SYNOPSICS
The Standoff at Sparrow Creek (2018) is a English movie. Henry Dunham has directed this movie. James Badge Dale,Chris Mulkey,Brian Geraghty,Robert Aramayo are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2018. The Standoff at Sparrow Creek (2018) is considered one of the best Crime,Drama,Thriller movie in India and around the world.
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The Standoff at Sparrow Creek (2018) Reviews
So close to amazing.
There is an amazing film here that the writer/director didn't actually get on film. The cast is solid and the direction is fine. The writing falters here and there. There are story lines that needed to be fleshed out a bit. Some of it seems a little implausible but only because there isn't enough attention given to details. I'm not bashing the writer/director. He did a fine job; better than most would. I actually look forward to what he has in store. I just can't help but feel this could have been a mind-blowing film in more, I dunno, seasoned hands.
Tense, Suspenseful, and Exciting Paranoid Thriller
The title of writer & director Henry Dunham's feature film debut "The Standoff at Sparrow Creek" is reminiscent of the classic John Sturges paranoid conspiracy thriller "Bad Day at Black Rock" (1955) with its alliterative title. Initially, "Militia" served as the preproduction title, but Dunham may have rejected it as too conventional. Mind you, little about this gripping, provocative melodrama qualifies as conventional. Basically, "Standoff" focuses on an anti-government militia group under police scrutiny, and law enforcement's mounting concern about their trigger-happy membership. Trouble flares up suddenly when an anonymous individual in combat garb shoots up a police funeral, and the men in blue suffer multiple casualties. Miraculously, not only does the charmed individual who perpetrated this attack elude authorities, but he also makes it back to his militia outfit without a scratch. When fellow militia members assemble after the fracas, they cannot account for one missing fully-automatic AR-15 assault rifle in their illicit arsenal at a remote lumber warehouse. Despite its all-male, all-white cast, "Standoff" benefits from Dunham's strong, forceful helming, his snappy dialogue, and lenser Jackson Hunt's sinister cinematography. Apart from some trifling plot contrivances, "The Standoff at Sparrow Creek" is tense, exciting, and surprise-laden. Indeed, the subject matter of an anti-government militia is as relevant to audiences as today's headlines. Moreover, Dunham doesn't complicate this above-average thriller with arguments either for or against militia as much as contemplate the anomalous individuals who drum up reasons to join these fringe groups. Ultimately, Dunham shuns pyrotechnical spectacles until the police and the militia clash briefly during the dramatic final quarter. Throughout imaginative, white-knuckled, 89 minutes, writer & director Dunham sidesteps material which would have made this nail-biter not only formulaic but also predictable. Happily, he has done a praiseworthy job of paring the story down to its absolute, essential components. Not surprisingly, the suspense and tension that "Standoff" generates rivals similar low-budget features such as "Reservoir Dogs" and "The Usual Suspects." One of the militia members is a former profiler, Gannon (James Badge Dale of "13 Hours"), who left the force and sought serenity in the wilderness. He hunts wildlife for game, cooks it, and lives the life of a recluse. Gradually, we learn more about Gannon as well as his momentous decision to quit the police after fellow officers pressured him to kill a suspect to reassure them about his loyalty. Gannon is the first militia member we see. He emerges from his trailer and listens to the distant crackle of gunfire. Actor James Badge Dale delivers a spellbinding performance. The leader of the militia, Ford (Chris Mulkey of "Ghost in the Machine"), contacts Gannon and five others about a rendezvous at a lumber warehouse in the boondocks. After they complete an inventory of their arsenal of firearms and explosives, they come up short one AR-15. Reports about similar militia outbreaks, such as at the cemetery, surprise them. Ford orders their own communication expert, Beckman (Patrick Fischler of "Mulholland Drive"), to notify neighboring extremist groups that his chapter was not responsible for the shooting. Afterward, Ford assigns Gannon the task of ferreting out which of them took the assault rifle and blasted away at the police. One of them must have committed the crime because only the seven knew about the elaborate security measures the militia had installed to maintain arsenal safety. Gannon chooses the two most likely suspects who might have done this dirty deed. One of those two is Morris (Happy Anderson of "Duplicity"), and Gannon's questions and observations yield a quick confession. Morris is an Aryan Nation heavyweight, with a lifelong grudge against law enforcement. Essentially, the person who saw a gang rape