I just saw this for the first time, and wow. It's a totally plausible scenario for this year. It feels a little toothless, and the characters are a little too on the nose, but it's a quality movie and has it's fair share of laughs. Definitely worth a watch.
Plot summary
In a politically-divided United States, a man struggles to make it through the Thanksgiving holiday without destroying his family.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
June 23, 2019 at 05:10 AM
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Top cast
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This aged well
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
In the bonus track of the DVD, the director-writer-star actor of "The Oath" talks about his film as if it were a satire on the current political divide in America that has torn families asunder and led the public to challenge the "alternative facts" presented to them by the mainstream media. Unfortunately, the film's GOOD premise was complemented by BAD scripting and an UGLY narrative that unfolded when a family's Thanksgiving Day is disrupted by sinister forces of the government who assault law-abiding people in their home. This film was indeed a compilation of the good, the bad, and the ugly.
Ike Barinholtz is the filmmaker who places his character Chris front-and-center as the hardcore liberal who rages at his brother and sister-in-law, who are polar opposites in political orientation. At any given moment, Chris may loose his cool with his conservative parents or even his devoted and feisty wife Kai. The film sets up a potentially raucous Thanksgiving dinner with the family members debating their political views. Then, the film takes a nosedive to become a stinker.
At the midpoint of the film, the satirical part of the film drops out when a brutal scene ensues with two officials from homeland security, who disrupt the family's Thanksgiving celebration on the pretext of a tip they received about Chris. The filmmaker is in effect turning America into a police state with the conceit of the loyalty oath, the suspension of free speech, and the storm troopers. The result was that the comedy dropped out of this extremely violent and unpleasant narrative.
Sadly, the film was not funny, and it failed to offer insights into the divisiveness of our nation. The script had the feel of an early draft or a work-in-progress, not a polished, thoughtful screenplay for a feature film. At its best, "The Oath" was like a bad Saturday Night Live skit. At its worst, it was amateur and vile filmmaking of the worst order.
Thumbs down!
Get out of my country
The President asks its citizens to sign a loyalty oath. It is not mandatory, but it has perks like a special tax break. Chris (Ike Barinholtz) and Kai (Tiffany Haddish) oppose the oath. The deadline for signing is the day after Thanksgiving. This leads to divisive Thanksgiving as if Trump got elected and asked people for loyalty to him.
The film is clearly about the divided nation we have right now. The picture had a few good scenes, but the plot failed to grab me. It missed that great scene and a decent hook. It needed a good "Purge" type of scene instead of snippets on the news.
Guide: plenty of swearing. No sex or nudity.