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Josh Trank

Author of Fantastic Four [2015 film]

3 Works 265 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Josh Trank

Works by Josh Trank

Fantastic Four [2015 film] (2015) — Director/Screenwriter — 136 copies, 2 reviews
Chronicle [2012 film] (2012) — Director — 116 copies, 2 reviews
Capone [2020 film] (2020) — Director — 13 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Trank, Josh
Legal name
Trank, Joshua Benjamin
Birthdate
1984-02-19
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Los Angeles, California, USA

Members

Reviews

This movie focuses on three teens: Andrew, Matt, and Steve. Andrew is a loner who's constantly bullied by his peers and abused by his alcoholic father. His beloved mother is slowly and painfully dying of cancer. His way of dealing with all of this is to make a video diary chronicling his life and the things going on around him, which is the source of most of the movie's "found footage."

Matt is Andrew's cousin and the closest thing he has to a friend. Matt takes Andrew to a party in an effort to help him mingle - it goes badly, but Matt and Steve (a popular and charismatic student) have Andrew come with them to film their exploration of a large hole they found in the woods. They discover a glowing crystalline object and, several weeks later, the three teens film themselves displaying amazing new telekinetic abilities.

For a brief while, Matt and Steve help Andrew use his new abilities to make friends and become more popular. Unfortunately, things don't turn out quite the way Andrew hoped, and his behavior rapidly becomes more erratic and violent. Only Steve and Matt have any hope of keeping Andrew from harming others.

If you're looking for a sad and realistic-feeling take on how three teens might react to suddenly getting superpowers, this movie is for you. I wasn't expecting it to be such a gut punch - while, overall, I thought it was good, it's not the kind of movie I'll ever want to watch again.

I don't know whether it was intended to be a statement about toxic masculinity, but it felt like one to me. All three of the boys had fun with their new powers when they first discovered them, but for Andrew they also provided a door to something better. For a short time, he could become the kind of guy who had friends like Matt and was popular like Steve. Unfortunately, when everything fell apart, he defaulted to his alcoholic father's violence, harming everyone around him, including himself.

Things went from bad, to worse, to just plain bleak - instead of music, the closing credits were simply accompanied by background noise. By that point, anything else might have felt like too much.

I thought this was definitely worth watching once, but, again, I don't think I'll ever want to rewatch it. I suppose you could call it a superhero origin story (although I doubt there will ever be a sequel), but it's more sad and draining than triumphant.

Extras:

Pre-viz materials, and camera test.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
… (more)
½
 
Flagged
Familiar_Diversions | 1 other review | Mar 5, 2023 |
Teenager Andrew escapes his everyday life with a video camera. This same camera captures unfolding events when Andrew and two other teens discover a mysterious substance that leaves them with supernatural powers. Their darker sides emerge as their abilities become more powerful causing the teens' lives to spin out of control.
 
Flagged
jek73 | 1 other review | Nov 16, 2018 |
The reviews of this film really get the knives out. But I didn't think it was that bad. The pacing is off - the setup is a good 3/4 of the film and then it's like the writer got to the part where the bad guy appears and he got bored or ran out of ideas. Which may be why the film is so short for a comic book adaption.
 
Flagged
infjsarah | 1 other review | Oct 1, 2016 |

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Statistics

Works
3
Members
265
Popularity
#86,991
Rating
2.8
Reviews
4
ISBNs
8

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