The East

Review

The East

4 out of 5 stars
  • Film
  • Recommended
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Time Out says

In a perfect world, exciting and ideas-driven mainstream films could be fronted (as well as created) by women without the need for a poster girl in the twenty-first century. In this imperfect world, however, 29-year-old writer-actor Brit Marling is that poster girl. This sleek, smart enviro-thriller is a more commercial movie from Marling and director Zal Batmanglij than 2011 cult study ‘Sound of My Voice’. But its morally ambiguous investigation of extreme left-wing politics is still light years away from usual multiplex concerns.

Marling excels as Sarah, an ex-FBI agent recruited by her sly private security firm boss (Patricia Clarkson on lip-smacking form) to infiltrate The East, a band of eco-terrorists on a violent rampage against corporate America. Inevitably, she’s seduced into their way of thinking – not hard to understand when their leader is Alexander Skarsgård. But the film keeps its good-evil borders compellingly supple, at least until a wobbly finale that requires Sarah to act like the Hollywood heroine she has so strenuously avoided becoming. It’s a minor blot on a film otherwise propulsively alive with prickly politics.

Release Details

  • Rated:15
  • Release date:Friday 28 June 2013
  • Duration:116 mins

Cast and crew

  • Director:Zal Batmanglij
  • Cast:
    • Ellen Page
    • Alexander Skarsgard
    • Brit Marling
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