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Felt
Directed by
Jason Banker
Not Rated
2014
80m
Horror
,
Romance
,
and more
4.8
64%
38%
Add to Watchlist
A woman creates an alter ego in hopes of overcoming the trauma inflicted by men in her life.
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Where to Watch Felt
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Cast of Felt
Amy Everson
Amy / Writer
Kentucker Audley
Kenny
Alanna Reynolds
Alanna
Roxanne Lauren Knouse
Roxanne
Brendan Miller
Brendan
Jason Banker
Director / Writer / Producer
Jesse McGowan
Producer
Felt Ratings & Reviews
Complex
Kristen Yoonsoo Kim
Felt is a fascinating movie-one that belongs on this year's list of "you've never seen anything like it!"
Flavorwire
Jason Bailey
In its own fascinating and sideways manner, 'Felt' acknowledges and addresses the oft-ignored darkness at the center of these mass entertainments, and reframes their emotional and political implications.
The Film Stage
Bill Graham
Mixing slow-building dread and mental health issues, Felt arrives as a needle prick of chaos.
SF Weekly
Sherilyn Connelly
This is a revenge picture unlike any other, less a straightforward narrative than a meditation on retaining agency in a world determined to take it away. The feelings in Felt run deep.
BuzzFeed News
Alison Willmore
It's a reminder that while genre movies usually look toward violence, there's just as rich territory to be explored in what happens after it, in the marks it leaves that go beyond the physical.
PopMatters
Valeriy Kolyadych
[It's] occasionally visually engaging, unique, and insightful, but also equal parts dull and overwrought.
San Francisco Examiner
Anita Katz
Different and daring but not quite satisfying.
Paste Magazine
Andy Crump
Whether we like or dislike movies like it is ultimately irrelevant compared to the responses they induce in their audiences. So consider this a guarantee: You won't walk away from Felt unmoved.
Los Angeles Times
Robert Abele
"Felt" is a moodily disturbing character study of a besieged woman for whom art is engagement and coping mechanism, but also conversely a source of alienation and even a weapon.
Austin Chronicle
Marjorie Baumgarten
Provocative though it is, Felt literally wears its ideas on its sleeves.
HeraldNet (Everett, WA)
Robert Horton
I'd give the movie more of a break if it weren't for the improvised dialogue that grinds down scene after scene. Those scenes don't look like a portrait of a debased culture; they look like actors searching for something insightful or funny to say.
San Diego Reader
Matthew Lickona
Director and co-writer Jason Banker's story of post-rape trauma is deeply unpleasant (you were expecting maybe a cheerful story, one in which Chekhov's gun somehow doesn't go off?), but thoughtfully, creatively so.
The Dissolve
Scott Tobias
The payoff may be predictable, but Banker and Everson are refreshingly unclear about how they-and viewers-feel about it.
Salon.com
Andrew O'Hehir
Some viewers will no doubt find "Felt" maddening because it never answers seemingly crucial plot questions that a normal movie or TV show would feel compelled to clear up. That ambiguity is precisely the source of its power, and its cinematic quality.
New York Times
Ben Kenigsberg
At once underwritten and overconceptualized. Reading about the filmmakers' intentions is more rewarding than watching the results.
AV Club
Jenni Miller
Although there are a few moments that feel a little too on the nose, Felt sneaks up on you and lingers for hours afterward.
IndieWire
Ryan Lattanzio
The first hour offers a textured, specific and creepy study of female victimhood and unspeakable trauma. And then the director loses his mind.
The Hollywood Reporter
Justin Lowe
With predominantly improvised dialogue and performances, Felt gains scant narrative complexity from an over-reliance on a no-frills documentary style.
Village Voice
Diana Clarke
This strange, quiet film takes social narratives about romance and gender and upends them, often seeming like one thing until it's another.
Slant Magazine
Wes Greene
A hollow bit of violence exposes the film's sense of empowerment as nothing more than a harmless sheep masquerading in wolf's clothing.
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