| Index | 4 reviews in total |
6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Believable, 1 April 2010
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Author:
jwaters1518 from United States
Lovers of Hate tells the story of a social outcast who's entire life has been outshadowed by his kid brother Paul. Rudy, the "failure" so to speak, can't hold a job and is living out of his vehicle. He tries desperately to hide the fact that his relationship with Diana has eroded knowing it would give his brother the one up. The conflict between brothers becomes more complicated when Paul and Diana end up together. Although Sundance knocks the character study for making Rudy off to be too childish in dialogue, I found the ending lines poignant, and allows forgiveness of Rudy's behavior earlier in the film by shadowing what has led up to this point. It was a remarkably touching film that did what it set out to do. My only real complaint within the movie is its length. The film wasn't remarkably long, but at times scenes did drag on. Overall, I feel the film was an accomplishment. 9/10
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
For Lovers of Psychological Backroads, 10 November 2010
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Author:
tigerfish50 from Old London, New England
Rudy's life is disintegrating due to his grinding negativity and resentment at the world - his wife has thrown him out, he's living in his car and he's just lost his dead-end job. As if this were not humiliation enough, his brother Paul, a successful writer of fantasy fiction, is coming to town on a promotional tour for his new book. Sibling rivalry prompts Rudy to hide the failure of his marriage from Paul, so he persuades his estranged wife, Diana, to pretend that they are still married for the night. When Rudy's pathetic deception comes apart at the seams, the fallout pushes Diana into the arms of his brother - and unfortunately for Rudy, they have always found each other attractive. The real story of "Lovers of Hate" begins to unfold from this point, the film setting off as if it intends to be a quirky offbeat comedy, but it soon ventures into darker territory. By the time it concludes it has turned into an entirely original entity, combining elements of suspense, black comedy, psychological mystery and romance. The three principal actors each give nuanced and believable performances as their characters get lost in a labyrinth of twisty side-roads. Unless one happens to be a fan of predictable escapist romantic comedies, it's a trip worth taking.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Weird melange that doesn't seem to know its own journey or destination, 19 February 2011
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Author:
L. Lion (laughing_lion@yahoo.com) from Los Angeles
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Lovers of Hate is a strange drama about a situation that begs for
catharsis, but never delivers. Tension builds throughout, without
payoff. Strangely watchable, but uncomfortable and unsatisfying.
Rudy and Paul are brothers. Rudy, the older, has wrecked his life.
Paul, the younger, is very successful, a success (in a tangential way)
built on contributions from Rudy. Paul has also harbored feelings for
Rudy's estranged wife Diana for years, and with Rudy out of the way, he
makes his move, inviting her to his chalet in Park City Utah for the
weekend. Unknown to him, Rudy had decided to drive up and visit Park
City at the same time and breaks into Paul's house in order to surprise
his brother. When Paul shows up with Diane, Rudy decides to play the
ghost rather than reveal himself. He conceals himself in the too-large
house, listening to their conversations and leaving little hints as to
his presence.
While this sounds like a strong build-up to something cathartic -
either a dramatic confrontation or a murder spree - we never get
either. The characters don't seem to have any arc. Rudy arrives a
bitter loser - does his experience hearing his brother and ex-wife
candidly discuss him (between sessions of knocking boots) change him?
Not that I could tell. Paul is incredibly underwritten - all we ever
really discover about him is that he is wealthy, has a treadmill he
runs on in the morning, and has a thing for Diane. Diane comes the
closest to taking full form because she is conflicted about what she is
doing. I had mixed feelings about the performances - Heather Kafka does
the best job of making her character sympathetic. Doubek as Rudy mostly
cringes in corners making faces and letting his three-day beard and
unkempt hair act for him, and Karpovsky never imbues Paul with any
recognizable attributes other than a desire have sex with Diane. The
brothers are so wimpy that watching the film became something of a
chore. Another thing that bothered me was the casting - Karpovsky and
Doubek do not look anything like brothers. Would it have killed the
producers to at least find actors who resembled one another? For all of
that it is still an oddly watchable film, primarily because the fuse on
what must be a final explosion continues to burn. But then it never
goes off. Several of the scenes have a strong horror-film flavor as you
can feel Rudy lurking just outside of the shot, but there are no horror
movie thrills because Rudy remains inert. That's not a bad thing - Rudy
isn't a killer - but it does pose several questions that the film
completely fails to answer:
1) What was Rudy attempting to achieve by continuing to stick around?
