Review of The Conspiracy (2012) by Ed C — 21 Aug 2014
One line summary: Clever ending to a short subject.
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Aaron and Jim get to know Terrance, a colorful conspiracy theorist. They were gearing up to do a documentary film with Terrance as the center when Terrance disappears, and his apartment is rifled.
Aaron and Jim are galvanized, and pursue Terrance's interests. Their investigation leads them to research the Tarsus Club, the 'New World Order,' and the cult of Mithras, which stretches back quite far in history. Jim has a wife and child to keep him centered, but ends up continuing with the effort to find the elusive 'truth.' Clips from an interview with a psychiatrist sprinkled throughout the film are another grounding mechanism, and a warning of bad things to come.
The pair manage to get into a meeting of the Tarsus Club. Their recording devices were on tie-clips, and the results were correspondingly unimpressive.
The Tarsus Club does a good job of scaring Aaron and Jim. Afterwards, Jim gets to go to a recorded meeting with an official of the Tarsus Club. The spin or the truth? Which one gets delivered more by the film?
-----Scores-----.
Cinematography: 5/10 The film is filmed in both hand-held and more standard camera techniques. The found-film part does not add anything, but does subtract a bit. The segement concerning the Mithras cultist meeting was particularly visually poor. The vignette filter cut off a chunk of the screen; faces were blurred out; over all resolution was VHS-style grainy; the smoke was good at cutting down on clarity.
Sound: 6/10 Adequate; I can usually understand the dialog. Voices were disguised during the outdoor initiation meeting of the Tarsus club.
Acting: 5/10 Giving the benefit of the doubt.
Screenplay: 6/10 The ending ties together the rest of the film nicely.
This review of The Conspiracy (2012) was written by Ed C on 21 Aug 2014.
The Conspiracy has generally received positive reviews.
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