Lumsdal
Good , But It Is Overrated By Some
Acensbart
Excellent but underrated film
RipDelight
This is a tender, generous movie that likes its characters and presents them as real people, full of flaws and strengths.
AutCuddly
Great movie! If you want to be entertained and have a few good laughs, see this movie. The music is also very good,
TxMike
My wife and I watched this at home on DVD from our public library.Many viewers will feel uncomfortable with the subject, a 3-month affair between an adult man and his neighbor, a 13-yr-old girl. However it is done with enough sensitivity that everything is merely suggested, along with dialog that explains what happened.Set and filmed in England, essentially 15 years later, now 28-yr-old Una looks up the man she had been intimate with, he had served his time and had changed his name, was now married and had a good job as a supervisor. She is intrusive, she is demanding, she had cared for the man and never got over what she considered abandonment when they decided to travel to Europe together.The story plays out to show how the bad decisions made those years earlier had wrecked the life of the young girl into her adulthood, and how now is came back to haunt him. This is fiction but these types of stories really happen, we learn about them on the news all too often.Ruby Stokes is really good as the young Una while Rooney Mara shines as the adult Una. Ben Mendelsohn is also very effective as the man, Ray, who changed his name to Peter. No pun intended, I suppose.
stuart_lynch
Una tells the story of a pubescent (don't call her prepubescent to serve your argument, because she's clearly going through puberty) girl, who doesn't know her own mind, but has strong sexual urges towards a much older guy.The older guy is likely an ephebophiliac, which means a preference for teens, but not kids. He falls for her advances and they end up having sex. Roll forward some 15 years, young precocious teen who's now a troubled nymphomaniac, travels to find the guy who abused her to confront him about his lack of good judgement and the impact it had on both of their lives. Slight boring, quite manipulative, great performance from Rooney Mara as always.
Howard Schumann
In Una, the powerful screen adaptation of David Harrower's play "Blackbird" about the sexual abuse of a thirteen-year-old girl, Australian director Benedict Andrews does what has become increasingly uncommon in modern cinema – he makes us think. While it may be uncomfortable to look outside of the reassuring categories of victim and victimizer, Andrews asks us to look at his characters not as symbols but as damaged human beings who are seeking to pick up the pieces of their shattered lives and re-mold them into a coherent and functioning whole.Rooney Mara ("Song to Song") is impeccable as Una, a 28-year-old woman who still has confused feelings about Ray (Ben Mendelsohn, "Slow West"), the neighbor she had an affair with when she was thirteen, but who abandoned her after promising to take her away with him. Written by David Harrower and backed by an effective score by Jed Kurzel ("The Babadook"), the film does not attempt to justify Ray's actions, making it clear that Una was clearly below the age of consent and that Ray should have known that what he was doing was wrong.In numerous inter-cutting flashbacks, Andrews shows the events that led us to the present day. The film opens as the teenage Una is sitting quietly under a tree near her home. As remarkably performed by newcomer Ruby Stokes, Una is a bright and articulate teenager who genuinely believes she is in love with Ray, a neighbor and friend of her father. The sexual act is not shown, only the emotional consequences of the thwarted three-month relationship that leaves Una with unanswered questions. The somber atmosphere is suddenly broken with the disorienting thump of rock music amidst a sea of strobe lights as the older Una wends her way through a crowded sleazy nightclub.When she has rough sex in the bathroom with her face pressed against the bathroom mirror, we sense her rootlessness and troubled life. When she discovers Ray's picture in a trade magazine, she decides to confront him at the warehouse where he is a mid-level manager. Other than some form of closure, it is unclear exactly what she expects from the meeting. When they finally meet and immediately recognize each other, Ray, who is now married and has changed his name to Pete, has no desire to relive the past, a history that has been hidden from his family and co-workers. He tells her that he has done his time and wants to be left alone. "This is my life. I had to fight for this!" he exclaims.Una responds with barely concealed rage, telling him that her wound is one that will never heal and that he has only lost four years while she has had to pay dearly during the last fifteen years. Under Andrews' direction, Ray is sympathetic, however, and is particularly compelling in pushing back against her accusations, making it clear that he "was never one of "them," though, to his fellow inmates in prison where he served four years for statutory rape, it was apparently too subtle a distinction. To further the chaotic scene, some employees are being laid off and Ray is called on to deliver some clichés about going onward and upward but is too emotionally upset to continue.Uncomfortable around his fellow employees, Ray and Una move around the cavernous building trying to find a hiding place to continue their painful recollections and recriminations which they do with increasing intensity. Their conversation runs the gamut from violent antagonism to tenderness. At one point, it is unclear if Una wants to kill him or make love to him. One of those looking for Ray is his foreman, Scott (Riz Ahmed, "Jason Bourne") who is used by Una afterwards to insinuate herself into Ray's home life.As the focus is evenly balanced between Ray and Una, we are left floating in a sea of ambiguity which can only be resolved by the perspective of the viewer. Although Ray claims that he does not "do these things" on a regular basis, and that he loved Una for who she was and never considered her as a "target," the fact that the film shows a scene of Ray's stepdaughter going into his bedroom (innocently looking enough) perhaps provides a hint that his denials should be taken with a grain of salt.Una is a complex drama that will not appeal to everyone but whose strength does not lie in its cultural or political agenda but in its art. Una explores, in Israeli author Aharon Applefeld's words, "the darkest places of human behavior to show that even there…humanity and love can overcome cruelty and brutality." For Una, however, there is no escape from the disappointment and humiliation of a young child and there can be no closure. The assault on innocence and the assault on childhood are one and can only be transformed by a world touched by the possibility of grace.
jjparish
But thankfully its a British film. Although they had to have an American name as one of the stars i guess to get the requisite amount of funding. No matter as rooney mara was brilliant. She plays the adult una who just cant move on from her past. She seems to be hiding so much and its quite thrilling to realise that you just don't know what her character is going to do next. Whether she will soften or go full on psycho. Some things didn't work, like setting so much of it in the warehouse. I didn't know going in but it quickly became obvious the film had its roots in a play. Whats the point of that? They are making a feature film, not another play! Overall though this was highly watchable, tense and dramatic. 8/10