Caught in the Net

  • Tchéquie V síti
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Résumés(1)

Un grand nombre – non recensé – d’enfants est confronté au harcèlement sexuel sur Internet. Afin de documenter l’étendue monstrueuse des abus en ligne, une équipe de tournage tchèque ose se lancer dans une expérience controversée: elle engage trois actrices majeures qui devront se faire passer pour des fillettes de 12 ans sur les médias sociaux. Une fois les profils mis en ligne, l’attente commence – et le résultat est choquant: en seulement dix jours, près de 2500 hommes adultes répondent! Les cinéastes démasquent leurs méthodes perfides dans l’espace numérique et accompagnent les actrices aux rendez-vous en personne. Dans leur documentaire Caught in the Net, les réalisateurs Vít Klusák et Barbora Chalupová brisent un tabou en dévoilant, par des moyens radicaux, les menaces auxquelles les enfants sont exposés sur le Net. (Zurich Film Festival)

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Vidéo (4)

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Critiques (10)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Documentaire d'horreur. Pas parce qu'il existe des « prédateurs » similaires, mais parce qu'il y en a TELLEMENT. Comment réagir ? Les traquer et enfermer des milliers, voire des dizaines de milliers d'hommes, souvent des pères et des soutiens de famille ? C'est probablement impossible. Mais peut-être que tout le battage médiatique autour de ce documentaire limitera leurs méfaits. Du moins pour quelques années. Klusák et Chalupová ont fait de l'excellent travail. J'apprécie les idées comme l'éclaircissement du « visage amical » sur fond de musique agréable, ou la dernière scène qui fait monter la tension de tout le film à un niveau émotionnel où les mains du spectateur tremblent avec les réalisateurs devant la caméra. ()

Isherwood 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Klusák is on top, this time also thanks to his progressive student Barbora Chalupová. I told myself that after crushing the moral cripple who has been prime minister for some time now, there is not really any room left to go anywhere, that there is no place to find stronger opponents, and the parody elegy about a bald, uncouth man who receives an educational soda in the middle of Auschwitz somehow confirmed this. But now comes this punch to the gut. To accuse the director of having an over-inflated ego at a time when Czech documentaries probably don’t have a stronger personality is more of a poor construct than a useful criticism. They could have sat in three little rooms instead of building three fakes in the middle of a hall, but if you have strong filmmaking ambitions, the question is not why, but how. And it serves a purpose. Even if you teach civics and computer science, when cybersecurity is on your mind, you know from hints what kids are looking at on the internet today, so you probably know what you'll be dealing with. But Caught in the Net goes far beyond the ordinary imagination. The concentrated moral bottom crammed into a hundred minutes, in which every excuse for a relieved laugh is accompanied by a feeling of inadequacy, will mix your feelings quite a bit. However, the dramatic arc works well, managing to encompass both the documentary process itself and the regular tension, which is almost unbearable when sitting down and drinking a lemonade. I was curious about the ending, the point, which must necessarily lead to education. However, the final interview describes all the dirt in three minutes without any hint of a moral extension. The subtitles, tears on the edge of my eyes, heavy legs, and an uncontrollable urge to be home immediately and hug my own child. And a double shot of alcohol. Nothing more important will pass through Czech movie theaters this year. ()

Annonces

EvilPhoEniX 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The Czech event of the year, which should probably be seen by everyone, although only parents and grandparents will be shocked by it. Caught In the Net is a documentary with a good idea presented in a form that doesn't bore, so even people who don't watch documentaries should give it chance. It focuses on three young girls with childlike features that make them look 12 years old as they explore the darkness of social networking sites full of sexual predators. But it is Tereza Těžka who gets most of the attention, giving the most believable performance of all (the final 20 minutes are very gripping and emotional). I wonder if Caught In the Net will be shown compulsorily at schools one day. Story****, Action>No, Humor***, Violence>No, Entertainment****, Music**, Visual**, Atmosphere****, Suspense***. 8/10. ()

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Clean marketing and filmmaking work. Klusák and Chalupová have delivered such an unpleasant, funny, understandable, simple and emotionally instructive title to overcome the traditional limitations of documentaries, which demand active cooperation and deeper empathy from the viewer. Like the "opening of a discussion" it's "cool ammo for memes and internet humor". It does not convey anything revolutionary and it does not discover anything stimulating, but it reliably draws you in, and perhaps it will lead to changes beyond the momentary event. The best moment of the documentary is the conclusion, which shows that mere "moral outrage" is not enough to humiliate the predator and drive him into a corner. That's the whole tragedy. ()

NinadeL 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais As a standalone film, it wouldn't be as good or as powerful as the whole combo of a film for adults and juveniles, and a book and awareness. I am thankful for the clarity, playfulness and ugliness. This is exactly what was needed and I sincerely hope that a miracle will happen in some families. It is already clear that this is Klusák's second biggest notch after Czech Dream. ()

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