WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Thriller >

Control

Watch Control For Free

Control

Mark, a man who commits perjury for his company in order to help his mother. However, he meets a mysterious person who threatens him and forces him to rob a bank. After the theft, the mysterious person continues to cause disasters to happen to Mark, which is when Mark vows to break free from this person's control and expose his or her true identity.

... more
Release : 2013
Rating : 6
Studio : Huayi Brothers Pictures,  Sil-Metropole Organisation,  Celestial Pictures, 
Crew : Director,  Editor, 
Cast : Daniel Wu Yao Chen Simon Yam Kara Wai Ying-Hung Ady An
Genre : Thriller Crime Science Fiction

Cast List

Related Movies

Breakup Mountain
Breakup Mountain

Breakup Mountain   2023

Release Date: 
2023

Rating: 7.2

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy  /  Thriller
Ready, Jet, Go! Space Camp: The Movie
Ready, Jet, Go! Space Camp: The Movie

Ready, Jet, Go! Space Camp: The Movie   2023

Release Date: 
2023

Rating: 6.6

genres: 
Adventure  /  Animation  /  Science Fiction
Velvet Mirage
Velvet Mirage

Velvet Mirage   2023

Release Date: 
2023

Rating: 7

genres: 
Fantasy  /  Action  /  Crime
Stars: 
David Crocpsy Li
Murder in the First
Murder in the First

Murder in the First   1995

Release Date: 
1995

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Drama  /  Crime
Stars: 
Christian Slater  /  Kevin Bacon  /  Gary Oldman
Bus 174
Bus 174

Bus 174   2003

Release Date: 
2003

Rating: 7.8

genres: 
Crime  /  Documentary
The 6th Day
The 6th Day

The 6th Day   2000

Release Date: 
2000

Rating: 5.9

genres: 
Drama  /  Action  /  Science Fiction
The Skulls II
The Skulls II

The Skulls II   2002

Release Date: 
2002

Rating: 4.6

genres: 
Action  /  Comedy  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Robin Dunne  /  Nathan West  /  Ashley Tesoro
Funny Games
Funny Games

Funny Games   2008

Release Date: 
2008

Rating: 6.5

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Naomi Watts  /  Tim Roth  /  Michael Pitt
Top of the Food Chain
Top of the Food Chain

Top of the Food Chain   1999

Release Date: 
1999

Rating: 6.2

genres: 
Horror  /  Comedy  /  Science Fiction
Stars: 
Campbell Scott  /  Fiona Loewi  /  Tom Everett Scott

Reviews

Cathardincu
2018/08/30

Surprisingly incoherent and boring

More
Beanbioca
2018/08/30

As Good As It Gets

More
Megamind
2018/08/30

To all those who have watched it: I hope you enjoyed it as much as I do.

More
PiraBit
2018/08/30

if their story seems completely bonkers, almost like a feverish work of fiction, you ain't heard nothing yet.

More
tenshi_ippikiookami
2016/02/04

Daniel Wu's Mark is put in front of Simon Yam's Tiger (does Simon Yam have any free time to be with his friends?) and starts spinning a yarn about how a "voice" is controlling him and forcing him to do very bad things.Kenneth Bi's "Control" is a very simple movie, which wears it's limitations with pride and which makes the best of a pretty simple idea.Your average Joe, victim of his own mistakes and forced to do the bidding of a man in the shadows, is not the most original idea ever. But where "Control" could have become one of those silly movies that becomes more and more ridiculous as it advances, "Control" keeps everything simple and, in this way, is a lot of fun. The pace is non-stop, the actors do a nice job, and the plot, even if simple, is explained in an interesting way, giving the characters time to shine. It's not without its missteps and ludicrous plot developments, but it doesn't go over the top, so it never loses the viewer's attention.On of the aspects where the movie production seems to have put a lot of effort is in the look of the movie, as the story is a futuristic one. The effects are middle of the road. Nothing great, but OK for a production that has not the budget of a big blockbuster. It has a nice noir look that makes the whole's movie atmosphere quite gloomy, in an engrossing way. A fun time at the movies. That would have been great with more money for the effects and a little more care with some small parts of the plot.

