I Know You from Somewhere (2017) Poster

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Sparky yet dark and realistic portrayal of social awkwardism in an internet age
bob the moo26 December 2017
I'm old enough that I didn't grow up with computers until I was late in education, but not so old that I don't benefit from the huge leaps forward in technology. I'm glad of this because I think if online games had been around when I was in school then certainly I would have been lost into them; and I'm also glad to have worked out social skills without the involvement of social networks - real life is enough of a game without apps actually gamifying it more. Against this background, I found this short film to be engaging, lively, yet chillingly real in what it does.

For the majority of the film it is about a young woman trying to work out relationships in a modern age, and to be outside of the online life represented by her selfie-obsessed friend. The final third of the film sees a moment in her life go viral and be misconstrued - becoming an internet talking point, and focus of hate and online bile. From reading about the film, it is this final third that is the main part of the description, so it is strange that it is the lesser part of the running time. However, the first sections work well to establish the world, and show the absurdity of it, before launching into the darkness of it (and of course ending up with the hacker known as 4Chan). The film gets this mix right, because on one hand it is about the cruel trolling that occurs, but it doesn't differentiate from the fact that the rest of social media, 'likes', 'subs', 'swipes' and all the rest of it is any less absurd - or somehow not connected to the extremity of this one specific situation.

It is this connection that makes the film work so well, because it carries that entertaining humor, but balances it well with the darker reality. That it has a great performance from Trimbur at its core, only makes it stronger as a piece.
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5/10
Further missinformation about Sarkeesian?
shide_8526 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Disclaimer - Anything in here is written as personal opinion or view from previously publicly available material.

Preconception: The first thing the viewer gets to see is a face very similar to that of the infamous Sarkeesian.

This to me seems like a simile to the Sarkeesian affair where a person premeditively tried to distort immoral actions taken, a person who was backed by large interest groups like ADL, mainstream media and others but still lost out, due to being inable to stifle informationflow and succumbing to reality of the events that occurred.

Maybe the producers simply has lent things from the story to interest people, whichever it is in this story (unlike what actually happened with Sarkeesian, then again for morally ambiguous interest groups to draw technocrats wrongfully as immoral was never going to end well for the interest groups) the person being pictured as the bad person (by her closest) is here unjustly drawn as such.

In short: The viewer gets to meet the lead Angela Trimbur, playing Kathrene a person who does everything right but ends up being misconstrued and used for selfish reasons by an internet troll.

The cinematography is well above anticipated for a movie such as this, the lead actress can also act. The writing could be sharper as it does not illustrate the reality of the new generations well but moreso the difference in moral and self rationalisation of different individuals. So as a character study it leaves more to be wanted because its lack of real depth.

The subject is a good subject to tackle for a full feature drama, but then maybe with a face not so similar, to that of a former despised infamous internet celebrity, from "another" context.

I restrained from voting (5) seeing as my view is possibly skewed by the associative relationship i have to mainstream manipulation of formal narratives. Using this actress, it should be quite clear what was intended though.
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