Exam is a 2009 British psychological thriller film written by Simon Garrity and Stuart Hazeldine, directed by Hazeldine, and starring Colin Salmon, Chris Carey, Jimi Mistry, Luke Mably, Gemma Chan, Chuk Iwuji, John Lloyd Fillingham, Pollyanna McIntosh, Adar Beck and Nathalie Cox.
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Directed by | Stuart Hazeldine |
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Written by |
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Starring |
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Music by |
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Cinematography | Tim Wooster |
Edited by | Mark Talbot-Butler |
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Distributed by | Independent |
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Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | $600,000 |
Screenplay
The film is set in an alternate history, present-time United Kingdom. Eight candidates dress for what appears to be an employment assessment exam, entering a room and sitting at individual desks. Each desk contains a question paper with the word "candidate", followed by a number, from one to eight. The Invigilator, a representative of the company named DATAPREV, explains that the exam is 80 minutes and consists of only one question, but there are three rules. The candidates must not: talk to the Invigilator or the armed guard at the door, spoil their paper, or leave the room. If they do, they will be disqualified. He asks them if they have any questions, and then leaves the room.
As the exam starts, it turns out that their papers are blank with no question stated. Within minutes, the Chinese candidate is disqualified for spoiling her paper by writing on it. After her ejection, the seven remaining candidates realize it is permissible to talk and collaborate since it was not forbidden by the rules. "White," assigns nicknames based on hair color and skin color: Black, White, Brown, Blonde, Brunette, and Dark, and Deaf for the one candidate who does not speak or respond to the group. The few times Deaf communicates, it's in French and is confusing to the other members of the group. In the next proceeding hour, the candidates use the lights, their bodily fluids, and fire sprinklers in attempts to reveal hidden text on their papers to no avail. The group members speculate about the purpose of the exam and the nature of the company whose identity is shrouded in mystery. Dark pipes up by saying that the CEO is highly secretive and has not been seen since the IPO. Slowly, it is revealed that this company is responsible for a miracle drug designed to treat a condition that afflicts a large part of the population due to a viral pandemic. In the chaos, White takes control of the group and engineers the disqualifications of Brunette and Deaf for spoiled papers.
White then taunts the others, saying he has figured out the question but will not tell them. Black punches White in the face, knocking him unconscious and ties him to a chair. As White passes out, he pleads for his medication, implying he has the virus, but some of them do not believe him. Brown then turns his attention to Dark, who demonstrates a lot of knowledge about the internal workings of the company, and eventually tortures her into revealing that she works for the company. It is revealed that Brown is a carrier of the disease. White then goes into convulsions, proving he has the disease. Dark pleads to the Invigilator for help and is disqualified.
Blonde retrieves the medication for White, which was stolen from him earlier by Brown, reviving him. The others release him, demanding to know the question. White suggests that there is no question and the company is going to hire the last remaining candidate. Black steals the guard's gun, but it requires the guard's fingerprint ID, giving White time to retrieve it. White forces Brown to leave the room at gunpoint, disqualifying him. He forces Blonde to leave; as she exits the room she turns off the voice-activated lights, allowing Black to attack White.
The lights come back on after Black is struck by a gunshot. Blonde is hiding in the hallway, still holding one foot inside the room, technically not having left the room. Before White can kill her, the exam timer runs to zero. White then addresses the Invigilator, sure of his success, but he is disqualified. It is revealed that Deaf had earlier set the countdown forward by a few minutes. Blonde then remembers that Deaf had been using glasses and a piece of broken glass with an exam paper earlier. Taking the abandoned glasses, she finds the phrase "Question 1." on the exam paper in minuscule writing.
Blonde then realizes that Question 1 refers to the only question asked of the group by the Invigilator at the beginning of the test ("Any questions?"). She answers "No." The Invigilator then enters and reveals that Deaf is actually the CEO of the company and a scientist rather than a businessman or administrator. Deaf's research had found the virus cure, but also discovered a method of rapid cell regeneration which is capable of curing both the virus and many other "stubborn mutations", literally "the gift of life" for millions of people. The bullet that hit Black contained this cure, and he awakens healed. With the desperate need for the drug and a limited supply at any one time, the company needed an administrator capable of making tough decisions with an attention to detail while showing compassion for her fellow man, all traits that Blonde had displayed during the exam. Blonde eagerly accepts her new job.
- Luke Mably as White
- Adar Beck as Dark
- Gemma Chan as Chinese woman
- Nathalie Cox as Blonde
- John Lloyd Fillingham as Deaf
- Chukwudi Iwuji as Black
- Pollyanna McIntosh as Brunette
- Jimi Mistry as Brown
- Colin Salmon as the invigilator
- Chris Carey as the guard
After seeing some of his friends' films fail due to studio interference, Stuart Hazeldine decided that he wanted full control over his feature debut. The original story involved an exam at a school, but Stuart Hazeldine changed it to be a job interview. The ending is also Hazeldine's creation, as the original story didn't have one. Hazeldine wanted to separate the characters by race, culture, gender, and, especially, worldview. The film's pandemic was influenced by contemporary fears of bird flu and distrust of pharmaceutical companies. Originally, the script had more science fiction elements, but Hazeldine stripped them out to keep the film grounded. About the twist ending, Hazeldine said he wanted the film to be about more than just the twist, and he tried to appeal to audiences who seek a story about human nature.
The film premiered in June 2009 as part of the Edinburgh Film Festival and was then part of the Raindance Film Festival 2009. It was released in UK cinemas on 8 January 2010.
On 11 February 2010, IFC Films acquired the rights for the US release, where it was released as part of the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. The DVD and Blu-ray were released in the UK on 7 June 2010. There was no theatrical release in the US, but IFC Films released the film via video on demand on 23 July 2010 and on DVD on 16 November 2010.
On 4 September 2012, a stage adaptation of the film opened in Manchester. Exam has been remade in Tamil as Dhayam and will be released on 24 March 2017.
According to Rotten Tomatoes, 63% of 30 surveyed critics gave it positive reviews; the average rating is 5.6 out of 10. Tim Robey of The Telegraph said that the film starts off well but loses its way. Lael Loewenstein of Variety called it "a smartly conceived, tautly executed psychological thriller." Philip French of The Guardian called the film clever and "ingeniously developed" but criticized the ending as disappointing. Also writing in the Guardian, Peter Bradshaw gave the film two out of five stars and said the film does not live up to its intriguing premise. Awarding the film four out of five stars, Total Film compared the film to Cube and the work of Jean-Paul Sartre. Becky Reed of Screen Geek compared it to 12 Angry Men and El Método (The Method), a 2005 Spanish film.
Awards
- Won the Independent Feature Award at Santa Barbara Film Fest.
- Won the Bronze Hitchcock at the Dinard British Film Festival
- Nominated for Best UK Feature at Raindance.
- Nominated for a BAFTA for Outstanding Debut.