The male lead is James McAvoy, known as ‘Kazumi’ and your dear Professor X. Ichimi plays Kevin, who has more than 20 personalities in the film. This role is a huge challenge for every actor. After watching the film, Uncle T only wanted to describe Kazumi’s acting as “bombastic”. The female lead is Anya Taylor-Joy, a girl born in 96. She became popular with the hit horror film ‘The Witch’. Despite her young age, her acting skills are not bad.
“The script has a lot of problems, but it wins because the story is well conceived and creative, and Shyamalan’s direction is effective. The second half is a dizzying experience to watch several times, and the humorous and bizarre mash-up of “The Visiting Scare” manages to continue, with a wonderfully gripping performance in which Ichimei’s nine personalities switch freely. The final scene is quite foul, but it’s really impossible for anyone to guess.”
“Kazumi’s acting holds up an entire play, with each personality characterised by its own portrayal. One ticket to see eight Ichimei ah, queer cross-dressing OCD retard has everything, you can’t watch it without being duped.”
The film begins with Kevin suddenly appearing in a car park and kidnapping three girls in broad daylight. When they wake up, the girls are in a closed chamber. At this moment, the personality dominating Kevin’s body is Dennis. Personality-wise, he is an obsessive + control freak. The fetish is watching young girls dance naked. Kevin suffers from dissociative identity disorder and is treated weekly by psychologist Dr. Fletcher, but his condition suddenly takes a sharp turn for the worse.
The different personalities struggle in Kevin’s body and dominate his often changing personality. In addition to the control freak just mentioned, the film shows the following- Barry, the fashion designer, who is emotionally delicate and has feminine qualities. The conservative Lady Patricia, who is a religious believer.
The mischievous nine-year-old Hedwig, extremely insecure and at the beck and call of Dennis and Patricia. And the other personalities keep bringing up the “Beast”, the final personality that has yet to reveal itself. Ichimi’s performance manages these personalities perfectly, to the constant admiration of Uncle T.
Claire is the most desperate of the three girls. She finds the passage and thinks she can escape. The girl is still too naive and fails to escape Dennis’ clutches. After being captured, she was held in solitary confinement in another room, crying out for her parents. The brunette’s escape plan also fails and ends up like Claire’s. Dennis held them separately and said to Casey, ” The beast is coming for you.” Didn’t Cathy want to escape? Of course she did, she wanted to more than anyone. Only she was calmer, and the first way she thought to escape was to use the personality of a nine-year-old child. But when he turns to Hedwig for help, Denise is immediately roused.
The many flashbacks to Kathy’s childhood memories are one of the clues to seeing this film.
As for the ending, fans had this to say: The main plot of the film, mostly concentrated in enclosed spaces, is very much a test of the director’s scheduling skills. The film is a good example of how to create suspense and thrill in a small space. Director Shyamalan’s precise grasp of the creepy atmosphere makes the whole film.
After watching Split, I think Lee has to work harder in A Crowded Room. Ichimei shows how unsettling and changing people can be through body language and facial expressions, showing the shifts between different personalities to perfection. This makes all the personalities look extraordinarily real and sets up the film’s shocking final scene. Our fresh meat should watch more films like this to learn what it means to have a face and act. It’s not just a great thriller, it’s a feast of acting skills.