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Targeting (2014)

Targeting (2014)

GENRESDrama
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Tajana PrkaBobby NaderiJames O'SheaFereshta Kazemi
DIRECTOR
Tarique Qayumi

SYNOPSICS

Targeting (2014) is a English movie. Tarique Qayumi has directed this movie. Tajana Prka,Bobby Naderi,James O'Shea,Fereshta Kazemi are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2014. Targeting (2014) is considered one of the best Drama movie in India and around the world.

A female soldier returns from Afghanistan and begins running surveillance on an Afghan person-of-interest that she learns is living in her hometown.

Targeting (2014) Reviews

  • Somebody help mommy

    nogodnomasters2018-02-23

    DISCLAIMER: I viewed this film for free for a review. I believe it is honest, whether you do or not. Mattie Ridgeway (Tajana Prka) returns to California from Afghanistan after doing some of the nasty work. She has trouble assimilating and suffers from PTSD. She spends time away from her family because she doesn't feel comfortable with them. She quickly becomes obsessed with an Afgahni (Bobby Naderi) who she believes is coincidentally the one that lead her into an ambush back in Afghanistan. She plays private detective and follows him around. Clearly the man is doing something illegal, but what? And is he even the same man with his beard cut off? Tajana Prka was incredible in this role. She was able to create a convincing character who we got to know early just by saying nothing. The film smartly shifts gears at about 40 minutes and then again at 60 minutes. This prevents the boredom trap so many indie productions fall into. It isn't until the film is almost over do we know how it ends. Negatives: Now there were a few things like the coincidence of this guy showing up in the same town and Mattie finding him (if indeed it is him). Then she kept classified files in her possession. I don't think it works that way. Her status board included a simple key H=Home, W= Work etc. when she is the only one using it. Apparently this was for the audience who couldn't make out the details anyway. The film keeps you engaged, even if it wasn't real. Guide: F-bomb. No sex or nudity.

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  • When life has changed

    blumdeluxe2017-08-23

    "Targeting" tells the story of a young mother who returns from her service in the army home to her husband and her little daughter. Soon after her return she notices what seems to be a familiar face in her neighborhood and starts to track the man down who she thinks tricked her company into an ambush in the middle east. The movie manages to create an atmosphere that is really hard to bear. Through good acting you can really relate with the husband who takes care of his daughter while having to deal with a wife that is caught somewhere between insanity and desperation. The events depicted in the film are not always super probable. It is, for example, at least surprising that the very first Arabian looking man she saw back in the states actually was involved into some illegal deal that makes him look even more suspicious. But I do believe that dealing with war is terrible and that it can lead to some pretty desperate and depressing situations. So in many aspects I see this film even better than my rating. What keeps me from doing so is the end. In my opinion it was just a bit too predictable and cheesy to have the daughter caught in the middle of a shooting (which was then also the second time already) and I simply do not believe that after an incident like that you just go back to normality and everything is just fine again. All in all a lot was done rightly in this movie and it has a thrilling and in parts very serious story to tell. With a little less drama and even more realism this film could be really great.

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  • How can we explain what we are watching?

    gradyharp2015-09-27

    Tajana Prka has written (with Tarique Qayumi and Alan De la Rosa), produced, directed and stars in one of the more desperately moving films of recent years. While many writers attempt to outdo each other with fantasies of both the fairytale past, the comic book genre, or the terrifying future that awaits us, Tajana instead takes on a story that happens around us daily – the problem of how war affects soldiers. It is not only thought provoking and intensely disturbing, but it is also one of the more moving portrayals of how being deployed to the current collection of wars in the Middle East affects female soldiers as profoundly as the more frequently discussed male counterparts and alters their lives severely. Attempting to summarize the plot would be to do the viewer an injustice: better to experience this film rather than read reviews about it. Except to say that the film is exceptionally worthy of your attention. Generally speaking the plot revolves around the return of Mattie Ridgeway (Tajana Prka) from Afghanistan, flat affect from PTSD, not relating to her husband Justin (James O'Shea) who was also deployed but not in the same front line activity as Mattie and thus understands her very little – as disconnected from Justin as she is form her daughter. Unable to step away from the trauma of Afghanistan Mattie becomes obsessed with investigating an Afghan person of interest (Bobby Naderi) rumors and other sources suggest that he is living in the same town. The extremes of her reaction and behavior mirror the fractures created by PTSD and rarely has it been developed so well in a film. Ringing with reality and agony, TARGETING is one of the better films to explore just how severe a problem PTSD is and why we must be aware of the 'other world' in which these victims live – making certain we are supportive and understanding. Tajana Prka deserves some awards for this film, not only for an Indie film, but also form mental health foundations for bringing this problem to the public's attention. See it!

