'Twinless' Sundance Review: Everyone will talk about this wild movie

Movie review

Twins

Running time: 100 minutes. Not yet rated.

Park City, Utah – The number one movie at the Sundance Film Festival this year, which is hit in the theater in a few months, is “Twinless.”

Bring an oxygen tank, you will be a lot. And not always from smiles.

A Sundance debut was the author-director James Swei's completely unexpected drama for the completely unexpected drama that bonds on the fact that two of them are about 30-of men who died of both their twins.

Floor movie locale creates a naughty top-end-switch.

The reason is that you can assume that the flick starring Dylan O'Brien and Swinn will be a relative of countless other sweet, strange Indies, where paralyzed hipsters give way to joy, who have bowed here on the Utah Hills. Most of us can recite the plot from memory. There are probably vintage bicycles.

And the quick summary doesn't sound nice? Two urban people are losing their biological half and filling their seemingly irreparable vacancies with the opposite kind of friendship? Even the title comes off like a nice '90s vhs.

“Twinless” begins enough enough, but soon a lot more darker and psychologically transformed into something ominous. The unexpected movie of the Sweenie twists and shakes, though it never loses the heartfelt desire for its layered characters. Nevertheless, do not go for good. Go for feelings. Visitly go for feeling-jotil.

Swenee's compulsively addicted film begins with the sound of the car accident and then quickly goes to the funeral. This director rejoices in a sudden cut, which gives a laugh in addition to laughter and gives the film a speedy speed that never gives up.

Roman's (O'Brien) brother Rocky is in the cascade, and he and his mother (Lauren Graham) are sad. Emotionally confused participants are separated by Roman, Rocky's uniform twin. They cried and hugged him as if their friend's life had returned.

“We have never seen before, but I think I know you,” one says.

And whenever someone in the street mixes him for his late brother, Roman lies. It's just easy.

In a support group for the bereaved twin children, he met with uncomfortable Dennis (Swinn), whose brother Dean died a year and a half ago. Dennis homosexual and foul; Roman is a straight, athletic methead who blurred malapropism, “I'm not the brightest knife in the drawer.”

The unlikely pair hit it and became inseparable. Borderline is overwhelming. Indicate generosity, we think. Not so fast.

To give some idea about the developed tones, with a lot of simmering subtracts during a party, Sine “Carrie” or “Dressed to Kill” is divided like a screen like Brian de Palma.

From here, the less you know, the better. Sine-a mega-genius who is just as great as an actor-a brilliant plotter. Those who are always one mile ahead of a script will find themselves refreshing themselves in the back of this filmmaker's sharp mind.

He is also intelligent to risk double-duty like Dennis, a cute character with a hyper-spaceful tone and eyebrows. If the manuscript is managed, the Giki friend can easily get a great response from the viewer. Even in his worst times, we give Swenee's favorite Dennis a doubt. It is difficult to admit (why you will find), but I think we all see ourselves in it.

O'Brien also wears two caps. He played the role of Roman's external gay brother Rocky in Flashback before the accident. Although the completely contradictory between the siblings, the most broken moment of the actor comes to a hotel when the rough Roman liberates its stuck emotions. I cannot think of such raw acting in comedy for ages.

You will start “Twinless” with the initial expectations and you will finish it with your mouth.

And then you will ask the most satisfactory question after you face an exciting young filmmaker work: When is the next?

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