Direction: Benjamin Caron
Country: USA
Even boasting a talented cast, Sharper needed sharper angles and less artificial schemes to succeed. The screenplay by Brian Gatewood and Alessandro Tanaka vomits so many twits that it makes you tired and nauseated. It’s an elliptical story that, extending itself for too long, is not as immersive as one might want it to be.
The film, with New York as its backdrop, is set in motion with Sandra (Briana Middleton), a timid PhD student who accepts an invitation for dinner from Tom (Justice Smith), an insecure bookstore owner recently rehabilitated from depression. The course of the story then takes us to Max (Sebastian Stan), a pitiless con artist who visits his indulgent mother, Madeline (Julianne Moore). At that specific time, he meets her new boyfriend, Richard (John Lithgow), a public figure and billionaire. Yet, in this game of deceit, nothing is what it seems.
Offering no innovation, director Benjamin Caron has difficulties in finding a tone of his own. The thriller seems complex on the surface but, looking closely, you’ll realize that it doesn’t unfold in an expert way. Its machinations, despite passing a sense of fun, are based on copy-paste rudiments that wear out our patience.