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Saturday, November 16, 2013

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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.

Movie Title : Eden
Release Date : Mar 20, 2013 Limited
Genre Movie :Mystery & Suspense,Drama
Mpaa Rating : R
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


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Visitor Ranting & Critics For Eden

User Ranting Movie Eden : 3.7
User Count Like for Eden : 2,111
Critics Ranting For Eden : 6.5
Critics Percentage For Eden : 82 %

Trailer For Eden

Eden
TagLine Eden Innocence isn't lost, it's stolen.
Review For Movie 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

Movie Images Eden
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Movie Overview For Eden

The true story of Chong Kim who, as a young teen, was abducted into the sex trade, and the complicated moral choices she had to make in order to survive as her situation grew more desperate.

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TagLine Eden Innocence isn't lost, it's stolen.

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