He commits some minor mischief, but aside from that he never acts, he
just sits there and hears the people he is closest to say things about
him that we already knew from the first ten minutes of the film. If he
is going to be the hero - and the film is told from his point of view -
then his actions to change himself are what will make this journey of
interest. But he never does anything.
2) What was Paul really trying to accomplish with Diane? His attempts
at romance with her are only modestly successful. Is this really about
getting back at Rudy, which is hinted at?
3) What is the result of this meandering journey? The final shot of the
film is perplexing to say the least.
The canned shot-on-HD-video made the film rather unappealing to watch.
Because it was shot in a ski chalet with giant windows in winter,
daytime shots at the house has an overexposed washed-out feel due to
the snow reflections. Shots in dark interiors or at night have a
red-hued washed out feeling as well. The exterior shots in the
mountains look nice.
My recommendation is that this is not ready for prime time - there is
an interesting movie to be made here, but the writer-director has only
uncovered about one-third of it.
3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
One note tale of self-entitlement and sibling rivalry would be better as an extended short, 11 February 2011
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Author:
Turfseer from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
First time feature writer/director Bryan Poyser has offered up a tale
of sibling rivalry that is so over the top, one can scarcely believe
such characters exist in real life. His story revolves around Rudy who
has just been dumped by his wife Diana and is living out of his car. He
briefly works as a census taker and ends up trying to hose himself off
at a car wash (taking his clothes off in the alleyway next to the
place) as well as taking a shower in the home of an elderly woman who
he's canvassing for the census.
When Rudy's brother, Paul, a successful young adult fantasy novelist,
is in town and they plan to get together for dinner, Rudy goes back to
Diana and begs her to go out to dinner, pretending that they're still
together. Diana reluctantly agrees as a last time favor for her
ex-husband but Paul senses something's wrong at the dinner. Later, Paul
calls Rudy who claims he's at home with Diana but Paul has driven to
Diana's home and can see her through the living room window, quite
alone.
Rudy is the penultimate loser who's never finished his novel, 'Lovers
of Hate' but expects Paul to once again mention him to his agent. Paul
has been enabling Rudy for years and puts him up in a motel for a few
days and returns to Utah, where he lives in a posh, expensive home, in
a gated community. Rudy decides to pay a surprise visit to Paul and
drives six hours and then sneaks into Paul's home.
The bulk of 'Lovers of Hate' takes place in Paul's house. Rudy is
shocked to find Paul return to his home with Diana, who are now having
a hot and steamy affair. However, Rudy finds he's unable to leave the
home without setting off an alarm and he's stuck there and must endure
seeing and hearing Paul and Diana make love. Rudy finds himself unable
to flush the toilet (which would reveal that he's in the house), and
Paul ends up blaming Diana for the 'misdeed'. After finding the same
thing happening the next morning, Paul speaks with Rudy via cell phone,
still unaware that he's in his home. Rudy tells him that he was in the
house briefly and Paul fails to mention this to Diana. Later, Rudy
unsuccessfully tries to erase the last four pages of Paul's new novel
on his laptop. Rudy then successfully drives a wedge between Paul and
Diana by leaving his picture on Paul's computer. When Diana sees this
and realizes that Rudy has been watching them all this time and Paul
knew that he was there and didn't tell her, she storms out, never to
return to Paul.
One wonders why such a rich and successful novelist as Paul would go
for the plain Diana. Given his social station, wouldn't he have many
women at his beck and call? This is never explained during the film. As
for Rudy and Paul, they are both such distasteful characters that
there's no one to root for here. Rudy is vile due to his narcissism and
gross sense of self-entitlement. Paul is not much better as he claims
to love his brother but then seduces his brother's ex-wife.
Are we supposed to admire Rudy's resourcefulness in facilitating the
comeuppance of his brother at the film's end? It's a really a pyrrhic
victory for Rudy since he's no better off than when he made the trip to
Paul's home. Perhaps the fact that he was able to get Diana to leave
his brother will give him some satisfaction coupled with that wave of
acknowledgment from Diana at the climax but there's still little hope
that she will take up with him again.
Lovers of Hate is a one note concept that might have been better has an
extended short. As a feature length film, the machinations of the
principal characters go on far too long and we simply can't care for
them since they have few redeeming qualities. The actors do a decent
enough job but are boxed in by the laborious script. Lovers of Hate
earns points for being quirky and offbeat and it's eminently watchable.
Ultimately, however, it' not a film that will stick in your mind for
long and I would be hard pressed to watch it again.
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