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Sundown

Drama Alice and Neil Bennett are the core of a wealthy British family on vacation in Acapulco with younger members Colin and Alexa until a distant emergency cuts their trip short. When one relative disrupts the family’s tight-knit order, surprising tensions rise to the fore.
Media Author Review
United States
Variety
"The high-minded director’s most successful film to date, conceptually speaking, 'Sundown' is an intricate, unconventional puzzle" 
United States
The Hollywood Reporter
"Despite the dark tingle of suspense running through the story, its protagonist remains remote (...) Of all the director’s films to date, this might be the most airless" 
United Kingdom
Screendaily
"It’s at its best when being infuriatingly reticent, and at its weakest when forced to offer some sort of explanation (...) [It] juggles several themes (...) without really tying any of them up" 
United Kingdom
The Guardian
"Brilliant (...) What an extraordinary performance Tim Roth gives us here (…) [Sundown] It’s pitiless and pitch-perfect, an existential tour-de-force (....) Rating: ★★★★★ (out of 5)" 
United States
The Wrap
"'Sundown' is only a short film, just about making it over 80 minutes, every second of which manages to be simultaneously riveting and banal. Yet its intensity burns like the sun which makes Neil’s skin blister" 
United States
IndieWire
"One of the pleasures of 'Sundown' is that it is impossible to guess where it is heading — and it heads in some bizarre directions" 
United States
The Wrap
"Riveting and banal (...) Franco is scratching away at the surface, making the sort of movie you come away from with questions, wondering if you'd blinked and missed something" 
Canada
Screen Anarchy
"In this day and age, where so many films needlessly dart and dash past the two-hour mark, Franco shows that the infinite is possible in a mere 82 minutes" 
United States
rogerebert.com
"Even as the movie takes a slight turn into surrealism in its final third, the sum is slight and obscure. At least the running time is brief, and the movie has the good sense to cast Tim Roth (…) Rating: ★★½ (out of 4)" 
United States
ReelViews
"Tim Roth is perfectly cast as Neil. Throughout his acting career, [he] has excelled at portraying opaque characters whose true motivations are hidden (…) Rating: ★★★ (out of 4)" 
United States
Austin Chronicle
"Roth's performance is utterly absorbing (...) The trouble is, once 'Sundown' reveals the mystery of Neil's unmoored behavior, the film loses the resonance it has patiently spent its time accruing (…) Rating: ★★★ (out of 5)" 
United States
AV Club
"'Sundown' has more substance, and a more intriguing premise, than most of Franco's proudly sadistic work (...) Rather than respectfully end his relationship with the audience, Franco just stops picking up the phone" 
United States
Slant
"The film leaves the viewer with the impression of a man trying to beat the entropic decay that surrounds him to the punch (…) Rating: ★★★ (out of 4)" 
United States
Los Angeles Times
"Tim Roth excels at quiet intensity (...) Taut, confidently unsettling film" 
United States
The Playlist
"'Sundown' doesn't subvert what we've come to expect from Franco's work, but it is still a distinctively cerebral rumination" 
Canada
Screen Rant
"Michel Franco's 'Sundown feels' hollow and too nihilistic for its own good. As it winds down, one is left wondering what is the purpose. What is Franco attempting to have viewers think and feel? (…) Rating: ★★½ (out of 5)" 
Cineuropa
"[It] feels like a prelude to something much bigger and ultimately remains unfulfilling, like a prestigious short suddenly stretched to its very limits." 
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