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The film follows the lives among school girls at an prestigious boarding school during 1930s. There, Di Radfield is an eminent student who is the center of the elite clique. But when a beautiful Spanish girl named Fiamma arrives at the school, things begin to change.
Although Green is the sort of actress you can't take your eyes off , her presence is not enough to keep this movie from becoming mired in a slow and predictable rut.
June 08, 2011
FilmsInReview.com
The story twists beautifully and shockingly. The ending is brilliant. Skillfully directed by Jordan Scott.
,,,sometimes seems too obvious, sometimes too opaque, and frequently leaves you guessing as to whether some episode has a deeper meaning or was just tossed out there to keep things moving.
Along with Fiamma's shift, we can't buy a miscast Eva Green, whose teacher begins the film faultless and finishes looking like The Turn of the Screw's governess.
May 17, 2011
Ebert Presents At The Movies
Cracks is very tawdry and blunt, but it's also an effective parable about the way people -- especially impressionable young people -- can become complicit in their own oppression.
Cracks only strays from the boarding school genre's playbook when it's entering questionable territory, making for a picture that's easily forgettable except in its disappointments.
Driven more by characters and relationships than narrative, Cracks explores the exclusionary power of cliques that develop within a closed society, the single-minded violence of the mob mentality, and the seductive charm of the charismatic individual.