Ask The Last Blockbuster or Dennis Perkins
Dear Employees of The Last Blockbuster and/or Dennis Perkins,
I am looking for a specific movie that brilliantly conveyed the perspective of people in early the social media age. It was a thriller/chase movie that I saw on cable, maybe DVD, in the year 2011 or possibly 2014.
One protagonist was a young white female, brunette, around 18-21 years old.
Many scenes showed the perspective of the principle characters from their homes or motel rooms catching on a screen slices of conversations, most incomplete. The curtailed and incomplete communiques were a broad theme of the film.
Please let me know if you know the title, it is one I cannot remember. No major stars (of the time) acted in this film.
Thanks,
Me.
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Further Reading:
"Our experience and movie expertise helped us make informed, intuitive leaps to find and fulfill entertainment needs they didn't even always know they had. I've had parents hug me for introducing their kids to Miyazaki and The Iron Giant. Nice old ladies have baked me cookies for starting them off on The Wire. People knew they could come in with the vaguest description ..." Dennis Perkins writing for vox.com
Blockbuster store in Bend, Oregon is the last blockbuster store in U.S. ‘Why are you still here?’: Inside the last Blockbuster in America: washingtonpost.com
This work by AJ Fish is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
I am looking for a specific movie that brilliantly conveyed the perspective of people in early the social media age. It was a thriller/chase movie that I saw on cable, maybe DVD, in the year 2011 or possibly 2014.
One protagonist was a young white female, brunette, around 18-21 years old.
Many scenes showed the perspective of the principle characters from their homes or motel rooms catching on a screen slices of conversations, most incomplete. The curtailed and incomplete communiques were a broad theme of the film.
Please let me know if you know the title, it is one I cannot remember. No major stars (of the time) acted in this film.
Thanks,
Me.
------------------------------------
Further Reading:
"Our experience and movie expertise helped us make informed, intuitive leaps to find and fulfill entertainment needs they didn't even always know they had. I've had parents hug me for introducing their kids to Miyazaki and The Iron Giant. Nice old ladies have baked me cookies for starting them off on The Wire. People knew they could come in with the vaguest description ..." Dennis Perkins writing for vox.com
Blockbuster store in Bend, Oregon is the last blockbuster store in U.S. ‘Why are you still here?’: Inside the last Blockbuster in America: washingtonpost.com
This work by AJ Fish is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.