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5:24 pm - 08/15/2012

'Compliance,' A Low Budget Indie, Might Be The Most Disturbing Movie Ever Made


NEW YORK -- Halfway through a special screening of "Compliance," the deeply unsettling new film from writer/director Craig Zobel, a woman stood up, yelled out, "Give me a f*cking break," and walked out of the theater. As the film progressed, other women joined her. At least eight by one count, although in the question-and-answer session following the film, someone suggested that actually 10 had left during the screening.

"Compliance," shown on Tuesday night at a special screening and panel put together by Psychology Today, is not a Holocaust drama or a gory war film or a Lars Von Trier genital mutilation-fest. It is a psychological thriller grounded in an almost documentary level of reality and will probably hold up as one of the most well-paced, brilliantly acted films of the year.

It was also, without a doubt, the most uncomfortable film experience of my life. Certainly it makes one question what constitutes a "great" film; though I don't really wish the experience of viewing "Compliance" on anybody, I also haven't stopped thinking about it.

Further compounding the psychologically disturbing nature of "Compliance" is the fact that it is based almost entirely on true events.



According to the film, in the decade leading up to 2004, more than 70 cases were reported of a man, pretending to be a police officer or some other authority figure, who called a fast-food restaurant and requested strip searches of employees. Each incident shared a similar pattern: The purported officer claimed to need help to solve a case, which required a manager to remove a female employee's clothing and, in some cases, perform sexual acts on her.

The film is based on one such event, which occurred at a McDonald's in Mount Washington, Ky., in 2004. In Zobel's version, Dreama Walker stars as Becky, a blond, teenage employee of "Chickwich," a fictional fast-food restaurant in Ohio, and Ann Dowd stars -- in an epically nuanced, Oscar-worthy performance -- as her well-meaning manager, Sandra.

Early in the film, Sandra receives a call from a man claiming to be a local police officer named "Officer Daniels," who explains that Becky has been accused of stealing from a customer. Officer Daniels then instructs Sandra to remove Becky's clothes, her belongings, to help him "find the money," and then -- well, it just gets worse from there.

The most unsettling part of "Compliance" (or rather, one of about a million unsettling parts -- really the whole movie is one long, unsettling part) is that, from an outsider's perspective, the whole escalation could have easily been avoided. As an audience member, one knows very early on that the caller isn't really a cop, so why doesn't this manager know? Why does she go along with it? Why does young Becky not resist?

At the panel following the screening, psychologist Stanton Peele suggested anyone might do the same thing in a similar situation. Though when the audience was pressed -- "How many people in this room think they would have gone along with this scenario if they were present?" Peele asked -- no one raised their hands.

"Nobody in this room would have fallen for it? Really?" Peele pressed. "Well, that's such a wonderful thing."

Then some of the audience members became vocal. A woman in the back suggested that any "intelligent" person would know right away that the caller wasn't real, and obviously no cop would request this type of thing from a woman over the phone in a public place. Another man suggested it was a matter of "IQ," and that anyone with a "high IQ" wouldn't fall for it.

"These people were working at a fast-food store!" the man explained.

Someone else, however, who said he was also "highly educated," admitted that he wouldn't have asked if the man was a real police officer. "If you truly believed there was a threat of consequence, you would have done it," he said. "A police officer is calling, saying you might lose your job, you might be held accountable if you don't do these things, you might follow through."

"This man didn't call banks and law firms, he called places of vulnerability," one audience member said.

Psychology Today editor-at-large Hara Estroff suggested that the events in the film paralleled those of the famous experiments done by Yale psychologist Stanley Milgram in the early 1960s, in which he asked various subjects to deliver intense shocks to people in other rooms who wrongly answered a series of questions. The shocks increased with each incorrect answer.

Milgram had surveyed professors and students before carrying out the experiments, and all had told him they would never do such a thing; yet, when the actual experiments were carried out, 65 percent followed through until the end, administering the final 450-volt shock to the unseen victims.

Estroff quoted Milgram: "Ordinary people simply doing their jobs without any particular hostility can become agents in a terrible destructive process. Relatively few people have the resources needed to resist authority."

Indeed, Peele suggested, the recent Sandusky trial is a perfect example of this.

"The most powerful men at Penn State failed to take any steps for 14 years to protect the children Sandusky victimized," he said. "They never demonstrated through actions or words any concern for the safety and well-being of Sandusky's victims until after he was arrested."