and kill his daughter was an undercover cop who refused to testify since he would have blown his cover. Interestingly, Happy provides Gannon with a detailed confession. Meanwhile, the other suspect is a tight-lipped, 23-year old college student named Keating (Robert Aramayo of "Nocturnal Animals"). Out of the entire group, Keating is an enigma because he rarely speaks. Indeed, the others believe Keating is a deaf mute, until Gannon penetrates his hard-bitten facade. Meantime, Ford is worried about another member, Noah (Brian Geraghty of "Jarhead"), but Gannon has no qualms about him. As it turns out, Noah is not only a cop, but he is also Gannon's brother. Ford and Gannon figure if they can identify the guilty member among them, then they can hand him over to the authorities and suffer the least consequences. Predictably, nothing turns out to be as cut and dried in Dunham's screenplay as these militia men are prone to imagine. Apart from its alliterative title, "The Standoff at Sparrow Creek" is one of those movies that gets to the point fast and doesn't waste time piling up superfluous complications in both character and plot. All seven militia members show up at the warehouse and analyze the shooting incident and what it means to them as well as law enforcement. Although it depicts an extremist group, "Standoff" doesn't stoop to hate ideology. Races, creeds, and national identities are not bandied about. The literate dialogue is laced with profanity, but each line contains vital expository information. Since the action strands the cast in a warehouse, with an illuminating flashback about Gannon's past, "Standoff" never wanders off its narrative course. Nevertheless, you'll pull your hair out trying to figure out who crashed the police funeral. The tension that escalates among the men about their own private Judas evokes memories of the suspense in John Carpenter's sci-fi/horror, cult thriller "The Thing." A shape-shifting extraterrestrial, in "The Thing" (1984), infiltrates a scientific expedition in the Antarctic and duplicates one after another of their group to evade capture. Consequently, the scientists must flush it out, but paranoia undermines the group's unity. Despite its obvious low-budget, with the action confined to one dominant setting, "The Standoff at Sparrow Creek" keeps you guessing, while Dunham forges an aura of eerie paranoia and tantalizing suspense.
Not as expected ...
The movie has no introduction, no character build up, it commences right from the beginning of the first scenes. In a who-dunnit esk style premise, the story is not as "gripping" as others have rated it. The story is hard to follow in some parts, and the ending is open to your own interpretation with no explanation. There are a few intense parts within the movie to keep you awake from the much boring dialogue throughout. I wanted to like this movie, and in parts the movie did have intriguing scenes, however in total it was a complete let down in my opinion. The movie is based and filmed 97% within one warehouse. With a group of men demanding answers from one another in continuous dialogue with very little action scenes. The scenes within the warehouse is very dark and in some parts of the movie the lighting is so bad, at first I thought my screen was bad and attempted to put the brightness up. I will not jump on the "best movie of the year" bandwagon as others have however, as this movie wasn't as good as I had hoped, perhaps the four stars I gave is generous. It has a disappointing ending which leaves you scratching your head. If your in the mood for a quiet night in and the choice is this movie or a good mystery novel, then chose to read.
Pretty vague and pointless movie
At no point did I ever think when watching this film, "Yeah this is good." That's because it wasn't. There were bits that were obvious, and bits that were totally mind blowingly vague. There were lots of scenes that had absolutely nothing at all to convey and were nothing to do with the story. It's just a load of paranoid men who like toting guns around and shouting at each other.
The local militia members turned out to be
Either so old or so fat or so middle aged or so young around 20+, a mute guy. Well, just tell me how foolish this role creations were? Why they just smelled the hands, arms, and the body see if there're traces of gunpowder generated and left behind after the multiple shootings with AR15? These guys hid in a timber warehouse, chatting, guessing, gossiping, puzzling about the possibility of the shooting suspect. Then one of the guys said there's a car rushing down to the warehouse, lights out! But where were all these guys pickup trucks and vehicles? We saw they parked the car in front of the warehouse, but didn't see any of them drove their cars inside. The stupid screenplay and the scenario just wanted to created some highly unlikely plots to fool the audiences but it just felt so unreal and illogic. This movie was just so weirdly, moronic stupid. DO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME, GUYS.