Beystiman
It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.
2freensel
I saw this movie before reading any reviews, and I thought it was very funny. I was very surprised to see the overwhelmingly negative reviews this film received from critics.
Asad Almond
A clunky actioner with a handful of cool moments.
Marva
It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,
SnoopyStyle
Filmmaker David Bond tries to see how much information is out there about him. He received a government letter about a loss of data that involved him and many of his fellow British citizens. He hires two private investigators to find him in 30 days and they're only given his name and picture. He leaves his pregnant wife and young child as he tries to disappear.This seems to be a fun gimmick to highlight this issue for the documentary. However, the gimmick is muddled by a lack of structure. There doesn't seem to be too many rules for the chase. David is being deliberately naive. There is a bit of OMG shock going on. Some of it is truly eye-opening but sometimes he tries too hard. There are a lot of talking heads with opinions. There are a couple of passing stories with people who have identity issues. His uncovering of his private information is sometimes funny. The investigators don't have much charisma or great screen presence. This is a worthy subject if it's done right. This has some good bits but not much more.
JaTyLe
I liked this. I feel that I need to add some comments in response to some of the reviews. This film has been made by someone who wanted to carry out an experiment. It is clearly something he was intrigued about and an issue close to his heart. It was a way of expressing his own way of thinking and doesn't need the question asked about what the target audience is.This was aired on More4 which carries many documentaries so I guess that is the target audience.It is what it is and needs no more analysis than of the portrayal of the subject. I think the target audience is neither here nor there.
paul2001sw-1
Ever worried about the way that almost all organisations seem to gather data on you regardless of whether or not it is needed? Of course, they can claim to be gathering it "just in case", but in case it's in your interests that they need it, or only in theirs? These issues are explored in David Bond's frustrating documentary, in which he examines how much information "they" have about you by going on the run and challenging a firm of private detectives to track him down. The problem with this exercise is that it's a bit like playing hide-and-seek; you can always win by running into the next field, but that's not the game: David is eventually caught, but only by committing an elementary error, turning up for a pre-booked appointment. Meanwhile, there's a lot of David expressing his paranoia to the camera, which seems a little forced since the only thing that will happen if he's caught is the end of the film (and indeed, had he stayed clear, the point of the film would have been lost). There is also some research, but even that is a little annoying: he visits a school to observe how pupils are tracked, but we never see him asking the teachers to justify this. There are two things going on in our society, I think: we trade privacy for convenience, and others steal our privacy because it's too convenient, and easy, for them to do so. But 'Erasing David' is little more than a gimmick; it won't tell you much that you don't already know.
mgulev
David wants to find out how much information about him is just hanging around in the world. He leaves his pregnant wife (with her consent, thankfully) and hires two private detectives to hunt him down. We follow David in his escape from the world and the detectives across Europe intermixed with flashbacks from before his vanishing act, where we see how much information every single institution has on him and the rest of his family. In the beginning, one gets a creepy feeling that companies and institutions and the government keep all sorts of records, and that it's just too easily available for "the wrong people" to get their hands on. As the movie nears its middle, it becomes apparent that the detectives are not relying on all this available technology, but on basic, nose-to-the-grindstone, garbage-digging, surveillance detective work. The end is rather unsurprising, but what is mentionable is the gradual paranoia that engulfs David. Even when he is hiding in a ruin in a field miles from nowhere and hundreds of miles from civilization, he thinks they're right around the corner. It gives a good insight into what people on the run must be feeling. All in all a good "documentary", but just not that gripping.