• Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
MySite
  • Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
My Favorites ❤️

Services
BrandingDesignMarketingAdvertisement
Company
About usContactJobsPress kit
Social
Movie 1

Please Hold

2020-09-25
18 minutes
Science FictionComedy
7.482

A young man’s life is suddenly and inexplicably derailed, as he finds himself at the mercy of automated ‘justice’.

Country : United States of AmericaLanguage : en

Cast:

Movie 1

Erick Lopez

Mateo

Movie 1

Doreen Calderon

Mamá Torres

Movie 1

Daniel Edward Mora

Papá Torres

Movie 1

Ruben Dávila

Guillermo Lima

Movie 1

Similer Movies:

Movie 1
Animation
Comedy

Angry Birds: Live Stream

Movie 1
Comedy
Drama

Untouchable

Movie 1
Action
Science Fiction
Horror
War

Rakka

Movie 1

John Alton

Ben Saperstein

Movie 1

Greg Karber

Automated Public Defender (voice)

Movie 1

Dani Messerschmidt

Correcticorp AI (voice)

Movie 1

Brian Paison

Various Voices

Movie 1

Shaun S. Sutton

"Ready-To-Win" Commercial (voice)

Movie 1

Devon Dávila

Extra

Drama
Science Fiction

Quarantine

Movie 1
Comedy

Trading Places

Movie 1
Drama
Comedy

Buffalo 10

TMDP Top Reviews:

CinemaSerf

The young “Mateo” (Erick Lopez) is heading to work one morning when he is apprehended by an automated policeman, forced to put on hand-cuffs and incarcerated - all without seeing or speaking to an human being. In his cell, the big screen advises him to plead guilty or face 45 years in jail, but he still hasn’t the faintest idea what he’s supposed to have done. With no money, he has to take a prison job to try to earn enough to place a call to his folks to try and get their help to raise enough cash for a perfunctory chat - but that just proves to be with an uninterested attorney who just wants his fee. Is there any chance he is ever going to even get to court let alone attain his freedom, and even if he does - what could possibly await him on the outside? At a time when there is talk of removing juries from some trials in the UK, this offers quite an unnervingly plausible look at just how that process of gradual erosion might actually turn out as automation becomes easier, cheaper, and cleaner - especially when visited upon those with limited resources to combat this quite scary pay-as-you-go culture. Lopez delivers quite well as the hapless fellow increasingly frustrated at every turn, and the relentlessly presented, jargon-laced, text messaging serves to effectively, and sometimes quite comically, dehumanise the processes of not just justice, but of humanity itself. Worth twenty minutes, and I’d be surprised if it doesn’t resonate on some level with all of our day-to-day lives just a little.