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Circle

Kino // Unrated // July 5, 2016
List Price: $24.95 [Buy now and save at Amazon]

Review by Thomas Spurlin | posted July 2, 2016 | E-mail the Author
The Film:




Those who have experienced the rigors of vote-off reality shows, especially those of Survivor, will immediately get where directors Aaron Hann and Mario Miscione are headed with the micro-budget indie, Circle. Gray-area morals, voting alliances, and evaluating people on their roundabout worth -- in terms of family, profession, and past experiences -- formulate into a type of social experiment when deciding who's getting kicked off the island and who gets to stick around a little longer. Instead of playing for a million bucks like reality-show competitions, Circle has far more immediate repercussions: those who are voted out are immediately killed, and it seems like the last person left might just be the only one leaving with their life. With that escalation of the stakes also comes a drastic amplification of the types of conversations had among these participants, forming into a heavy-handed, overly eclectic tempest of social topics determining the mortality of these individuals.

Of course, there's another key difference: the people involved with this situation didn't volunteer, having no choice in the matter. Spread out in an incredibly dark room, a group of fifty strangers stand upon red luminescent discs as they face towards a mysterious, futuristic black-and-red device, unaware of where they are or how they got there. Soon, they learn that stepping off their discs leads to immediate death by electrocution, and just a little time after that, they discover that selected individuals will be electrocuted while standing still on the discs as well. Eventually, the group figures out that they're actually casting secret votes for different people spread across the circle, controlled by hand gestures, and that they'll likely continue to keep dying so long as they cast votes or step off the pedestals. Then, the truly complicated part of the scenario begins, where everyone tries to figure out who's the next to die and who, in one way or another, is less deserving of being the last person standing.

Giving its audience zero time to get the know the fifty participants beforehand, Circle revolves around the attitudes and information these people choose to provide amid this death trap, which could be honest reflections of who they are or false "characters" they've devised as a fight-or-flight response. Because of this, and because of the hasty two-minute (...ish) intervals in which they're killed off by the machine, everything relies upon the underlying thought exercise to move its Twilight Zone-esque plotting forward, having little chance for this to become a genuine examination of the superficial people themselves. Instead, this film scrutinizes the broad nature of humanity itself, gathering together a wide range of Americans -- young and old, light skinned and dark, healthy and disabled -- who figure out which single one among dozens possesses a stronger reason for living than the others, all based on the elements of themselves that they choose to reveal, voluntarily or through their reactions.

Fueled by performances that range from stiff to convincing, including a reactionary and fraught turn from Julie Benz as a middle-class wife, Circle takes an unsavory approach to this philosophical experiment with the rationale behind how people decide which person's the next to go. It's commendable that Aaron Hann and Mario Miscione want to incorporate themes about how society judges others and evaluates their individual worth, but their approach works much too hard to incorporate as many conceivable facets of the human condition as possible into the group's decision-making, coming up more like a social commentary checklist than naturally occurring talking points. From cancer survivors and military servicemen to same-sex parents and illegal citizens, the details of people's lives are scrutinized, attacked, and quantified in brave but loathsome ways, some of which are contorted for the sake of throwing individuals under the bus. And then, instead of the group logically voting off the "lesser" of two targets off in the next round, the nasty current of the circle typically gets directed at another hot topic to be deconstructed.

This melting-pot abundance of people involved and the speed in which they die are what keep Circle from being a more meaningful piece of work, too frequently throwing its cynical ideas at the wall in hopes that at least a few of 'em stick. Bits of truth about the stereotyping and profiling that humans do to themselves emerge in their fierce bickering, but when they're paired with the scheming and cutthroat logic that lead to immediate executions, most of that potency zaps away as the rounds keep going on and on. That becomes especially true once the exceedingly dour ending paints a grotesque portrait of how far certain people will go to secure their livelihood. Since there's little to enjoy in the drama of observing the participants systematically cut each other down, while making decisions like whether to kill a child or a pregnant woman first, Circle doesn't have much surging it forward beyond its bleak musings on who could end up being the sole survivor, and this certainly isn't a game.


The DVD:





Video and Audio:

Circle takes place in the confines of a very dark room with glowing red disks, small energy surges inside the machine, and the shadow-covered faces of the fifty participants as the camera either closes in on their expressions or pulls out to reveal the breadth of the remaining people. Kino's disc, therefore, doesn't have a lot to work with in impressing with its visuals, projecting a 2.35:1-framed, 16x9-enhanced transfer that intentionally swallows up details in the black levels and offers little beyond small bursts of strong color. The reds -- and a little amber radiance here and there -- are alien-looking and solid in appearance, while the low-saturation skin tones feel appropriate to the eerie atmosphere. Camera movement across the individuals remains fluid and focused, while the darkness of the setting conceals the digital smoothness inherent in the photography.

The sound design, however, is a little more deceptive for Circle. As one can expect, the bulk of the 5.1 Dolby Digital track centers on amplified voices -- yelling and debating across the enigmatic space -- and the track projects the dialogue without any pronounced distortion and with a strong presence in the center and front channels, though it does sound a little bulky and compressed at certain points. There are other consistent sound elements throughout, though, from the counting-down of votes being tallied as they floor responds to the hand gestures to the persistent bursts of lightning that kills its target on impact. As the death device responds, assertive mid-range effects and bass response fill the channels, and the correlating burst of energy following the vote taps into fierce higher-end clarity that, while a little strained digitally, offers a satisfying punch.


Special Features:

Audio Commentary with Mario Miscione and Michael Nardelli:
Director Miscione and actor Nardelli discuss the inventiveness of the production and its legacy influences, emphasizing how they realized their old-school science-fiction vision through computer pre-viz and numerous production design overhauls. Between discussions about the plot, they discuss color, the evolving drafts, and persistent discussion about its genre definition, as well as how there's a degree of black comedy involved with the scenario ... and how one could possibly turn the movie into a sort of drinking game. They also talk about the camera used, photographing the scenes in order, and the overt characteristics instilled in the characters. It's a casual, mildly enjoyable track even though it meanders and repeats at points.


A quick, standard Behind The Scenes Featurette (8:42, 16x9) actually fits a lot of insight into its condensed runtime, though overly generous clips from the film eat up some of that. References to Dr. Strangelove, 12 Angry Men, and Children of Men emerge in discussions about the film's overall design, as well as the extreme angles in the photography and the challenges of the one-room setting being approached as a creative opportunity. Kino have also included a Trailer (2:14, 16x9).


Final Thoughts:

Circle has the potential to make someone think about the value of individuals, and what they might do if forced to choose one stranger among fifty to die every two minutes, but the bluntness and cynicism present throughout holds even more potential to make them cringe in dramatic discomfort. Knee-jerk arguments, vote scheming, and the repetitious quantification of an individual's intrinsic worth make for an unpleasant indie sci-fi outing here, one whose ends doesn't really justify the means. There's clever, stylish craftsmanship in establishing the setting and the terror of the setting, though, and despite being heavy-handed, it does provoke some thought in the topics it so frantically pursues. Rent It.



Thomas Spurlin, Staff Reviewer -- DVDTalk Reviews | Personal Blog/Site
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