Mute Witness

1995

Crime / Horror / Thriller

7
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 85% · 26 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 65% · 2.5K ratings
IMDb Rating 6.7/10 10 7328 7.3K

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Plot summary

Billy is mute, but it hasn't kept her from becoming a successful makeup artist. While in Russia, working on a film directed by her sister's boyfriend, Andy, Billy finds herself trapped in the studio one night and is horrified to see a snuff film being made. Billy escapes and, with the help of her sister, Kate, alerts authorities about what she saw. Unfortunately, in doing so, she makes an enemy of the Russian mafia, who funded the snuff film.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
November 26, 2023 at 10:16 AM

Director

Top cast

Alec Guinness as The Reaper
Fay Ripley as Karen Hughes
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
888.59 MB
1280*546
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 36 min
Seeds 2
1.61 GB
1920*820
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 36 min
Seeds 14

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by reelreviewsandrecommendations 7 / 10

A Macabre Mosaic

Billy Hughes is a mute, American make-up artist working on a low-budget slasher in Moscow, directed by her sister's boyfriend. One night, Billy stays later than usual, looking for a prop. She isn't the only one on set, though, as she discovers to her horror. She stumbles upon members of the crew, who are making a snuff film. A frantic chase ensues. Will Billy be able to escape the killers and- if she does- will anyone believe her story?

Written and directed by Anthony Waller, 'Mute Witness' is a tension filled thrill-ride that will have viewers gripped from the get-go. A low-budget affair, it brims with suspense, and is genuinely frightening, though also contains moments of black humour. Waller's narrative is absorbing, despite a weak third act and a rushed ending, containing many unexpected moments of pure petrifying power. Billy, whose struggles to communicate compounds the dread, is a perfect conduit for the audience, as Waller takes us on a journey into fear.

In some ways, it is like Joel Schumacher's '8mm' and John Carpenter's 'Halloween' had a cinematic child; and is just as gruesome as that sounds. Intense and engrossing, it goes in directions one doesn't expect. Although the secondary characters aren't particularly well-written, and some of the dialogue is very stilted, Billy is compelling. We feel for her: isolated in a foreign country, unable to communicate, stalked by murderous thugs- her struggle to survive is engaging. At least, until the third act, when things descend, becoming rather mundane.

The best horrors are usually the ones that make effective use of sound design- such is the case with 'Mute Witness.' Noises- the scraping of a knife on a hard surface, the splatter of blood, footsteps in the dark- create agitation and alarm, while the use of silence heightens the suspense. Furthermore, Egon Werdin's cinematography is eerily atmospheric. His use of irregular angles, shaky cam movements and tracking shots evokes fear and creates tension.

Werdin also makes brilliant use of the sets and locations in the film, employing the lighting team to ominous effect. The shadow-play and utilisation of contrasts makes for a sinister looking picture, while the production design is of a high quality. Moreover, Peter R. Adam's editing is most effective, making a macabre mosaic of a movie, stitching scenes together with a rhythm that mirrors the viewer's racing heartbeat.

Unfortunately, despite the technical expertise behind the camera, those in front disappoint. Although Marina Zudina does strong work as Billy, effectively displaying her fear and agitation silently, her co-stars let her down. As the director, Evan Richards delivers a shockingly hammy performance, seemingly hell bent on chewing as much scenery as he can. Fay Ripley does better than him in the role of Billy's sister, but still doesn't impress much, coming across as quite wooden.

Oleg Yankovskiy is good in a small role as a policeman, deserving of more screen time, while Igor Volkov and Sergei Karlenkov are terrific when silent and unconvincing when not. Furthermore, Alec Guinness- who thought the production was a student film and did not accept, nor was offered, payment for his services- is terrific, for the few seconds he's on screen. Blink and you'll miss him, in this case, is too generous, as even if you don't blink, you might miss him.

Despite a tepid third act, Anthony Waller's 'Mute Witness' is a tense and sinister horror that rockets along at a brisk pace. Boasting striking cinematography from Egon Werdin and creepily atmospheric sound design, it is a stirring picture. However, while it is well-edited and Marina Zudina does strong work as Billy, the supporting cast don't all impress- with Evan Richards' misjudged, over the top performance hampering the film's impact. Despite that, though, 'Mute Witness' is not a film you'll want to keep quiet about.

Reviewed by / 10

Reviewed by ma-cortes 6 / 10

A chilling thrilling film about a mute makeup artist witnesses a brutal crime.

Waller's first feature film was this thriller, Mute witness (1995), filmed entirely in Moscow in 1993, and financed privately by himself and his co-producing partners. Some US filmers are making a cheap thriller in Moscow . Billy (Marina Zudina) is the mute make-up artist of the title who, returning to the studio for for a forgotten item is locked resulting in fateful consequences . As Billy is accidentally locked overnight in the strange studio where the movie is being made and she wanderers into the basement looking for someone to let her out. Then Billy witnesses some of the crew shooting a snuff movie with a real-life stabbing and along the way , she attempts communicate her sister Karen Hughes (Fay Ripley) . We dare you not to scream !. Nobody reduce the Silence !. She Can't Speak ! . She Can't Scream !. She Can't Beg For Mercy !. She Won't Be Silenced !. Nobody was able to silence her!

Low- budget British thriller lensed in Moscow film studio . Anthony Waller's witty , action-packed thriller seldom lets up . He milks the Moscow locations and the heroine's isolated predicament for all they're worth , only Billy's sister attempts to understand her sign-language , while brother-in-law is too obsessed by the film he's directing to attend to anyone but himself . First-timer Waller mocks both thriller genre and film biz , sometimes relying on , rather than cliched , spoofing elements . Highlight is 25-minute long chase scene with the murderers chasing Billy in the cavernous studio . Alec Guinness makes a surprise appearance in an uncredited cameo who he shot 8 years earlier in 1985.

The motion picture was well directed by Anthony Waller . Filming was complicated by its coincidence with Russia's October revolution, a diphtheria outbreak, -23 degree temperatures, local mafia extortion and last minute cast changes. Despite these initial difficulties, it was sold to Columbia TriStar as a completed movie, and was distributed worldwide in all major territories, and invited to 23 festivals, including the Cannes Film Festival, Courmayeur (Audience Award), Gerardmer (Audience and Grand Jury Award), Moscow (Audience Award), Birmingham (Grand Jury Award) Sundance, Toronto and Tokyo. In 1995, Waller co-founded the Amsterdam-based, Cometstone Pictures. In 1996, Cometstone's first production was An American Werewolf in Paris (1997), which Waller directed, co-wrote and executive produced. With a budget of $22 million, the movie was an entirely European co-production, sold to Hollywood Pictures in a negative pick-up deal for a Buena Vista release on Christmas Day 1997. Further projects Waller has directed are the psychological thriller, ¨The Guilty¨ (2000), and the supernatural thriller, ¨Nine Miles Down¨ (2009). As well as the dramatized Documentary "The Singularity is Near¨ and ¨Trader¨ and most recently, "The Piper" with Elizabeth Hurley. Rating : 6.5/10 . Well worth seeing .

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