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By Robert Scucci
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What makes A classic horror story. The conferenceand Oxygize All have in common? They are all produced internationally, non -English, Netflix Originals speak English that I would like more people to know about. Listen, I know that English dubes are not properly emote, and subtitles may appear as a task, but so does some of the original Netflix Stateside ones like A chopping timewhich is basically an ad 92 minutes for an olive garden and butterflies mastering as a teenage horror flick.
OxygizeOne of the best sci-fi flicks I saw in a very long time, can be a French film, but you will be sucked so much to its bare bone story and claustrophobic location so you don’t even realize that you are reading the off-screen dialogue, which forces you to pay close attention, making it impossible to escape the unfortunate suspension.
As someone who has the stomach for the greatest horror flicks, Oxygize F*Ied me up because I’m claustrophobic, and adding nothing vast of deep space to the equation makes the story much more frightening because there is no hidden antagonist or a deep state conspiracy to which the viewer is presented – we simply deal with a single woman on her own with her thoughts, and the highly intelligent AI tries to be trying life.
As his title suggests, the main source of the conflict is Oxygize is, in fact, a lack of oxygen. When a woman named Liz (Melanie Laurent) wakes up wrapped in a small medical pod in an unveiled location, she immediately finds herself hysterically because she only knows is about 90 minutes of oxygen to find out who she is, where she is, what kind of sick experiment she is ahead of. When accessing an supercomputer called Milo (Medical Interface Liaison Officer), Liz scrolls through extensive databases in her efforts to remember who she is, and how long she has been locked.
Using the limited resources she has available Oxygize.
Losing her sense of self as old memories of her sick husband Leo (Malik Zidi) begins to occupy the front of her mind, Liz sets her trust in Milo, who is not necessarily a force of evil, but obviously has been instructed not to fully reveal the truth about her situation. Having to choose between putting herself back into hypersleep and venturing out of oxygen, or smoking in search of solutions, Liz has to think quickly in her disoriented state as she waits for the authorities to save her, but he has no compelling reason to believe that help is actually coming any time soon. Facing her own deaths as an oxygen clock literally ticks right in front of her, Liz desperately tries to remember who she is, where She, and whether she has voluntarily closed or against her will.
Melanie Laurent has all the respect in the world from me because of filming Oxygize It could not have been a pleasant experience by any part of the imagination. Certainly, the pod she is in, probably no more than a bathtub, is more widespread than I think from a production, but it is still a highly claustrophobic location that made me much more concerned when I realized that it would probably have Oxygize possible.
Technical outside the theater on screen aside, a valid Laurent portrait of fear and Isolate-The confusion means you sweat bullets when you realize that she is alone, and has no reason to trust anything she is told when searching through extensive databases about her origin story.
To put on a blunt, Oxygize Made my skin crawl, but his sense of urgency kept me from looking away because of how active it is, which is commendable when you consider the fact that we are talking about a lonely woman chatting with a related, intelligent artificial voice in such a limited setting.
If you are willing to challenge yourself with one of the best Netflix original sci-flicks on the platform today I would advise you strongly to watch Oxygize In an open, open space because if you do not feel as locked and hopeless as Liz.