Share

    Share
    2019

    Synopsis

    After discovering a disturbing video from a night she doesn’t remember, sixteen-year-old Mandy must try to figure out what happened and how to navigate the escalating fallout.

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    Cast

    • Rhianne BarretoMandy
    • Charlie PlummerDylan
    • Poorna JagannathanKerri
    • Lovie SimoneJenna
    • Milcania Diaz-RojasMia
    • J.C. MacKenzieMickey
    • Nicholas GalitzineA.J.
    • Danny MastrogiorgioTony
    • Jhaleil SwabyMason
    • Christian CorraoTyler

    Recommendations

    • 100

      The Playlist

      An uncommonly knotty and fiercely intelligent story of assault and blame in the social media age.
    • 100

      RogerEbert.com

      Share is a relatively restrained work. Nothing is made explicit aside from the internal agony of its heroine, whose headspace we occupy so fully, we can’t help sharing in every tremulous emotion that ripples across her face.
    • 75

      The Film Stage

      [It] deftly mines morose, intelligent drama from its entirely real scenario.
    • 75

      IndieWire

      Share can be so traumatized and detached that it risks losing its grasp on reality, but few movies have so boldly confronted the complexities of sexual assault, and even fewer have had the courage to privilege a victim’s truth above the judgements she inspires.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Aided by down-to-earth portrayals and a compelling cinematographic throughline that echoes the both ordinary and complex nature of this kind of violence, Share blurs genre lines between coming-of-age drama and thriller. It’s psycho-drama lite, grounded in a quietly intense portrait of how a girl, her family and a small town grapple with the ugliness of sexual violence.
    • 70

      Screen Daily

      If nothing else, this intimate, well-observed drama should prove to be a nice calling card for its first-time feature filmmaker.
    • 60

      Variety

      Share is fragmented and disorienting, though one suspects that confusion is perhaps Bianco’s point.
    • 60

      The Guardian

      Even though Share wraps up within a slim 90 minutes, Bianco does struggle to sustain her premise until the end, especially in the final act, as beats start to feel repeated and our investment starts to waver.