Sunday, September 29, 2013

Watch New Movie Eden No Survey on FULL HD Format

Jamie Chung stars in a searing contemporary drama, based on the true story of a Korean-American teenager who is kidnapped from a bar in New Mexico and transformed into a sex slave in Las Vegas by a band of ruthless international thugs. Beau Bridges plays an avuncular federal marshal, a good ol' boy, who turns out to be one of the operation's masterminds while Matt O'Leary is equally repellent as the boss's wildly erratic, drug-addled right-hand man. But it's Chung who breathes life into a story that could have been reduced to violent, even pornographic sensationalism, if not told so compassionately from the victim's point of view. Human trafficking is a $32 billion-a-year business, perpetrated throughout the world. EDEN gives a thoughtful, albeit mind-boggling perspective on how these crimes are sometimes committed in America within plain sight.
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Movie Title : Eden
Genre Movie :Mystery & Suspense,Drama
Mpaa Rating : R
Release Date : Mar 20, 2013 Limited

Actors :Jamie Chung,Matt O'Leary,Beau Bridges,Jeanine Monterozza,Scott Mechlowicz,Tantoo Cardinal,Eddie Martinez,Joseph Steven Yang,Naama Kates,Laura Kai Chen,Mariana Klaveno,Jeanine Monterroza,Tracey Fairaway,Russell Hodgkinson,Tony Doupe


Eden

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New Trailer For Eden


Review For Eden

Cruelty, bloodletting and death are evident throughout (frequently occurring just outside the frame), and Griffith's laudable discretion actually intensifies their impact.
Jeff Shannon-Seattle Times

Griffiths lays bare a many-tentacled trafficking system sickening in its reach.
Robert Abele-Los Angeles Times

A quite moving performance comes from Jamie Chung as Eden, repulsion sliding into fearful acceptance without the extinction of hope.
Stanley Kauffmann-The New Republic

Nearly every second is taken up with the horrors inflicted upon the heroine by the sorriest bunch of good ol' boy sadists since "Deliverance."
Farran Smith Nehme-New York Post

A few moments harp on the sentimental, but overall, this is a powerful addition to the small collection of films dedicated to spreading awareness of this horrific crime.
Stephanie Carrie-Village Voice

[An] excruciating vision of under-age women conscripted into sexual slavery by a criminal enterprise from which there is seemingly no escape.
Stephen Holden-New York Times

Jamie Chung gives a reserved, watchful performance, but the true surprise is perpetual nice guy Beau Bridges in a nasty turn as the head trafficker.
Jamie S. Rich-Oregonian

Eden surprises by managing to paint a vivid and disturbing picture of the trafficking experience within the context of a conventional thriller.
Eddie Harrison-The List

It's chilling, convincing, matter-of-fact realism.
Philip French-Observer [UK]

Griffiths handles the exploitation with care, hinting at what goes on rather than rubbing our faces in it.
Amber Wilkinson-Eye for Film

It's based on the experiences of a real life Korean woman, Chong Kim, but you can just tell that many of the facts have been massaged.
Charlotte O'Sullivan-This is London

Harrowing true events are dramatised with surprising restraint in the low-key Eden.
Allan Hunter-Daily Express

I would have liked to know more about the criminal setup, though leaving it unexplained gives it a greater tang of evil: a very strong performance from Chung.
Peter Bradshaw-Guardian [UK]

Engaging, sharply focussed and pointedly non-exploitative sex trafficking drama with a strong script, assured direction and a terrific central performance from Jamie Chung.
Matthew Turner-ViewLondon

Props to Griffiths for proving that it only takes a very slight shift in tone and focus to give a gory old bike a set of shiny new wheels.
David Jenkins-Little White Lies

For half an hour, with brutish hunks abusing teens in torn clothes, we think: "Sexploitation!" Then stately, plump Beau Bridges appears, a corrupt federal marshal resembling a gone-to-girth Timothy Spall, and the story starts.
Nigel Andrews-Financial Times

Director-cowriter Megan Griffiths refuses to sensationalise the tabloid aspects of this harrowing true story about human trafficking within the USA.
Rich Cline-Contactmusic.com

A frustratingly mild interpretation of a horrific true-life incident.
Neil Alcock-Empire Magazine

Director Megan Griffiths wastes a great villain and settles for easy answers in a watchable but by-numbers thriller.
Josh Winning-Total Film

Tackles the issue of sex slavery, but does so in a way that never feels too clumsy or overarching. Instead, it's a character study with thriller elements; it exposes you to a horrible underworld without ever beating you over the head with it.
Drew Taylor-The Playlist

The intimate scenes between marginalized individuals feeling out complicated relationships. . .gives unusually poignant insight into those caught up in sex trafficking.
Nora Lee Mandel-Film-Forward.com

Tackling the most lurid of subjects, this schlocky shocker proves that sometimes female directors can be as exploitative as men.
David Noh-Film Journal International

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