tech Thriller In 2022, With A Great Performance By Zoë Kravitz

 – Reminiscent of Alfred Hitchcock’s classic Rear Window, Steven Soderbergh’s tech thriller in which Zoe Kravitz stumbles upon evidence to a murder while testing artificial intelligence in this thriller set in the era of isolation thanks to COVID.

 

 

Steven Soderbergh’s somewhat wide and shifting filmography has failed to please moviegoers, while being delightfully distinctive. Some of his films are especially outstanding (such as Bubbles and Side Effects), while others are mediocre (such as In the Web of Sin) and one is exceptional (Girlfriend to Directing), but none have had a significant impact on the box office. Even yet, you can sense their excitement for filming. You might argue that they are Soderbergh’s protest against the blockbuster business, a method of reminding his audience, and possibly himself, that a picture can still be defined by a few basic aspects such as plot, performers, and camera angles. Except now, in the midst of the film industry’s gradual crisis (would people return to the theaters?) and inflated costs, Soderbergh’s newest short, the exquisite and menacing cyber-age corporate thriller Kimi, offers as a lesson on how to go forward. A timely reminder that in film, less may sometimes be more.

 

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COVID, the girl, and the virtual helper

 

It’s another another artful thriller pastiche that manages to pique your interest. Angela Childs (Zo Kravitz), a wavy, blue-haired, slender, stylish girl, peers out the window and basks in the late-morning sunlight while observing her neighbors (some of whom gaze back) in the apartment building across the street for more than half of the film. She then moves her gaze to her computer screen, where she works as a voice-stream translator for The Amygdala Corporation, which sells Kimi, a Siri-style virtual assistant.

We know that today’s faceless internet behemoths – Google, Facebook – don’t merely run on algorithms; human middlemen are at work behind the scenes. However, the mechanics of how it all works remain a mystery (part of the monolithic structure). Angela, who formerly worked for Facebook, is now in charge of monitoring Kimi’s command streams and advising the app on how to perform. She can do this from the comfort of her own home, and it is one of many variables that contribute to her agoraphobia. There’s an epidemic going on. There’s also the fact that he’s still coming to terms with a traumatic episode in his past. There’s also the hipster aloofness, which he transfers to the lawyer across the hall (Byron Bowers), whom he emails when he wants to fuck her but is too aloof to hang out with her outside of sex. She consults her mother (Robin Givens), her psychiatrist (Emily Kuroda), and a vodka-sipping Romanian tech expert on the internet (Alex Dobrenko). While stressing that #MeToo is still 50 years away in Romania, the latter insists on calling her “Hotness” (for “Bombshell”). “Kimi” is a story about COVID’s isolation from the rest of the world, among other things.

 

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A well-known narrative done in a clever manner

 

Angela hears a sound that gives her the creeps, the scary noises (a battle, a struggle, possibly a muffled cry) hidden behind the loudness of the pounding music, heightening the lonely ambiance. As a result, she listens to the other soundtracks in order to better understand the crime that may have occurred. The Romanian offers him a fictitious administrator code to get access to the machine that was making the sounds.

Is this a unique concept? No, not at all. This isn’t the first time we’ve seen anything like this. Not specifically in a Soderbergh film, but in The Conversation (where Gene Hackman played a lone surveillance sleuth who realizes he may have recorded a murder) and a few other film references that Soderbergh acknowledges with a wink: Magnification, Rear Window (Alfred Hitchcock), and The Tattooed Girl. Cliff Martinez’s soundtrack, which resembles the finest works of Bernard Herrmann, Alfred Hitchcock’s typical composer, contributes to the Hitchcockian mood.

 

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Kravitz is fantastic.

 

Zoe Kravitz, who was most recently seen in The Batman as Catwoman, dominates the whole picture with her coolly rigorous portrayal, her hard-kept coldness hinting at the deep worries that lay under the emotionless mask. When she finds a stream of such sounds via Angela Kimi, it’s as horrifying as the killings in Michael Clayton and Crimes and Misdemeanours. We see murder virtually every day in movies, but only a few are sufficiently related to the actual world to remind us that regular people commit the crime. Angela ultimately decides to leave her apartment only because she needs to tell her coworkers about her finding, who have pledged to contact the FBI. The Amygdala headquarters, like the whole metropolis in which Angela must soon hurriedly evacuate, conjures the setting of a real-life technocratic sci-fi.

“Kimi” is Soderbergh’s first collaboration with screenwriter David Koepp, who has a lengthy track record in the mainstream (“Jurassic Park,” “Carlito’s Way,” “Panic Room”), and Koepp’s narrative – in fact, everything about it – is constructed on very recognizable themes. Her discovery of a crime tied to corporate misconduct and corruption, her plot to elude the conspiracy, and her ultimate act of action all culminate in a final act of action.

 

 

 

We’re in serious need of a genuine, engaging thriller right now.

 

Why did I say “Kimi” is pointing us in the right direction? Because the film’s appeal is derived on Soderbergh’s direction’s low-budget glitz and provocative ingenuity. He’s evolved into a real minimalist indie cinema maestro. The joy of filmmaking is evident everywhere – in the way he frames each shot as a (non-accredited) cinematographer like a sentence in a story; in the hypnotically enigmatic dialogues between Amygdala’s CEO (Derek DelGaudio) and a colleague (Jaime Camil); in Rita Wilson’s mysterious little performance as the “reassuring” office manager; in the way the camera rushes towards Angela like In this manner, a nail gun becomes into a powerful weapon.

We need to return to this type of filmmaking energy if we want to see anything other than Marvel stories in theaters. In a sea of superhero movies, this film can take human experiences and transform them into a captivating thriller.

-BadSector-

– Reminiscent of Alfred Hitchcock’s classic Rear Window, Steven Soderbergh’s tech thriller in which Zoe Kravitz stumbles into the evidence to a murder while testing artificial intelligence in this thriller set in the era of isolation thanks to COVID. Steven Soderbergh’s somewhat wide and shifting filmography has failed to please moviegoers, while being delightfully distinctive. Some of his films are especially outstanding (such as Bubbles and Side Effects), while others are mediocre (such as In the Web of Sin), and one is exceptional (Girlfriend to Directing), but none of them have made a…

Kimi – In 2022, a Rear Window-Like Tech Thriller With A Fantastic Performance By Zo Kravitz

Kimi – In 2022, a Rear Window-Like Tech Thriller With A Fantastic Performance By Zo Kravitz

2022-03-11

Gergely Herpai (BadSector)

We need to return to this type of filmmaking energy if we want to see anything other than Marvel stories in theaters. In a sea of superhero movies, this film can take human experiences and transform them into a captivating thriller.

8.2 Direction
Actors have a score of 8.1.
8.4 for the story
8.6 for visuals/music/sounds
8.5 for atmosphere

8.4

EXCELLENT

We need to return to this type of filmmaking energy if we want to see anything other than Marvel stories in theaters. In a sea of superhero movies, this film can take human experiences and transform them into a captivating thriller.

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