Home > Drama >

One Point O

AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

One Point O (2004)

March. 16,2004
|
5.9
|
R
| Drama Horror Science Fiction Mystery
AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

Paranoid computer programmer Simon wakes up to find a package in his room one day. Despite attempts at securing his apartment, the packages keep arriving. While cameras watch Simon's every move, he struggles to find the answers to the mysterious forces taking over his life.

...

Watch Trailer

Free Trial Channels

AD
Show More

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Diagonaldi
2004/03/16

Very well executed

More
SteinMo
2004/03/17

What a freaking movie. So many twists and turns. Absolutely intense from start to finish.

More
Aneesa Wardle
2004/03/18

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

More
Paynbob
2004/03/19

It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.

More
p_imdb-238-926380
2004/03/20

You didn't hear of this movie for years? Well, good, but sadly somehow you got here, which means you might want to check this movie out.But luckily you ended up reading this review. I won't go into detail, but just give you one tip: It is Bulls*The other reviewers must be crazy. Seeing a riddle behind every camera angle. This movie is crap. It is atmospheric but in a way that made me nervous, I wanted to tear the seat and theater apart. The movie leads nowhere. There isn't a message about anything you are left with. I am a software engineer, and I don't get anything here. I suppose you have to be very ignorant about everything, to see the master plan here. Having some kind of knowledge totally breaks this movie. It is up to you if you want to waste your day. I am still angry writing these lines.

More
MBunge
2004/03/21

This film was an absolute chore to sit through. With some bad movies, you can actually enjoy how horrible they are. This is the sort of film that as you're watching it, you wonder if you wouldn't be better off going into the kitchen and finding out if you can fit an entire spatula inside your mouth.The story is about Simon J (Jeremy Sisto), a socially maladjusted computer programmer. As he tries to complete some code for a sweaty man who yells at him over a web cam video feed, Simon starts to find these packages in his apartment. They're empty and he has no idea how they're getting into his place. He asks everybody he meets if they know anything about the packages - his landlord, who watches everything in the building on his bank of security camera monitors; his neighbor, who's building an android head that he treats like his young son; another neighbor, who's creating a virtual reality video game and using Simon as one of the characters; the building handyman, who talks like a man in need of psychiatric medication; Simon's courier, who delivers computer parts and emergency supplies of milk to him; and the woman who just moved in to the building, who finds Simon's pathetic inadequacies very attractive. The vague excuse of a plot in this movie sees Simon get more and more crazed as he investigates a secret conspiracy that may or may not exist while people are killed in his building and found with their brains scooped out.This is a boring movie. All of the actors, except the striking Deborah Unger, are playing quirky and offbeat characters. Except they're not interestingly quirky, where you want to find out more about them. They're "why am I paying attention to this person" quirky, where you'd be happier if they just went away. There's no real tension generated by the story, so they try and gin it up with all this scary music and dark and gloomy settings. The plot plods along because the script dictates where it's going, not because one scene naturally leads to another. You can tell the filmmakers think they're making some sort of commentary on corporate consumerism and social isolation, but it's nothing more than rudimentary and remedial allusions to well-worn tropes.I did happen to watch all of the deleted scenes, which I didn't expect considering how little I enjoyed the movie. But I couldn't get to sleep and wanted to know just how much worse the stuff that got cut could have been than what they left in. When I watched the scenes, I found something interesting. It's not that they were any good, but if they had been included in the film it would have made the story more understandable, more conventional and more linear. T he deleted scenes would have connected things together and instead of just being a bunch of stuff that happens, they would have turned the film into a journey with a beginning, middle and end and a reason why it starts at point A and ends up at point Z.In watching them, I think I know why there were cut out of the film and it wasn't to try and make it any better. I think the filmmakers finished this movie, looked at it in a screening room and knew it sucked. Whatever it is they were attempting, I think they knew they failed. And then I think they had a clever idea. They went back and deleted a bunch of scenes that helped the movie make sense, cutting out the connective tissue of the story, in the hope that it would make Paranoia: 1.0 seem weird and arty enough that a certain type of viewer would look at it and convince themselves the movie is better than what it really is. I don't know if they were successful, but I do know I'm not that type of viewer.

More
mario_c
2004/03/22

This film is an amazing dark thriller that is greatly filmed in a noir-style type. The settings are always dark, mysterious and full of a surrealist ambiance that grabs you in suspense since the beginning until the end of the movie. The plot, which is extremely confusing, is passed in a near future, where almost everything is similar to the present except the nanotechnology, which is more advanced… I love the kind of cinematography which is presented in this movie: the mysterious characters, the dark settings, the strange and confusing plot, the surreal ambiences, those camera shots from the most bizarre angles… However, in this particular case, I didn't appreciate very much its ending (which I will not spoil), maybe because I was expecting some kind of different disclosure. It doesn't mean the end is bad, not at all, but I was expecting something else… Just because of that I will score this movie as 9/10 and not the 10/10 I was thinking I would give it when I was watching the movie… Anyway, it's an excellent movie made in some Sci-Fi and surreal standards that shows us a possible scenario to the future, when the technology and the informatics systems will mess (even more!) with our brains!

More
Jonny_Numb
2004/03/23

What begins as a paranoid gloss on David Lynch's "Eraserhead" (the central character is an antisocial loner in a fittingly creepy apartment complex) eventually unravels and stalls due to its own hyper-allegoric art-house pretensions. But for a while, it's an engrossing, unconventionally entertaining tale of a computer programmer (Jeremy Sisto) who receives empty packages inside his apartment...even after he changes the locks. While it's clearly a work of science fiction, the conceptualization of "the future" is presented in a minimalist manner–save for some complex-looking computer screens and virtual-reality scenes–that envelops the cerebral thriller elements quite nicely. In addition to "Eraserhead", it also bears some resemblance to David Cronenberg's more playful "eXistenZ," with a similar emphasis on the blurred line between hallucination and reality (metaphors abound), but the double- and triple-crosses the plot lays out eventually become tiresome.

More