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Movie Review

Searching makes smart use of technology for modern mystery

Alex Bentley
Aug 30, 2018 | 2:21 pm
Searching makes smart use of technology for modern mystery
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At first glance, the filmmaking technique of Searching seems to be an unnecessarily distancing one. Literally every second of the film is viewed as if looking at a computer screen, so that none of the actors ever appear to be acting for the camera. It’s the same technique utilized by the Unfriended horror movie series, which is produced by the same company, Bazelevs Production.

This time, instead of trying to scare the audience, they’ve turned to a mystery, with arguably much better results. John Cho plays David Kim, who, along with his daughter, Margot (Michelle La), is struggling to get by after the untimely death of his wife, Pamela (Sara Sohn). The struggle gets even more difficult when Margot goes missing after a late-night study group.

Desperate to find his daughter, David tries to track her movements using the best resources available — her computer and the Internet. With the help of the detective assigned to the case, Rosemary Vick (Debra Messing), he doggedly pursues every clue he can find, often coming up with answers to questions he didn’t know he should have.

Perhaps it’s the ubiquitousness of being on a computer or a smartphone every day, but after a settling-in period, the film seems to give the audience a perceived sense of control. Writer/director Aneesh Chaganty, along with co-writer Sev Ohanian, do an amazing job of making the act of clicking around and typing on a computer seem as compelling as any traditional narrative could be.

They’re helped by a variety of video options available, most notably Facetime. Although slightly unbelievable — does anyone actually use Facetime on a computer? — its usage allows the filmmakers to give the characters just enough, well, face time so that the story retains the requisite emotion.

The believability factor is upped even more by the film, with one notable exception, using real websites and devices instead of fake ones like many other movies do. It’s much easier to put yourself in the shoes of the characters when they’re using Google or scrolling through Facebook and Instagram on their Macbook or iPhone.

Best of all, though, the filmmakers don’t let the gimmick of the film get in the way of telling a good story. The twists and turns it takes throughout the course of its 102-minute running time are as surprising and effective as any conventional film, and perhaps even more so given the setting.

Much has been made about the all-Asian cast of Crazy Rich Asians, but there’s something even more notable about having an Asian family at the center of a movie like this. Their ethnicity is a minor but still important element of the film, and thanks to the performances of Cho, La, and Sohn, the situations they experience are as close to universal as you can get.

Though it might not age well given the speed that the world changes, Searching is an of-the-moment film, one that makes great use of modern-day technology to tell an enthralling story.

John Cho in Searching.

John Cho in Searching
Photo by Elizabeth Kitchens
John Cho in Searching.
movies
news/entertainment

World Cup game recap

Japan and Netherlands battle to 2-2 draw in FIFA World Cup opener in Dallas

Associated Press
Jun 14, 2026 | 5:37 pm
Netherlands v Japan: Group F - FIFA World Cup 2026
Photo by Michael Steele/Getty Images
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ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Daichi Kamada scored on a header off Koki Ogawa's corner kick in the 88th minute, sending the Samurai Blue fans into a frenzy and giving Japan a 2-2 draw with the Netherlands in their World Cup opener on Sunday.

While the Dutch extended their unbeaten streak to 16 games in group play, the orange-clad Oranje supporters were stunned by the late goal that left them at 21-2-11 in group play at the World Cup.

Virgil Van Dijk and Crysencio Summerville scored off each post for the Netherlands early in the second half, while Keito Nakamura had a goal between those as part of a three-goal flurry in just 14 minutes.

An uneventful first half changed quickly after the break for a crowd evenly split at AT&T Stadium, the home of the Dallas Cowboys with the retractable roof that offered relief from the muggy Texas heat, and the giant video board that fans had a hard time keeping their eyes off.

Summerville gave the eighth-ranked Dutch the lead in the 64th minute, and Japan was running out of hope when Ogawa sent the corner that Kamada timed perfectly. The ball deflected slightly again on its way toward Bart Verbruggen, who got his hands on it with a sprawling dive but couldn't keep it from going in.

Van Dijk sent a header toward the far post on the right in the 50th minute, bending forward from inside the penalty area as he stared at the ball before it caromed in for the Dutch captain’s 13th international goal.

Nakamura answered seven minutes later for 18th-ranked Japan, turning and rifling a shot past Verbruggen from the left side of the arc after taking a pass from Takefusa Kubo.

Another seven minutes later, Summerville took a pass from Ryan Gravenberch and sent a left-footed shot to the far left post past Zion Suzuki, where it caromed in again.

The Dutch’s most recent loss before the elimination round came the last time the World Cup was in the United States in 1994, when a group play defeat was followed by a quarterfinal loss to Brazil at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas.

In Group F, the Netherlands plays Sweden on Saturday in Houston, while Japan goes to Monterrey, Mexico, to face Tunisia on Saturday.

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