Use every cliche, have nice cameras, add cinematic music, add your friends as really bad actors, and get your product on Netflix. ... Now that I think about it, not a bad formula.
27 Reviews
How Not To Make A Movie
jfoyboy3 July 2019
Weak
danielpauldawson4 July 2018
Why Did I Even Bother
harvey-castellano6 July 2019
One-Dimensional, Low, Low Budget Thriller
lavatch4 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"Recall" was especially disappointing in its cardboard characters and flimsy plot line. The roles were uniformly stereotypes, such as the crime boss Sal Ventucci, his nephew whom he doesn't trust, the drug lord, and the two step-brothers who hatch a scheme to rob the powerful Ventucci family of $2 million during a drug sale.
Not only did the Ventucci clan not protect their money very well, but the two stepbrothers were incompetent in their vague plan to carry out the heist. There was lack of substance in the film's narrative and lack of sympathy for any of the characters.
In the film' structure, the crime drama was disconnected to a subplot of the personal drama about Mike and his girlfriend Nicole, which is told via flashbacks. That storyline was also poorly developed, relying on a messy ending that never revealed the full story of what happened to Nicole and why.
The film get bogged down in slow-paced conversations, interminable pauses, and one scene that actually repeats itself in the content: the long, agonizing double sequence (one inside a car followed nearly verbatim in the scene in the bar) where Dale persuades his stepbrother Mike to participate in the robbery.
The relatively positive reviews that argue that the film has been ranked too low are badly mistaken. The comments on this board are far too generous, and the numerical rankings are way too high.
Not only did the Ventucci clan not protect their money very well, but the two stepbrothers were incompetent in their vague plan to carry out the heist. There was lack of substance in the film's narrative and lack of sympathy for any of the characters.
In the film' structure, the crime drama was disconnected to a subplot of the personal drama about Mike and his girlfriend Nicole, which is told via flashbacks. That storyline was also poorly developed, relying on a messy ending that never revealed the full story of what happened to Nicole and why.
The film get bogged down in slow-paced conversations, interminable pauses, and one scene that actually repeats itself in the content: the long, agonizing double sequence (one inside a car followed nearly verbatim in the scene in the bar) where Dale persuades his stepbrother Mike to participate in the robbery.
The relatively positive reviews that argue that the film has been ranked too low are badly mistaken. The comments on this board are far too generous, and the numerical rankings are way too high.
Plot Twist? What Twist?
gwworkman29 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This movie had the potential of being interesting, but there were just too many implausible scenes. (1) The mafia is going to leave two million dollars in an unlocked, unguarded car at night with the keys left in the ignition so that someone can just walk up to it and drive it away? (2) Sal, the aging mafia boss, is going to be so good with a gun that he can shoot to death all of the opposing gang members (with guns) in his restaurant and never sustain a scratch? (3) Nicole was murdered by a gunman out in the dark of night for no reason at all?
I have no idea why some reviewers say there is a twist ending. I see no twist at all. I just see Mikey stopping along a road at night, getting out of his car, and falling onto the road. Are we supposed to guess that he collapsed from a drug overdose? And are we also supposed to guess that he died there? If so, that's not a twist. He told his step-brother earlier in the film that if he wanted to die, that's the way he would do it. And what happened to step-brother Dale, the other main character? Did the mafia henchman John shoot him? It never showed it. And what happened to Alexis?
The movie ended without our knowing whether the two main characters lived or died and whether the mafia boss recovered his money. This is what I call a rip-off movie. The viewer watches it all the way through and then, when the credits start rolling, he finds out that there are no definite conclusions. Who can enjoy a movie like that?
I have no idea why some reviewers say there is a twist ending. I see no twist at all. I just see Mikey stopping along a road at night, getting out of his car, and falling onto the road. Are we supposed to guess that he collapsed from a drug overdose? And are we also supposed to guess that he died there? If so, that's not a twist. He told his step-brother earlier in the film that if he wanted to die, that's the way he would do it. And what happened to step-brother Dale, the other main character? Did the mafia henchman John shoot him? It never showed it. And what happened to Alexis?
The movie ended without our knowing whether the two main characters lived or died and whether the mafia boss recovered his money. This is what I call a rip-off movie. The viewer watches it all the way through and then, when the credits start rolling, he finds out that there are no definite conclusions. Who can enjoy a movie like that?
Cringe worthy.
jake-9762727 June 2019
A go to example for teachers to reference when describing how not to fo things.
A painful chore to watch...it really could not be anything other than a Canadian film made for television. Terrible in every way from script to acting. A better title could well have been 'Dudfellas'.