Regardless of whether or not "Compliance" is a film likely to draw widespread interest -- it also divided audiences when it screened at Sundance this year -- one can't deny the questions it raises.

The soft-spoken Zobel seemed to appreciate the intense reactions elicited by his film, and to look forward to seeing how the rest of the world would respond. Though he said he originally had no idea what he was getting into when he began working on the film, he said the stories of these prank calls had immediately "riveted" him.

"They're sensationalist news that you read about, and then the next day it's not there anymore," he said. "I'd immediately had such an adverse reaction to it, where I said, 'There's no way I would be that guy.' But I had to ask myself, 'Am I being honest, that I've never been in my life been in a situation where an authority figure has asked me to do something I disagreed with, but I've gone along with it because I didn't feel I had the agency to say no?'"

"Compliance" will be released in select theaters on Friday, August 17.


Source
Wiki regarding the incidents
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isntdaveone 15th-Aug-2012 10:33 pm (UTC)
It is a psychological thriller grounded in an almost documentary level of reality

iluvdykes 15th-Aug-2012 11:31 pm (UTC)
As sad as it is, I remember that there was another case where a bunch of workers at KFC were told by "police" that a customer had contaminated the area with some disease and that they would need to leave the premises in their underwear. We're talking below weather and people did it because you would trust that it's the cops.
chihaya19 15th-Aug-2012 10:33 pm (UTC)
i wouldn't go that far, but the whole situation was definitely fucked up
fionaapple 15th-Aug-2012 10:34 pm (UTC)
Dreama Walker really won me over in Bitch in Apt 23, I would hate to see her in a role like this because of her bubbly and sweet personality on the show.
bollyhood 15th-Aug-2012 10:34 pm (UTC)
Nhf these kinds of movies. A serbian film still sounds worse.
browneyedguuurl 15th-Aug-2012 10:46 pm (UTC)
Yeah, I read the description of that film and DNW EVER! OMG!
jessography 15th-Aug-2012 11:08 pm (UTC)
What are they about?
secretivexhero 16th-Aug-2012 12:49 am (UTC)
yeah that movie isn't "art" like they were claiming it was. it was just fucking stupid and the people who made it are fucked up in the head.

I love how people always try to justify stupid shit with the "it's art" crap. I appreciate art, but not that kind of art.
juanbomb 16th-Aug-2012 01:20 am (UTC)
LOL a serbian film might sound worse but trust me, is not.

