

While it was easy to believe what Beth believed, at the start of the movie, there were some details that made me untrusting of some of these characters. When police officers, Pavic (Amar Bukvic) and Kovac (Iva Mihalic), tell Beth certain bits of information about people like Zain (Ziad Bakri), or when she figures out information on her own about people like Sebastian (Adrian Pezdirc), I felt my perceptions of the characters shift along with Beth’s. My opinions about the main characters changed–like Beth’s did. What I loved most about the complexity of The Weekend Away was that it changed my feelings about each of the characters as more information was unraveled. I never felt lost by the ever-evolving plot, which I frequently find happening to myself with complex plots in other shows, books, or movies.
#KATE NETFLIX SIMILAR MOVIES MOVIE#
With so much going on, I have to applaud the movie writers for keeping all the information organized and verbalized for the viewers. What I loved most about the complexity of The Weekend Away was that it changed my feelings about each of the characters as more information was unraveled.” Don’t get me wrong, though, I absolutely loved it. Then, one girl-who is known to disappear to party-disappeared, and, in the end, it became a whole murder mystery. I feel as though I watched five seasons of an ultra-dramatic television show in less than an hour and a half.

She gets up and leaves her room to meet up with her friend. Beth wakes up startled by a shout from Kate in her dream. Suddenly, the movie cuts to the next morning straight from the club. Kate begs Beth to let loose a little and have fun with these men, even though she is married to Rob (Luke Norris). At the club, Beth and Kate end up sitting with two mysterious men, Luka (Marko Braic) and Mateo (Lujo Kuncevic). Kate takes Beth out for an expensive night at dinner with her ex-husband’s credit card, then to a club: The Blue Parlour. In the movie, Beth (Leighton Meester) and Kate (Christina Wolfe) go on a girl’s trip to Croatia. I never knew who the “bad guy” was until the end of the novel, which made me love it The Weekend Away on Netflix felt similar. Last summer, I read the book House of Salt and Sorrows, and I had no clue what to think.
