Top Floor is a thriller set in New York that was actually filmed in Bulgaria. This explains the amount of accents the film has, and maybe also accounts for some of the weird vibe the movie has. Written and directed by Jérémy Minui, this had an interesting premise and an utterly bonkers twist reveal, but also had plenty of flaws. Apologies for the time stamp on the images used, I usually rely on Google to get film images but due to being unable to find any I used my own shots from the screener version of the film I had been sent!
Julia (Justine Wachsberger - Divergent) is a very popular social media influencer who has millions of fans around the world. In a car with her rich fiancé Greg (Nicolas Cazalé), they get into an accident and Julia loses consciousness. She awakens to find herself inexplicably in an unknown stopped elevator, and with no phone signal she decides to press the operator button. She is answered by an operator (voiced by Akil Wingate- Creepshow 3 segment 'The Radio'), this creepy man soon reveals himself to be the person responsible for trapping Julia in the lift, as well as revealing he has drugged her. He tells her that he is going to ask her a series of questions, with each truthful answer moving the elevator upwards, once she gets to the top floor she is promised that she will gain her freedom. Should she lie however, she is promised death. With her plight being live streamed to her social media accounts, her assistant Tess (Lewkowski Yovel) and some police detectives are in a race against time to locate her and save her before the madman takes her life.
This falls into a couple of subgenres of horror, firstly, the majority of the movie takes place in a single location in the vein of Saw or Phone Booth, while a famous person being forced to reveal their darkest secrets has been done many times also, such as with Feedback and Truth or Dare. The elevator made for a decent enough location, and while the antagonist is represented by a voice, he also kind of gets a physical presence with the elevator speaker and camera both taking on a sinister vibe as they are shown often when the operator is speaking. Julia was fine as the lead, but I wish there had been more to show just why she was such a popular influencer. No criticism of the actress, but the character didn't appear to have much star quality to her (again, no criticism, I myself am a textbook example of a non-speaking background character in life itself), so it felt unbelievable she could be such an influential person. If there had been more of a beginning, rather than a muddled sequence showing her walking past waiting press to get to her car, then maybe I would have been sold more on this. As it was, there are a few sequences showing people commenting on the live stream, but that is it, most the film has Julia trapped in her lift.
With the protagonist having a multitude of sins, it was a wonder none of them had leaked out from anywhere before. I never really understand why characters in these films aren't just truthful right away, I guess it makes it more interesting to watch when they have to go through ordeals and get punished in order to be forced to speak their truth. Julia constantly kept going back and forth between terror and anger at being trapped, and trying to reason with her captor. Got a bit of whiplash with the back and forth mood swings from her.
I thought Wingate was perfection as the operator voice. He sounded to me like a more cartoonishly evil version of Gus Fring from Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul fame. The voice had traces of Giancarlo Esposito, but was far more demented and energetic with his wild delivery of the lines. I loved how crazy this voice sounded, making for the more entertaining scenes of the thriller. Side characters were mostly a mixed bag, I thought the two detectives for instance were terribly cast, neither felt like they were detectives, especially the male one with his stupid bright red hoodie. It all culminates in a twist I never saw coming. Initially it didn't really make much sense at all, but I saw the logic within the madness of the twist, even if I'm not convinced it didn't lead to some plot holes appearing as a result.
Top Floor was far from perfect, but this indie thriller to its credit had me watching from opening to the end credits without once clock watching to see how much was left. It helps that at seventy four minutes long this doesn't stay around long enough to get monotonous.
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