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Movie Info
U.K. filmmaker Marc Evans directs the psychological thriller Trauma, produced for the Ministry of Fear division of Little Bird Productions. Colin Firth stars as Ben, a man who wakes up from a coma to discover his wife, Elisa (Naomie Harris), has been killed in a carin a car crash. He tries to start a new life on his own, but he's haunted by images of his wife and strange happenings in his apartment. Having no family connections left, he reunites with old friend Tommy (Tommy Flanagan). He also makes friends with neighbor Charlotte (Mena Suvari), who takes him to psychic Petra (Brenda Fricker). Trauma premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2004. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi
Gazette
Trauma (2004)
Starring:
Tommy Flanagan
Directed by:
Rating: 8/10
Marc Evans
Running Time: 98 minutes
UK CertificateCertificate: 15
Country: United Kingdom
Not to be confused with Dario Argento’s film of the same name, ‘Trauma’ is, like David Cronenberg’s Spider’ (2002), a gothic psychological thriller with a tragic twist, about a damaged man trying to get back his grip on reality in the dingier by-ways of London – and it acknowledges this debt to Cronenberg in full by prominently featuring several spiders, both fake and real, in the web of its plot. Director Marc Evans has brought from his last film, ‘My Little Eye’, an obsession with surveillance and the media. Characters seen on TV news reports enter Ben’s room moments later, Ben finds his own image lurking in the background of photos in celebrity magazines, and in one particularly unnerving episode near the film’s beginning, everyone around Ben in a busy open market suddenly freezes, revealing that he has unwittingly walked through, and been filmed in, a police reconstruction scene. All this, along with some disorienting flashbacks and jumpcuts, creates a kaleidoscopic fragmentation of reality in which the viewer feels as lost and paranoid as Ben himself.
From playing the original Darcy in the BBC’s ‘Pride and Prejudice’ to a modern-day Darcy in Bridget Jones’s Diary, as well as having principal parts in mainstream romcoms like ‘Fever Pitch’, Hope Springs and What a Girl Wants, Colin Firth is the British romantic lead par excellence, and the very presence of his name on the marquee guarantees ‘Trauma’ a broader audience than a film so bleakly nightmarish might otherwise garner. It is not, however, just for commercial reasons that this is an ingenious piece of casting, for Firth is here once again playing his typical rôle as a romantic dreamer – only one who is waking up to a far less salubrious reality – and he makes an effective transition within the film from confused lover to just plain confused. Mena Suvari, the other big-name star in ‘Trauma’, cannot quite match up to Firth’s acting abilities, but again she is cleverly cast, reprising from ‘American Beauty’ a rôle that is half projected male fantasy and half ordinary girl-next-door (literally, in the case of ‘Trauma’).
Not a film to watch if you are looking for Firth’s usual feel-good factor, but if you like atmosphere, amnesia, angst and ants (and who doesn’t?), ‘Trauma’ has it all – and as the first film from Ministry of Fear, a new horror offshoot from successful production company Little Bird, it heralds a new era of quality British gothic cinema.
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