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In authoritative books about science fiction in the movies, Five is generally dismissed as crude and simplistic. There is justification for this, but somehow I found the picture interesting anyway. The fact that it was shot on a shoestring may even have helped. Being forced to use only five actors and a single ready-made set--his own Frank Llloyd Wright house in the California hills--director Arch Oboler created an intimate self-contained world.
This narrow focus increases the intensity of the drama, which, as an end-of-the-world story, has its own inherent interest.
The plot doesn't bear much looking into. The way these five people--out of the entire world population--came to be together amounts to wild coincidence. There is a certain amount of sermonizing of the why-can't-we-all-get-along variety. And so on--it's hardly a great movie.
But it's interesting nonetheless and worth looking into.
score 6/10
bob-790-196018 6 February 2013
Reprint: https://www.imdb.com/review/rw2749287/ |
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