Up There
Dir: Zam
Salim
2012
****
Zam Salim's 2012
Up There is a brilliant little independent film that proves you don't need a
huge budget to make a great film, just a good idea and some capable actors.
Okay, so you need a little bit more than that but this Up There has it, it is a
fantastic film. It's a very British alternative to Albert Brooks' extremely
underrated 1991 indie Defending Your Life. Both films deal with death and
purgatory, and while both are similar, Defending Your Life deals with identity
and ventures into the realms of reincarnation, while Up There explores the
depressing realization of the end of life and the headache inducing bureaucracy
and administration issues that one would encounter in purgatory should it
exist. Premature death, never seeing your loved ones ever again, a world
without you in it and an uncertain future are all rather terrifying, but Zam
Salim's thought are concentrated on the paperwork that could create and the
effort one would need in order to okay with it. Heaven is hinted at, it is the
'Up There' of the title and as you'd expect with a film about purgatory,
this is about readying oneself for the afterlife. However, the film is full of
people who feel even more lost in death than they did in life, they could all
prove they are ready by making simple changes and performing simple tasks but
that would be too simple and rather unreal. Our protagonist Martin (played
brilliantly by Burn Gorman) struggles to find any enthusiasm in the afterlife
and wonders whether his life really meant anything in the first place. It
sounds depressing but it really isn't, it's not a black comedy either and as
dead-pan as it is, it's also rather uplifting and probably the most charming
film of 2012. It doesn't follow the usual rules of the supernatural either, our 'ghosts' can't walk through walls or float and often find themselves trapped in shops and peoples cars, which only makes it more endearing in my opinion.
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