The Removals (2016)

Is it still a revolution if no one notices?

Genre :

Runtime : 1H 3M

Director : Nicholas Rombes

Synopsis

Part-thriller, part-nightmarish examination of the widening gap between originality and technology, The Removals imagines where we go from here. A secretive, nefarious agency seeks to control the culture. They do this by covertly staging reproductions of everyday events, and by so doing, undermining the moment’s originality and currency. Society is then left to puzzle over what might be real, and what is fake. The agency employs symbols—like the fascists, like imperial powers of the past—notably a red cone, to plant their flag upon the moment. Two agents, Kathryn and Mason, exhausted by the toll each removal has taken from them, quietly, and then overtly, set out to undermine the agency. Haunting, engaging, and with a ferocity of vision that calls to mind the cerebral thrillers of Shane Carruth, David Lynch, or Andrei Tarkovsky, Nicholas Rombes’s directorial debut is a spellbinding new work and apt analogy for the wormhole where modern social communication leads.

Actors

Milly Sanders
Milly Sanders
Kathryn
Jeff Wood
Jeff Wood
Mason
Joe Justus
Joe Justus
Bronson
Scott McClanahan
Scott McClanahan
The Accountant
Andrew Sensenig
Andrew Sensenig
Casey

Crews

Nicholas Rombes
Nicholas Rombes
Director
Mike Shiflet
Mike Shiflet
Cinematography