A Sacrifice movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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A Sacrifice movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (1)

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The first two-thirds of "A Sacrifice" are a largely leaden affair that offers viewers little that they haven’t seen before. It isn’t even awful so much as it is intensely forgettable—the kind of film whose title eludes you even as you watch it. Unfortunately, it then proceeds to get infinitely worse in its final act as it shifts from tediousness to outright lunacy with a series of plot developments that will frustrate and irritate anyone who has put any sort of investment in the goings-on of the narrative, though I suspect that there will be very few of those viewers by the time it begins to fully go off the rails.

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Having fled America for Berlin following a separation from his wife, social psychologist Ben Monroe (Eric Bana) is working diligently on his latest book, this time on the subject of the appeal and perils to be found in groupthink. As part of his research, he is allowed to look in on the scene of a mysterious group suicide that he suspects may be connected to a local cult. There,he meets Nina (Sylvia Hoeks), the cop in charge of the investigation. At the same time, his 16-year-old daughter, Mazzy (Sadie Sink), arrives in Berlin to stay with him. While he tries to reestablish a relationship with her, complications exacerbate when he and Nina begin a romantic relationship.

Upon arriving, Mazzy meets Martin (Jonas Dassler), a seemingly nice young man who helps her navigate the trains andwants to see her again. He says he is involved with an environmental NGO and invites her to a meeting with his group, where he introduces her to the group’s charismatic leader, Hilda (Sophie Roos). Although Mazzy sees Martin and the group as a friendly alternative to her strained relationship with her father, it becomes apparent she's fallen in with the very same cult her father has been looking for. What's more, said cultbeen making increasingly apocalyptic statements about society's disintegration and how “sacrifices” need to be made to make things right again.

Some interesting films have been made over the years dealing with cults and the insidious ways in which they work themselves into the minds of vulnerable people. (“Ticket to Heaven” (1981), “Split Image” (1982), and “Faults” (2014) come to mind.) Those films took the subject seriously without reducing it to a plot device. “A Sacrifice,” by comparison, never displays any interest in what drives people to fall into this way of thinking. Making her feature debut as writer-director, Jordan Scott handles the material (adapted from the 2015 novel Tokyoby Nicholas Hogg) in a slickly impersonal manner, and the performances by the undeniably talented cast are equally meh.

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Then comes the finale, where everything gets loopy and not in a good way. The fact that plot threads involving Ben’s investigation and Mazzy’s dalliance with Martin and his friends eventually come together will probably not surprise too many people, I suppose. However, my guess is few will fully anticipate the silliness and contrivances involved in bringing them together; the screenplay willfully throws away whatever serious points it might have hoped to make to turn the story into a simple-minded race against time. Having not read Hogg’s book, I cannot say if Scott’s adaptation is faithful to its source or if it has gone off in its own direction, but if it's the latter, he can at least be comforted by the fact that the title change will ensure that few of the people who actually see this will connect it with his work.

Watching “A Sacrifice” is like watching an extra-long episode of a middling procedural series that is now a season or two past its prime. No one involved on either side of the camera ever seems truly engaged with the material, and as a result, viewers can't take up much interest in it. Even when it takes its turn toward the idiotic in its final scenes, it never manages to develop into anything that is even momentarily interesting. If ever there was a film that seemed destined to spend eternity playing unnoticed in the background while people are folding their laundry or doing other busywork, this is the one.

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Film Credits

A Sacrifice movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (9)

A Sacrifice (2024)

Cast

Eric Banaas Ben Monroe

Sadie Sinkas Mazzy

Sylvia Hoeksas Nina

Jonas Dassler

Sophie Roisas Hilma

Stephan Kampwirthas Max

Lara Feithas Lotte

DJ Express

Daphna Rosenthalas Martin's Grandmother

Joone Dankouas Elsa Neumann

Alexander Schubertas Lead Detective

Matthias Rheinheimeras Nina's Father

Frida Stittrichas Young Nina

Tatiana Nekrasovas Nina's Mother

Carl Bagnaras Pogo Boy

Screenplay

  • Jordan Scott

Director

  • Jordan Scott

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A Sacrifice movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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A Sacrifice movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert? ›

Watching “A Sacrifice” is like watching an extra-long episode of a middling procedural series that is now a season or two past its prime. No one involved on either side of the camera ever seems truly engaged with the material, and as a result, viewers can't take up much interest in it.

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Rotten Tomatoes and the Tomatometer score are the world's most trusted recommendation resources for quality entertainment. As the leading online aggregator of movie and TV show reviews from critics, we provide fans with a comprehensive guide to what's Fresh – and what's Rotten – in theaters and at home.

How many stars does Roger Ebert give? ›

He awarded four stars to films of the highest quality, and generally a half star to those of the lowest, unless he considered the film to be "artistically inept and morally repugnant", in which case it received no stars, as with Death Wish II.

What is the meaning of the movie you people? ›

Its plot focuses on an interracial and interreligious couple, namely a Secular Jewish man and a Black nationalist NOI woman, and how their families reckon with modern love amid culture clashes, societal expectations and generational differences.

What is the plot of the movie Sight? ›

What was the last movie Roger Ebert watched? ›

Roger Ebert continued to review movies until the end of his life, despite the challenges of his cancer, which inspired others facing the same disease. Terrence Malick's To the Wonder was Ebert's last review and showcased the director's iconic style and departure from his previous period pieces.

Is the movie You People a good movie? ›

A modern attempt at something like “Guess Who's Coming to Dinner” from the creator of “Black-ish” and co-written by star Jonah Hill, Netflix's “You People” is a stunning misfire, an assemblage of talent in search of an actual movie.

Is the movie You People based on a true story? ›

No, You People is not based on a true story. It does, however, bring to mind the 1967 film Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. In its review of the 2023 film, Variety called You People "a modern-day riff on Guess Who's Coming to Dinner in which clashes of race and culture are even more pointed."

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The film obviously has a lot to say about racism. Most of the content on that front is(for the most part) an accurate, poignant, and critical look at racial stereotyping. Some characters work and some chemistry works, and some doesn't.

What is the movie "Sight" about based on a true story? ›

Is the movie Sight religious? ›

By Sydney Jezik. The new movie “Sight” shares the true story of a man who overcame great adversity growing up in China to become a ground-breaking eye surgeon in the U.S., as the Deseret News previously reported. The movie is meant to inspire viewers with its faith-based message, per The New York Times.

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"At First Sight" is a fictionalized adaptation of Shirl and Barbara Jennings, a couple who passionately loved each other even though the former was completely blind. Their story was documented by Dr. Oliver Sacks.

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Some people agree that critics are useful in how they can help determine whether a movie or show is good enough to watch, or if a restaurant is tasty enough to eat at. The truth is that all of these reviews and opinions are subjective.

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