Sundance Review: The Imposter

Score:A

Director:Bart Layton

Cast:Ken Appledorn, Debbie Jennings, Travis Alan McAfee

Running Time:95 Minutes

Rated:NR

The Imposter
centers around a young man from France who gets by in life impersonating
runaway teenagers. This story is heartbreaking and unfortunately 100% real.

A boy named Nicholas disappears
from San Antonio, Texas. Three years and four months later he "resurfaces" in
Spain. The family gets a phone call from the American Embassy saying the
Spanish police have Nick and he needs to be picked up. The audience watches,
horrified, thinking that his sister will certainly recognize him. Sadly it
doesn't happen. He fools everyone for months"”it's disgusting and terrifying.

Director
Bart Layton brilliantly chose to combine the standard documentary style of
filmmaking with a dramatization of the boy's story to better pull the audience
into the overall narrative. It reads more like film noir than a documentary as
the viewers begin to feel for the family and hate the man who is ruining their
lives for the second time.  This is
one I would watch over and over again just to study the nuances of the imposter
himself. He's a master manipulator and it is enthralling and aggravating to
watch him spread his malice everywhere.

It is impossible to fully convey
the emotions that rise to the surface while witnessing this criminal act take
place.  I cannot stress to you how
much you need to see this movie.  It
really is an impressive feat.

The Imposter is competing in the World Cinema Documentary Competition.

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