A mysterious older woman seeks revenge on the corrupt legal guardian who destroyed her life.A mysterious older woman seeks revenge on the corrupt legal guardian who destroyed her life.A mysterious older woman seeks revenge on the corrupt legal guardian who destroyed her life.
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- 4 wins & 1 nomination total
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Featured review
The G is an intentionally miserable revenge film that showcases some of the most despicable villains of recent memory because of how they manipulate the legal system to take everything from the elderly. When the revenge finally comes it's very satisfying and suitably unflinching but the film saves it for the very end making it a bit of a slog even at a relatively short 106 minutes. Luckily, it has the right actress to keep it going until then.
Dale Dickey is great in a central performance holding everything together. She shows hints of a darker past early on and seeing her husband get mistreated is painful to watch, making her eventual revenge all the more satisfying when she shows no mercy. Bruce Ramsay as the main villain and his generically evil henchmen are the kind of bad guys who are very easy to hate thanks to how irredeemable their scheme makes them.
Karl R. Hearne's direction is very conventional in a way that rarely draws attention to itself. It looks suitably bleak, creating a strong sense of unease and confusion at the beginning when the house eviction happens with no warning. It only escalates further when they're in the care home since there's minimal contact with the outside world and the information that's slowly revealed makes their situation more horrifying.
Dale Dickey is great in a central performance holding everything together. She shows hints of a darker past early on and seeing her husband get mistreated is painful to watch, making her eventual revenge all the more satisfying when she shows no mercy. Bruce Ramsay as the main villain and his generically evil henchmen are the kind of bad guys who are very easy to hate thanks to how irredeemable their scheme makes them.
Karl R. Hearne's direction is very conventional in a way that rarely draws attention to itself. It looks suitably bleak, creating a strong sense of unease and confusion at the beginning when the house eviction happens with no warning. It only escalates further when they're in the care home since there's minimal contact with the outside world and the information that's slowly revealed makes their situation more horrifying.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film portrays abuse of conservatorship rules which apply in the USA and Canada and are a step of control over and above a Power of Attorney used elsewhere to manage health or financial matters. A conservatorship requires approval by a court and after medical professional input. The concept is often used by unscrupulous people, often relatives, to bully the elderly.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 46 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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