25 Mar Inside Movie Review
INSIDE
dir. Vasilis Katsoupis, starring Willem DaFoe
A high-end art thief becomes trapped inside a luxury, high-tech penthouse in New York’s Times Square after his heist doesn’t go as planned. Locked inside with nothing but priceless works of art, he must use all his cunning and invention to survive.
If you’ve seen the trailer, Inside is exactly what you think it is: a man trapped in a high-end condo with no avenues of escape. The no-frills, approach to the story hits the ground running with Willem DaFoe’s Nemo trapped within the first 10 minutes. These 10 minutes are enough to establish the only necessaries the audience needs: art thief, in a penthouse loaded with expensive artwork, owner out of the country. The other 95 minutes showcase Nemo’s ingenuity, his many setbacks, and his decaying thought process as the penthouse deteriorates into a wasteland of filth, a visual representation of his mental state. As a one man show, it’s incredible to watch DaFoe’s Nemo work through his obstacles and observe how he navigates his failures. As a movie, it’s longer than it needs to be, wearing its premise thin before Nemo reaches his final conclusion.
Willem DaFoe is a one man force in this movie. While it’s been done countless times throughout cinema to varying degrees (Sam Rockwell in Moon, Redford in All Is Lost, Tom Hardy in Locke), the concept of seeing only one person on the screen for the vast majority of the performance is a tall task for an actor and DaFoe’s slow descent into madness is expertly conveyed. An actor who’s shown multiple times over his career to play characters that are a bit unhinged or or coming apart at the scenes, DaFoe calls upon those past roles to portray a man losing his grip on reality the more desperate he becomes. The internet loves to poke fun at DaFoe’s crazy eyes and wild performances, and Inside shows just how good he is with these types of roles.
Directed by first time director Vasilis Katsoupis, Inside shows promise in an interesting directing career while also displaying some flaws. A one person story that carries across an feature length runtime is a difficult enough feat for a veteran storyteller; Katsoupis tackles it right out of the gate. Inside is highlighted by its minimalist nature; the only things the viewer has to focus on is Willem DaFoe and the penthouse. To its credit, the production design is well thought out, lending a sense of someone with far too much money having just enough items scattered about to give Nemo a fighting chance at survival. Katsoupis and screenwriter Ben Hopkins dole out enough small victories (and a number of setbacks) to keep audiences baited and rooting for the thief.
Overall, Inside is a decent feature debut from Katsoupis. At 105 minutes, the pacing drags at times due to not having enough material to justify its runtime. Had 15-20 minutes been shaved from the story, viewers would’ve experienced a much more lean, faster moving story of a man desperate to escape. As it stands, though, it’s a great vessel to spotlight Willem DaFoe’s talents and let him shine. Great production design, an intriguing premise, and an actor talented enough to hold the audience’s attention for the majority of the time, the film is good enough weeknight watch after work. Inside is currently in theaters.
Review by Darryl Mansel
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