More
moviexclusive
2013/12/08

If you need an example of a movie which wears its ambitions proudly on its sleeve, look no further than Kenneth Bi's latest 'Control'. Billed as a game-changer for Chinese cinema by being the first of its kind to be set against an entirely computer-generated visual world, the adaptation of Jack Messitt's book of the same name aims for a sci-fi noir feel not unlike that of 'Sin City' or 'The Spirit', but ultimately settles for much more familiar territory in its story of an ordinary man's desperate battle with an unseen villain.Indeed, one can't quite shake off the distinct sense of familiarity between 'Control' and 'Connected', the latter of which was itself a remake of the Hollywood movie 'Cellular'; in both films, a hapless individual is at the behest of a voice on the phone in order to preserve the life of someone else. The main - but gradually insignificant - difference here is that Daniel Wu's leading character Mark is a victim of his own choices, his virtual captor having latched on to the fact that he had falsified his testimony in court in return for a fast-track promotion at work.Bi situates that premise within an unnamed modern metropolis in Asia sometime in the near future, but what so special about that city or for that matter that time period in which it is set remains unclear throughout the film. After establishing some impressive overhead VFX shots of a metallic looking city gleaming in the dark of the night, Bi pretty much leaves that mise-en-scene in the background, and aside from the fact that Mark's nemesis seems to be able to track his every move via a dense network of closed-circuit cameras around the city, there is hardly little to suggest that the unfolding action is taking place amidst a futuristic dystopia.Instead, Bi concentrates on building an aura of suspense around Mark's 'missions', including robbing a restaurant's patrons at gunpoint, threatening a high-school flame Jessica (Chen Yao) for access into a bank's safe deposit vault, and dealing in firearms. Slowly but surely, Mark meets others like him who have been similarly coerced against their will to do the bidding of that same mysterious person, and together they start to form a shaky alliance to uncover the identity of that shadowy villain. Unfortunately for Mark, he ends up tied to a chair facing a powerful gangster he ripped off Tiger (Simon Yam) as well as Tiger's right-hand man Devil (Leon Dai), that sequence both opening and capping the preceding events which Mark recounts to his physical captors.A significant genre change from his filmmaking debut 'Rice Rhapsody' or his subsequent 'The Drummer' and 'Girl$', Bi does commendably in building an engaging narrative that to its credit is less straightforward than you might expect. There is also a twist right at the end that you probably won't see coming, a slightly implausible but no less interesting turn of events that puts a fresh perspective on everything that you have seen unfolding without making you feel duped. What is nonetheless lacking is character development, which is barely there for Mark and almost non-existent for the rest of the supporting acts.The buck then rests squarely with Daniel Wu, whose earnest leading performance does its best to win his audience's sympathy; and yet there is only so much he can do to redeem a thinly written character. The rest of the ensemble is pretty much wasted - Yam's over-the-top villainous act is something he can do with his eyes closed; Taiwanese actor Dai barely has a few lines of dialogue before Yam takes over; and Chen Yao seems bored than enthused to be sharing the screen with Wu.For all that talk about being the first of its kind, 'Control' underwhelms for failing to make use of its futuristic cityscapes (supervised by our very own Nickson Fong no less) to mount an immersive dystopia built upon its titular concept. Instead, it settles for a much more conventional suspense thriller that's been done and done before, saved by a nifty twist at the end that provides neat closure. If you're looking for a smart sci-fi thriller, this will most definitely not be it; at best, it serves as a teaser for a more ambitious filmmaker to come along and realise the possibilities of a genre that's largely been shunted by Chinese cinema. There's no doubt the effects are top-drawer; now for a compelling story.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now