Eden
Eden
R | 20 March 2013 (USA)
Eden Trailers

After a night out with friends, Hyun Jae accepts a late night ride home from a young fire fighter. What begins as a night of promise quickly turns into a nightmare when she is abducted and imprisoned outside Las Vegas as a sex slave.

Reviews
Laikals

The greatest movie ever made..!

... View More
WasAnnon

Slow pace in the most part of the movie.

... View More
CommentsXp

Best movie ever!

... View More
DipitySkillful

an ambitious but ultimately ineffective debut endeavor.

... View More
Poptart_Psycho

There was controversy over this movie, not for the storyline but for the fact of if its real its claimed to be based on real life events but trying to do research comes up with dead ends. Regardless of this the film was well executed.Jamie Chung plays Jae a young Korean-American in New Mexico in 1994. She obtains a fake ID for a night out with her friend. At the club she meets a handsome man who appears to be in uniform. Feeling safe she leaves with him but within minutes is abducted. Woken up in a warehouse full of beds and separate rooms in what looks to be a well looked after establishment but turns out to be a forced prostitution ring. Lead by a volatile crystal meth addict Vaughn the women are forced to go to bars, clubs and houses to work. A year has passed Jae is now called Eden and has realised the only way to escape is work with them. And of course perseverance pays off Eden is lucky and the final scene captures the movie of a phone call to her mother An underrated film on a very troubled issue in todays society

... View More
Bradley Baum

This film is one of the worst I have seen for a very, very long time! I saw another dreadful film just before this one but of the two this is worse! There is absolutely totally nothing good about this film and I don't mean that in a way! Gee what a surprise that a person that appeared in a reality television program and has no drama training from drama school whatsoever should get acting parts ahead of someone that actually has been to drama school! he fact that Jamie Chung has not been to acting school and done the full however many years it is training shows as she is completely wooden! The film itself doesn't make any sense. After being kidnapped the girls are all given kittens to look after. Why?!?! There is absolutely no reason for it and none is given! The girls are holed up in what looks like a prison corridor with their cells all along one side of it. The cells have a corrugated door that slides up and down like a garage door. There is nowhere for the cats to get out. As no litter trays, litter scooper or anything else that would be needed were given to the girls ....yes, you can see where this is going can't you?....what happened to all of the cats' urine and faeces! Then here are the numerous points in the film where she had ample opportunities and time to escape and go to the police but just didn't take up on any of them. Maybe she actually loved being a prostitute and actually loved this way of living but just didn't want to show it! Then there was this whole injecting the prostitutes with something that was supposed to make them compliant but the acting was so bad you never got the feeling that the prostitutes ever really were. Oh, and where were her parents and the police? Absolutely nowhere to be seen! It was as if the parents couldn't care and couldn't be bothered to even try and find her and so therefor hadn't even be bothered to contact the police over the fact that their daughter had gone missing! And because they couldn't be bothered or care the police did nothing! But then the should have been doing something anyway and they weren't! Surely some investigating would have started as to where and why two police officers have suddenly disappeared to after they had been killed in the desert by the corrupt sheriff in charge of the prostitution ring but nope nothing happened! That was pretty much it for the whole film....nothing happened!

... View More
ktyson9426

I have a tendency to read up on the facts behind a movie as I watch it... Especially movies based on "true stories". More times than not movies based on true stories tend to be two disjointed details a writer has connected through some fictional thread. I've learned from my research that many times a writer will take some minor event and write an over the top story about it to make it entertaining and interesting. Usually these movies go way over the top and when I read up on it, I find myself disappointed by what the reality of the fact are. This apparently was not the case with the movie Eden. As I researched the movie, I kept reading more and more horrific events about the life of Chong Kim. He "true" story had her sexually abused by baby sitters, her fathers friends, teachers and principles... and then physically abused by her mother. According to what I read about her on the internet, she was a Criminology major when she was kidnapped by a "boyfriend", and sold into sexual slavery. As her story unraveled she thought she was subjected of domestic abuse and not sexually exploited by pimps as she was sexually abused in warehouses with 40 other women. Her story also involved her NOT calling 911 during an escape attempt, and instead wasn't able to find any help because she didn't have any identification, before her pimps/kidnappers found her. In another escape attempt she was shunned by a mall full of parents as she screamed and yelled for help. Apparently, her final escape involved her crawling through an air duct in a Vegas hotel, knocked a man unconscious with her shoe heel and made her escape by stealing his car. As I read through her story as I watched the movie, I realized they had to scale back on these "details" about her life to make a believable movie. Which unfortunately puts this woman's story in a dubious position with me. I put in several hours of effort to find any evidence that her story was true. All I could find were interviews with her.... No news stories, no connections to arrests, nothing. I would think in an attempt to identify how warehouses filled with women could occur in America she would at least testify in front of a congressional subcommittee. Unfortunately I never found any vett'ing by any news agency to back up her story.While I feel the subject of sexually trafficking to be an extremely important one.... The more I learned about this women the more I find it difficult to take this movie seriously. As far as the movie itself went... I found it to have value in the sense it has people talking about the subject. I felt the acting was well done and you could feel the fear of Jamie Chung character Eden. I also found the twisted, and emotionally crippled character of Vaughan to be interesting as he goes from looking at Eden as a piece of meat to thinking they were in a pseudo relationship. There were the typical plot holes that one has to look the other way for like the mystery spray that instantaneously kills Vaughn, the existence of underground hospitals that imprison pregnant women for months at a time, the corrupt US Marshal that runs the day to day operations. Then the story tip toed around the underlying story of the movie... for a sex slave operation there was a noticeable lack of sex or violence. Which sort of left me scratching my head a bit.My gut instinct tells me there is some seriously shady holes in this woman's "true story"... I just felt they should have scaled it back a bit more and made it grittier to really highlight the plight of the women in the sex trade industry. The way this movie is right now, I'm expecting to have to debating the truthfulness of Chong Kim's life rather than the topic of sexual trafficking.

... View More
Tss5078

To me, films like this are the true definition of horror, because they really happened. Anyone can look up the graphic details on Wikipedia and see that not only did it happen here, but it happened fairly recently. Hyun-Jae was just a typical California teenager, who went out to party one night. She met a man, left with him, and quickly learned he wasn't what he appeared to be. Hyun-Jae is sold into prostitution and has no other choice, but to be a sex slave for the next three years. The film was very well done, in that it didn't go over the top. Abduction of Eden showed us, what we needed to see, in order to understand and be shocked by what happened, but it didn't go so far as to desensitize us to the story. Jamie Chung, A.K.A. Stu's wife from the Hangover, stars as Hyun Jae, and her performance was really key to how the audience would react to what was happening. Equally as good, was the jailer, Matthew O'Leary. It took me a while to recognize his as the kid from Domestic Disturbance and Spy Kids 2, and it was shocking to see how quickly he grew up. He was this horrible guy, doing terrible things, but there was a part of you that saw him as trapped as the girls were and you couldn't help but feel sorry for him. The cast makes the film, it's as simple as that. Abduction of Eden was a story that was fast moving and somewhat graphic, but ultimately predictable. Films like this one could go either way, it all comes down to just what they show and who they cast, and the producers of this film did an outstanding job of both.

... View More