Movie Review: Alone in Four Walls at the Edinburgh Intertnational Film Festival 2008

Part of: Edinburgh International Film Festival 2008

Alone in Four Walls is possibly one of the most boring cinematic experiences I’ve had in a long, long time. Although there are some admirable points it’s trying to get across, it doesn’t succeed very well, leaving a hollow and empty shell of a film.

Alone in Four Walls is a documentary about a young offenders institution — the day to day things they do within it and interviews with them as they tell how they ended up in there and what they aspire to do when they eventually get out.

I have just recently become a fan of the documentary genre. I never used to even look sideways at them but after seeing the films of Michael Moore I have gone on to enjoy many more from the genre since. I am very disappointed to say, as I was really looking forward to it, that Alone in Four Walls is the worst documentary I have seen so far. Now granted I am a newcomer to this type of film, so take what I have said with a grain of salt, but that’s my opinion of it. I really didn’t know a documentary could be this uninteresting.

Usually a documentary will be interesting to me for at least its first half and then most of them lose me. That’s not usually the film’s fault; it’s just there’s only so much that I can usually take of being told information about the same thing for very long. Alone in Four Walls lost me within the first five minutes; even though I can understand some of the things they are trying to get across, they just don’t do it in an adequate fashion. The idea that boys as young as eight can be put into a place like this young offenders institution is a disheartening thing on its own but after a few minutes of taking in this idea it becomes very boring. That’s not to say it can’t be appreciated and enjoyed by someone else, but I bordered on hating it.

The film hasn’t got enough in it to sustain anywhere near its 90-plus minute runtime. I felt that it could have been a short documentary (which now seem to pop up at festivals as a sort of experiment in filmmaking) that lasts no more than a half hour. There are a lot of scenes there that definitely should have been taken out in the editing process; for instance, we see the boys make their beds and tidy their rooms about four or five times throughout the movie, with no reason for the inane repetition.

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Article Author: Ross Miller

I am a film critic and blogger, and have been so for almost three years now, going from starting my own movie review website, Movie World (which is still running), and then moving on to writing for various movie blogs.

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  • 1 - frank

    Sep 26, 2008 at 6:21 pm

    wow - you didn't get this film at all. Yes it was understated and subtle, but everyone I saw coming out of the cinema at the Cambridge Film Festival showing of this was highly impressed and quite deeply moved by the film. Did you not think that maybe the 'inane' repetition of the boys making their beds may be meant to reflect the routine and regiment of the boy's 2+ years in the institution? I thought it was a powerful and moving film - one of the best films at this years festival in my opinion.

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