Friday, February 24, 2012

Solitary (2009)

NetFlix 3.1/5
IMDB 5.7/10
My Rating: 6.5/10

One day, Sara finds herself unexpectedly stricken with severe agoraphobia and is unable to leave her home.  When her husband goes missing, she is trapped inside her house with only her sister, police detectives, and her doctor to link her to the outside world.  As the mystery of her vanished husband deepens, she begins to unravel.  

Here is the classic "Movie that no one has heard of" - As I write this, it only has one review on IMDB and I don't know a single other person who's seen it, but it's worth seeing.  It is a gripping mixture of some very unbalanced elements - Dull direction, a great lead actress, unconvincing secondary characters, a mediocre TV movie feel, and a genuinely tense and moving story.  In the end, the quality of the story wins out over the film's demerits and I would certainly recommend it to others.  Be prepared to think I'm crazy, though, because this is how you'll react when you start watching this:
  • There are no recognizable actors in this.  It looks like a soap opera.  Is this a TV movie?  Do they still make network TV movies?
  • Wow, those are some genuinely unconvincing suspense scenes.  I've really never seen the camera come flying up behind someone before, to the tune of a screeching soundtrack.  That KFP guy actually liked this?
  • Hmm.  TV movie direction mixed with long quiet bits of tedium, and now something totally unbelievable?  My suspension of disbelief has crawled away and died.  Is this trying to be SF or what?  
  • OK, that was creepy.
  • Is this Gaslight?  Suddenly I find myself getting wrapped up in this.
  • Holy crap, OK, that was very weird indeed.  What the hell is going on here?
  • My entire brain is focused on trying to figure out what is happening.
  • Scary!  But I think I have it figured out.
  • Wow.  I was wrong.  That was excellent.  What a great ending, even with the fairly awful FX.
So, if it sounds like I'm running the movie down regarding its no-budget feel, let me stress that ultimately, the story and your emotional involvement with the main character will overcome its limitations and grab you tight.  By the time it was over, my crying wife had the Kleenexes out - That was how unexpectedly wrapped up we'd gotten in it, after spending the first half hour trying to decide if we should give up and go watch Airport '75 instead.
Our heroine Sara starts off with the perfect life - Happily married to a guy who brings her breakfast in bed and full of wholesome suburban bliss.  One day she goes out for a run and is stricken with agoraphobia, manifested by cheesy "camera zooming up behind her" flourishes that we've seen a million times.  Not wanting her husband to think she's a freak, she keeps this panic attack secret until the day he goes off to work and never returns...  Leaving her literally trapped in her home by her terror of going outside.

The movie starts to get going when she calls police detectives out, and we're also introduced to a troublesome relationship with her sister and one very creepy doctor.  Supposedly this fellow is a specialist in her sort of phobia and he wants to test a new treatment on her.  Considering that this is a doctor who refuses to enter by the front door and who turns up at some very odd hours, it's hard to imagine trusting him with a box of matches, but Sara is forced to rely on him as her link to sanity... and, hopefully, the outside world.
And...  That's all I can really say about the plot.  What I can say is that it draws you in slowly - What starts off feeling stilted and clumsy becomes part of the unfolding narrative, and eventually it does all make sense.  I give the movie great credit for actually tying up its loose ends and providing a genuinely emotional conclusion.  I give it even more credit for keeping me guessing the whole way.  A few folks on Netflix complained that they figured it out, but I had no clue what was happening till the end - It grows into a seriously tangled mystery that could be anything from a straightforward Gaslight-style thriller to a time travel sci fi trip.

And yes, it does span genres...  It's a dab of horror and a lot of thriller and two scoops of mystery.  Think of it as a semi-horror film that you can watch on date night, that your SO will enjoy a lot more than Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2.  One moment you're in full "Spot the clues" mode and the next you're tensed up as strange noises start happening in the night.
Another point in its favor is lead actress Amber Jaeger.  She carries the weight of the film and while the other characters are often stilted and distant, she pulls you into her plight even during the times you want to strangle her.  It can't be easy to sell fear when your only indicator is standing at a doorway looking out, but she really convinces as a bright and directed young woman determined to get her husband and her life back, whatever the cost.  This makes it that much harder to watch as the increasing isolation of her predicament takes its toll on her.

My final verdict - Above average and intriguingly different.  Not great, not epic, but gripping and surprising.  Definitely worth seeing, especially given that it's available on Netflix streaming.


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6 comments:

  1. LOLOL!!! this is too funny. 11 years later and i've just watched this film and you're now the SECOND review on the entire internet. hilarious! and you're exactly spot on with all of it!

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    1. Glad you enjoyed! I've gotten so used to deleting spam comments that it was a positive delight to hear from an actual person. Funnily enough, I was just trying to remember the name of this movie the other day, and all I could recall was "The movie with the woman who couldn't leave her house".

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  2. Well, i never would have seen it but it popped up in my Prime titles so i figured what the heck and was pleasantly surprised, as were you, that it turned out to be pretty good! And i was definitely creeped out. I just couldn't help but laugh at your review as my reactions to the gradual unfoldment of the movie were exactly as you described LOL! Quick question for you though... i'm fairly certain that she decides to die in the end,but what was that about with her husband and baby? I thought the husband was dead.. yet he asks if she will be joining them and she declines, as if she is going somewhere else..

    That stumped me a bit. If he is dead, and she decides not to live, then wouldn't she be going with him? And that baby never existed, did it? I realize this is full of spoilers but i don't think anyone else living has watched this movie, so..

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    1. Alas, sorry, I don't remember the details that well - It was 8 years ago and I have a hard time recalling what I had for lunch yesterday. However, this has all inspired me to watch it again, because I'm curious to see how it plays now after a year of pandemic isolation.

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  3. I was so dissatisfied ending was confusing.

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    1. My memory is that she was dead the whole time, but finally accepted it and stepped outside "into the light", as it were, and that last image of her big smile of recognition at someone off-screen was my favorite scene.

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