It's tries so hard to shock and the acting and everything in it is so bad and fake that it falls flat.
eloisatoabelard 16th-Aug-2012 01:06 pm (UTC)
Megan Is Missing is another one that fucked me up. It's unsettling to even think about.
gee 15th-Aug-2012 10:35 pm (UTC)
How can you make a whole movie out of that? Does it take her 40 minutes to get naked?
elvenqueen86 15th-Aug-2012 10:37 pm (UTC)
iirc the actual event it's based on lasted for hours :-/
gee 15th-Aug-2012 10:39 pm (UTC)
The fuck. I had heard about it before, but not that it lasted that long. Terrible.
thetrustoryofme 15th-Aug-2012 11:28 pm (UTC)
aside from the manager, the actual story also features the managers boyfriend. apparently the faux police officer has him rape the employee. there's a ton that the plot synopsis above is leaving out of the real story that might explain how it could take up a whole "movie" time wise.
pluralization 16th-Aug-2012 01:57 am (UTC)
law and order svu did this on an episode and robin williams was the bad guy.
stussytribe 15th-Aug-2012 10:35 pm (UTC)
what?
drkshdw 15th-Aug-2012 10:41 pm (UTC)
this actually happened. the innocent employee was in the managers office for hours being abused because her manager was being told to do so.
dracopet 15th-Aug-2012 11:17 pm (UTC)
And apparently at some point the person on the phone said for the manager to get her fiance involved and then her fiance came and HE was told to do stuff to her and went along with it. Really at that point how can you still believe this is real?
georgie_georgie 15th-Aug-2012 10:36 pm (UTC)
I can't watch movies with graphic sex, violence or gore. Some things are better left implied imo /cool story brah.
cherryreefer 15th-Aug-2012 11:18 pm (UTC)
AGREED. I CAN'T WATCH SHIT LIKE THAT EITHER.
hershelwalker 15th-Aug-2012 11:56 pm (UTC)
seriously. I can watch them but I choose not to. it's just bad filmmaking.
secretivexhero 16th-Aug-2012 12:50 am (UTC)
IA. I think the best films are those that don't use graphic anything to get their point across. It's SO EASY to use shocking things to make art~~~~, it takes a true artist to use subtly.
georgie_georgie 16th-Aug-2012 12:58 am (UTC)
yup
babyyouloveit 15th-Aug-2012 10:37 pm (UTC)
They're trying too hard to make this movie sound disturbing.
Trust me they have no idea what the hell disturbing movies are if they think this is "the most disturbing movie ever made".
Like it still sounds unsettling and everything but not "ever made", no.
drkshdw 15th-Aug-2012 10:41 pm (UTC)
this really happened though, and the girl was in the office for hours while they were instructed to abuse her.
clubland 15th-Aug-2012 10:47 pm (UTC)
Right, which is a horrific event in real life. But a movie about it would be boring as fuck.
cupkate 15th-Aug-2012 11:23 pm (UTC)
Yeah, and the fact that it was only women that left makes me think that it's not necessarily that disturbing itself, but probably filmed in a ridiculously annoying, sexist way.
fjfjbb99 15th-Aug-2012 11:54 pm (UTC)
Well I've seen the film, it's disturbing in that Michael Haneke's "Cache" and "Funny game" kind of way. I can definitely see the Haneke's influence. It's a quite intense and suffocating film and you definitely question how could this happen at all.
bigbranch 15th-Aug-2012 10:38 pm (UTC)
ugh, will not be watching this. just thinking about that incident makes me so uncomfortable.
runnerlevelred 15th-Aug-2012 10:39 pm (UTC)
Milgram's Obedience Experiment...it's entirely possible the events in the film happened. Still sounds like a lame film, though.
missloom 15th-Aug-2012 10:41 pm (UTC)
They did...
drkshdw 15th-Aug-2012 10:42 pm (UTC)
they did. this actually happened.
snortingcoke 15th-Aug-2012 10:43 pm (UTC)
this did happen which is disturbing but this review is trying too hard
babyyouloveit 15th-Aug-2012 11:30 pm (UTC)
ia
cindel 15th-Aug-2012 10:39 pm (UTC)
A cop asking you to strip search an employee over the phone? Ok then...
drkshdw 15th-Aug-2012 10:42 pm (UTC)
it actually happened, bb.
clubland 15th-Aug-2012 10:48 pm (UTC)
The fact that the two abusers and the victim all thought this was a legit cop/investigation being done over the phone just fucking baffles me.
zemi_chan 15th-Aug-2012 11:05 pm (UTC)
MTE, especially when it comes to the "sexual acts" part.
akasakasan 15th-Aug-2012 11:39 pm (UTC)
She was 17, being instructed by someone in a position of authority and obviously terrified. Even if she didn't believe it was a legit investigation she wasn't allowed to leave, was naked embarrassed and scared. :/
maveness 15th-Aug-2012 10:53 pm (UTC)
It actually shocks me that people fell for that...but I guess the easiest ones to convince of that are the ones that have done nothing wrong and never have had run ins with the law. They honestly don't know.

I'd never have fallen for it, but I work in law enforcement so...
pluralization 16th-Aug-2012 01:59 am (UTC)
the most fucked up part, while on the phone the guy told the manager she needed to bring someone else in to watch over her. so the manager called in her fucking boyfriend, and he ended up abusing her, spanking her..etc. all because the "cop" said so.
drkshdw 15th-Aug-2012 10:40 pm (UTC)
i remember when this actually happened. i feel so bad for that poor girl. the movie looks good though.
dazzled4life 15th-Aug-2012 10:41 pm (UTC)
psychology today is hardly a credible source of reliable psychologically related information.
hellomeru 15th-Aug-2012 10:41 pm (UTC)
snore
snortingcoke 15th-Aug-2012 10:42 pm (UTC)
after reading the wiki for a serbian film this is tame
sullen_child 15th-Aug-2012 11:22 pm (UTC)
whats that?
snortingcoke 15th-Aug-2012 11:30 pm (UTC)
the most disturbing thng i have ever read, don't even go there.
babyyouloveit 15th-Aug-2012 11:32 pm (UTC)
The only thing you need to know about A Serbian Film: "newborn porn".
josh_the_k 16th-Aug-2012 12:04 am (UTC)
I knew about the newborn scene in "A Serbian Film" before I watched it. And when it happened, I found it unintentionally hilarious because the baby was so obviously not real, and the scene itself is so over the top, I couldn't take any of it seriously. The whole film is like that.
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