A painful chore to watch...it really could not be anything other than a Canadian film made for television. Terrible in every way from script to acting. A better title could well have been 'Dudfellas'.
Lol
anthonysmith-4933130 June 2019
We need to make laws on who can make a movie. I think the director studied filmmaking at community college and this was his final project. And he didn't even get a good grade, just enough to pass. The actors perfected their craft in free drama classes at the YMCA. I only watched this because I promised someone I'd spend time with them and they had control of the TV. I'm second guessing that relationship. Life is too short for this.
Simply terrible
Wizard-830 June 2019
I know the many obstacles and pitfalls independent filmmakers have to face when making movies, especially when the filmmakers are Canadian. But even when you take that into consideration, there is no reason why this indie film had to be so unbelievably bad. I know the filmmakers were working with an extremely low budget, but even then they should have known to include things such as establishing shots and linking footage. As a result of missing essentials such as those, the movie sometimes has some bewildering moments. Actually, the bewildering moments momentarily woke me up from my near slumber, because the story plods along at a really slow pace, even though the running time is just a mere 72 minutes. Also what woke me up were the unbelievably amateurish performances by a no-name cast, though the dialogue is often written to be so awkward and unnatural that even an Oscar-worthy cast wouldn't be able to deliver them with firm conviction. The confusing and seemingly unfinished ending is the icing on the cake. Why on earth did Netflix think this utter weakling of a movie was worth picking up?
S T U P I D
JohnGaultProSe27 June 2019
Solid
tommy-jmurphy14 August 2018
Enjoyable
robin-3320713 October 2018
Characters
strogonovich15 August 2018
Absolute crap!
sandringham-414472 July 2019
No better way to say it just sucked.
larkosh13 July 2019
Stilted and awkward dialogue. Plot is disjointed with holes big enough to drive a truck through them. Stereotypical, one dimensional characters. Acting was terrible. There is no "twist" ending. You can't have a "plot twist" without first establishing a plot which there is none. At the end you feel like the filmmakers just ran out of money so they crafted a meaningless montage as the ending. Didn't work. Total fail on multiple levels. A perfect example of a bad gangster genre movie done badly.
Piss poor everything
ride-897-7293597 July 2019
Do not watch
ronbreezey13 November 2019
Awful
jamesstevens-9352115 February 2020
Horrible
shelley-morningstar10 October 2019
Good God this was terrible
nardobram@yahoo.com18 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
If you just look at the brother's relationship, that should be enough to hate this film because their relationship is just so unbelievable. They hate each other, yet they're doing this huge job together and they spend scene after scene explaining how much they obviously dislike each other. That alone would be enough to hate this film. Then you throw in the horrible acting and mediocre writing and you have a film that makes you want to throw up in your mouth.
No good
ryanhowarth-4402516 November 2019
Good twist
cindy-764108 February 2019
Not bad
cassie-9415913 October 2018
Packs a wicked punch
Woodyanders18 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Desperate Mikey (nicely played by director/co-writer Michael James Regan) decides to assist his scuzzy no-count stepbrother Dale (a solid performance by Tommy James Murphy) in robbing two million dollars worth of money from the mob.
Director Regan keeps the riveting story moving along at a brisk pace, presents a colorful array of seedy low-life criminal characters, maintains a tough gritty tone throughout, and delivers a real doozy of a dark twist at the end. The profane dialogue further adds to this film's overall harsh edge. Moreover, the sound acting by the capable cast keeps this movie humming: Louis Di Bianco as formidable mob capo Sal Vertucci, Stefano DiMatteo as the reluctant Vinny, Katrina Isberg as foxy waitress Alexis, Danny Bruzzi as the belligerent Bruno, Eugene Clark as fearsome drug dealer Eddie Jackson, and Brendee Green as the sweet Nicole. A hard-hitting crime thriller.
Director Regan keeps the riveting story moving along at a brisk pace, presents a colorful array of seedy low-life criminal characters, maintains a tough gritty tone throughout, and delivers a real doozy of a dark twist at the end. The profane dialogue further adds to this film's overall harsh edge. Moreover, the sound acting by the capable cast keeps this movie humming: Louis Di Bianco as formidable mob capo Sal Vertucci, Stefano DiMatteo as the reluctant Vinny, Katrina Isberg as foxy waitress Alexis, Danny Bruzzi as the belligerent Bruno, Eugene Clark as fearsome drug dealer Eddie Jackson, and Brendee Green as the sweet Nicole. A hard-hitting crime thriller.
Underrated
joe-4880513 October 2018
After reading the negative reviews... I actually found this film (and cast) better then I was expecting. It looks like they had a small budget and made what they could with it. More power to them. The pacing didn't bother me, felt like a slow-burner.
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