

Compliance
Directed by Craig ZobelA normal Friday service at a fast food restaurant becomes interrupted by a police officer who claims an employee stole from a customer, but something more sinister is going on.
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Compliance Ratings & Reviews
- Michael Heimgartner10h agoDisturbing, Frustrating, and Tragically Real – A Hard Watch That Stays With You I have to say right away that Ann Dowd is always a highlight for me. She has this uncanny ability to make any role feel grounded and believable while radiating an unsettling intensity, and she absolutely delivers here. The fact that Compliance is based on a real story makes it all the more disturbing, because you’re watching something that feels absurd and yet actually happened. The film is remarkably authentic in its approach, with a controlled, almost clinical direction that creates a tense, suffocating atmosphere from start to finish. It plays out like a grim chamber drama, confined almost entirely to the back rooms of a fast-food restaurant, and that single-location setting enhances the film’s claustrophobic, documentary-like quality. The cinematography is subtle but effective, with tight, often uncomfortable close-ups that heighten the sense of entrapment and helplessness. The whole film has this stale, airless feeling to it that’s deeply unsettling. What really struck me is just how infuriating the entire scenario is. Watching these characters obey increasingly abusive commands without question was maddening. I caught myself shouting internally, begging them to just say something, to stand up, to realize how absurd it all was. But that’s also the entire point. The film confronts you with the uncomfortable reality of how easily people can be manipulated into blind obedience, especially when authority is invoked. It’s tragic, but also incredibly frustrating. I appreciated how the film stays mostly restrained. It doesn’t rely on graphic imagery for shock value but instead suggests much of the horror, making it even more disturbing as your mind fills in the blanks. That choice adds a layer of raw, unsettling power without feeling exploitative. It’s also painfully realistic. The script is based closely on actual events, with dialogue inspired by real-life transcripts, which explains why the conversations feel so horribly plausible even when you want to scream at the characters for their naivety. It’s important to remember that this wasn’t a one-off case. The real-life hoax call that inspired the film was just one of more than seventy similar incidents in the US. That fact alone is chilling and lends the film a horrible authenticity. Director Craig Zobel deserves credit for not sensationalizing the story but instead treating it with a kind of cold, documentary-like precision that makes it all the more unsettling. Despite all that, Compliance is not an easy film to watch—and not always in a good way. The characters’ passivity is so extreme it can cross the line from tragic to outright infuriating, making it hard to empathize even when you know it’s based on real events. That frustration is clearly intentional, but it also makes the film hard to sit through. At times I felt like the script could have gone deeper into exploring why these people behaved this way rather than simply reenacting the events. Ultimately, Compliance is an uncomfortable, bleak, and deliberately infuriating film that sticks with you whether you want it to or not. It’s solidly made, well-acted, and chilling in its realism, but it’s also unpleasant in a way that can make it hard to recommend as entertainment. For me, it lands firmly at 6/10: an undeniably effective and important film, but one that’s deeply frustrating, intentionally unpleasant, and tough to revisit.
- ayayronFebruary 16, 2025Being that it's based on a true story makes this film equal parts bizzare and disturbing