Locke.
A man, a car, a long stretch of motorway and a phone and you have pretty much the main items that make this film what it is. Ivan Locke (Tom Hardy) is a concrete expert and is driving home the day before one of Europe's biggest concrete jobs and it all rests on his shoulders to pull it off.
Taking his work boots off and sitting in his car he locks the doors and from now on his journey home will define his future. On his journey home his whole life will change, his career, family, friends and job will all slowly slip away from him and when he arrives at his destination he will be a changed man.
The film itself for me is seriously impressive, having just one actor on screen for the whole hour and a half is a risk but Tom Hardy manages to pull it off with such ease. Hardy portrays Locke with such ease and impressively with a welsh accent to boot, you see his character go through the whole up and down emotions, he can be serene and calm one minute and bashing the steering wheel in a fit of rage the next.
The one way in which the film stands out visually and impresses on first glances is it is set at night in total darkness with just the motorway street lights in the background. It really brings out just how lonely Ivan Locke is in the darkness, encapsulated in his own little chaotic world inside his car driving to somewhere he knows will change his life totally. With constant phone calls going back and forth between Ivan and his co-workers about the big job he has to explain to everyone his intentions and why he is doing what he is doing. Other actors make voice appearances Olivia Colman, Ruth Wilson and Tom Holland all voice different people in Ivan's life and all manage to work well and help bring out at times the best and worst of Ivan.
For a film with just one main actor on screen in the small space of a car it is seriously impressive and brings out some serious acting chops for Tom Hardy. Usually cast in big action budget films we finally get to see just the pure acting skill of Tom who again portrays Ivan with ease. The camera work is perfect for me as every angle is covered and the backdrop on a dark motorway at night just shows the reflections in the windows and how the outside world can just fly by.
Anyone who loves nothing but a tense, at times emotional yet purely acted film then do check out Locke as it is by far Tom Hardy's greatest performance on screen to date. The film has you hooked from the start, you twist and turn and guess what happens next and when you get it wrong you think it's cleverly done which it really is. A no doubt in my mind seriously impressive film that no doubt will not get the big wide consumer audience it truly deserves.
10/10.
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