Time Share (2018 film)

Time Share (Spanish: Tiempo Compartido) is a 2018 Mexican thriller-drama film directed by Sebastián Hofmann, and written by Hofmann and Julio Chavezmontes. The film follows the stories of two haunted family men: Andres (Miguel Rodarte), a cleaning man working in a luxury resort; and Pedro (Luis Gerardo Méndez), who happens to spend a week-long holidays in that same luxury resort with his wife and son.

Time Share
Film poster
Directed bySebastián Hofmann
Written bySebastián Hofmann
StarringLuis Gerardo Méndez
RJ Mitte
Release date
  • 20 January 2018 (2018-01-20) (Sundance)
CountryMexico
LanguageSpanish

Plot

Pedro, his wife Eva (Cassandra Ciangherotti) and their young son arrive at the Everfield luxury resort for a week long holidays. Unfortunately, that same evening another family knocks at their door, claiming the right to stay in their same bungalow. As it turns out, the management of Everfield has overbooked the bungalows. To much of Pedro's dismay, who is not particularly fond of the gregarious manners of Abel (Andres Almeida), the two families are forced to share the same bungalow. Things become increasingly bizarre as Pedro begins to feel that the family he is sharing his entire holidays with may not be as nice as it looks.

Meanwhile, deeply troubled Andres is trying to save the relationship with his wife Gloria (Montserrat Maranon). Once a cheerful and athletic village entertainer at Everfield, Andres fell into a spiral of depression after the death of his son. For this reason, he now works as a cleaning man for the same resort. Although his wife also works as a cleaner at Everfield, she is chosen among the other members of the staff for a special development scheme which may lead her to future promotions and pay rise. The development scheme is co-ordinated by the mysterious and somehow sinister American manager Tom (played by RJ Mitte, in one of his break out post-Breaking Bad roles).

Things will become darker and stranger, until Pedro's and Andres' paths will cross.

Cast

Release

The film premiered at the World Cinema Dramatic Competition section at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival.[1] It was released theatrically in Mexico on 31 August 2018. It is released internationally by Netflix.

Reception

Time Share received mixed reviews from critics. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 86% based on 22 reviews, with an average rating of 7.64/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "Sharp, funny, and delightfully dark, Time Share (Tiempo Compartido) offers genre fans a complex thriller that sinks its hooks in fast and doesn't let go until the closing credits".[2]

Writing for The Hollywood Reporter, Franck Scheck praises the cinematography and the eerie soundtrack, as well as the ″disturbing prologue″, although he feels that the film "never achieves dramatic urgency. The characters feel more like plot devices than three-dimensional figures, the storylines don't converge in sufficiently resonant fashion and the pacing is sluggish to the point of tedium. The film seems to be constantly straining for a deep significance that it never quite pulls off".[3]

Nick Allen of RogerEbert.com also laments the pace of the movie and finds the resolution of the story unsatisfying. He defines the movie as ″a horror movie with the third act taken out″. Nevertheless, he praises the cast and the cinematography, adding that ″The movie peddles in paranoia, but is too tedious to make a lasting effect; even the resort itself seems too poorly operated to be worried about. This steady decline is all the more disappointing because of the solid filmmaking and acting, of which there are inspired moments throughout″.[4]

Guy Lodge, for Variety, defines Time Share as ″[a] nasty, nettling little puzzle piece that cleverly probes patriarchal insecurity and corporate invasiveness through the course of one botched family vacation″. He also praises the cinematography, commenting that "[this] is the kind of film that can turn pools of blush-pink to blood-red in a single shot, and a trick of either the light or mind is responsible".[5]

On a more positive note, Danielle Solzman, for Cultured Vultures, comments ″[w]ith you never knowing exactly what will happen next, Time Share is going to keep audiences on the edge of their seat.[6] Allan Hunter, for Screen Daily, observes that the movie is ″Bunuelian in its brash satire of corporate ambition, [and] can be as blackly comic as a Coen brothers screenplay″.[7]

Accolades

At the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, Time Share won the World Cinema Dramatic Special Jury Award for Screenwriting.[8]

References

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