The Invitation

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Reluctantly accepting a dinner party invitation from his ex-wife (Tammy Blanchard) at the house they once shared, Will (Logan Marshall-Green) and his new partner gather with old friends to toast new beginnings. But Will and his ex-wife share a tragic past, and as paranoia mounts and tensions build, he begins to wonder what is real and what is imagined. The claustrophobic evening grows increasingly sinister until a shocking revelation is made in this highly-acclaimed and taut psychological thriller. (Second Sight)

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POMO 

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English With its decent building of paranoid suspense by letting the viewer get to know the characters through their conversations, which are disturbed by occasional tense situations, The Invitation is a pleasantly sophisticated, less mainstream and smarter variation on the well-known The Purge. ()

kaylin 

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English An interesting film that leaves you in no doubt that there is something evil among humans. It's good in terms of psychology, where this film triumphs. The premise itself isn't original, but how it all goes wrong and what happens is. And that is a good thing. Still, the film failed to impress me. Good, but not exceptional. ()

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J*A*S*M 

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English Simply put, a perfect and incredibly stylish psycho-thriller that masterfully generates an unpleasant sensation of uncertainty on the viewer, and in the same manner plays with the mind of the main character, Will, who together with his new girlfriend, is invited to a party at the place of his ex-girlfriend and her new husband. The evening is also attended by other old friends, and the air smells weird from the very beginning. I can’t remember when was the last time I saw such superbly escalating paranoia. For most of the film, it isn’t clear who’s crazy – whether the hosts or the guests – or whether it isn’t just an unfortunate misunderstanding by both parts. All are realistic scenarios and all of them would be fitting to the genre category. And Karyn Kusama holds everything so firmly in her hands that the viewer can only rejoice. The climax is sharp as a barber’s blade and the last shot is the cherry on top. ()

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