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  • Intense, riveting and...well, stunning in some ways

    DeeNine-22015-09-14

    This is a brilliant movie with an amazing performance by Tajana Prka who plays a shell shocked (old terminology) woman soldier suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The direction by Tarique Qayumi is tight, intense, and focused if somewhat unrealistic in spots. (I'll get to that below.) The film does something that no other film that I have seen even come close to doing, and that is make us feel the sheer depths of the PTSD affliction. Mattie is traumatized to the extent that she is no longer really human. She cares nothing for anything but her obsession. She cares not for her daughter, not for her loving and patient husband, not even for herself. It is a portrayal of madness, obsession and what seeing and doing horrible things can do to a human being. The acting was superior overall. Even the bit players did a good job. I noticed nary a false note. Even the little girl (played affectingly by Brooke J. Ferrell) was excellent. When the entire cast or most of it is very good you can be sure that the director is one of the main reasons. I don't know how Tajana Prka, who plays Mattie Ridgeway, would do in a sitcom (nor do I care) but I cannot recall a more intense and utterly believable performance in such a demanding role. Charlize Theron's role in the film Monster (2003) comes to mind or, going way back, I recall Susan Hayward's Oscar-winning performance in I Want to Live (1958). Yes, Prka is that good. The entire story is heart-wrenching for just about everybody involved. I suspect one of the reasons some people did not like the film or could not watch it, is because it is so tragic for not only Mattie, her husband and her daughter, and of course for her target (Baktoosh Nuri / Khalid Attaqi, played with creditable realism and balance by Bobby Naderi) but also for the bad guys who are exploiting him. Also probably not agreeable to a popular audience is the fact that there is nothing heroic here, just a terrible tragedy that is entirely real thanks to the madness of the wars in the Middle East. Still another reason some people did not like this movie is because some people don't like the idea of PTSD, believing that it is unmanly or fake. The singular thing this movie presents is the fact that PTSD is not fake, and to see a woman suffer from it to the point of becoming less than human is a very effective way to drive home that point. Some other people (chicken hawks, I might guess who like to imagine themselves big masculine war heroes on their living room couches) will not like the way the feminine/masculine roles are reversed here. James O'Shea, who does a nice job as Mattie's ever patient and loving husband, ends up doing the mother's job while Mattie madly pursues her obsession. The role reversal almost works as a parody of the world of a PTSD family, which is probably why some viewers thought that this was a parody. No, this is not a parody. This is a brutal depiction of one of the bitter fruits of war. There is nothing light-hearted about it. Yes, I can find flaws with this, mostly in how miraculously she is able to follow this guy and especially how she got out of the hotel room without being noticed. I just happen to know what it is like to try to follow someone by yourself without being noticed. It ain't easy. The way the movie is filmed would never work. She would be spotted early on, especially under the circumstances of the life the target is living. And he would be paranoid to the gills after somebody let the air out of his automobile tire--actually, way before that. This movie is especially relevant and important because there are so many people in this country who were happy to cheer our soldiers off to war but who are reluctant to take responsibility for what war did to them. Incidentally, I also like the way the film shows just how absurd and ineffective torture can be. --Dennis Littrell, author of the movie reviews book, "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote"

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  • Excellent Pacing Makes for Great Suspense

    mark-224522015-10-07

    This film delivers suspense. You rarely notice the pacing in a movie unless it's either exceptionally bad or exceptionally good--Targeting does it exceptionally well. The premise of the film about a soldier returning home from Afghanistan only to be thrust back into harm's way is absolutely fascinating. It's also relevant to the seemingly daily reports of terrorism we see in the news every day. Also fascinating was the lead role of the soldier going to a woman. It allowed the film makers to explore the issues surrounding troops returning from war in an entirely novel way, one that I hope other film makers will tackle. Kudos to this group for taking a chance and making a truly unique experience for fans of indie film!

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