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Sanctuary Poster

Sanctuary

His game. Her rules.
2023 | 96m | English

(11955 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Director: Zachary Wigon
Writer: Micah Bloomberg
Staring:
Details

Confined to a claustrophobic hotel room, the heir to a hotel empire and the dominatrix who has primed him for success become locked in a battle of wits and wills as he tries to end his relationship with her.
Release Date: Apr 06, 2023
Director: Zachary Wigon
Writer: Micah Bloomberg
Genres: Drama, Thriller
Keywords hotel, eroticism, denver, colorado, dark comedy, dominatrix, dominance, job promotion, power dynamics
Production Companies Rumble Films, Charades, Hype Studios, Mosaic Films
Box Office Revenue: $581,423
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Margaret Qualley Rebecca Marin
Christopher Abbott Hal Porterfield
Danita Battle Hal's Mother
Rene Calvo Younger Phil Porterfield
Christian Casatelli Young Hal
Dominick Defilips Older Phil Porterfield
Name Job
Zachary Wigon Director
Ariel Marx Original Music Composer
Micah Bloomberg Screenplay
Lisa Kjerulff Line Producer
Jason Singleton Production Design
Amber Thrane Set Decoration
Mirren Gordon-Crozier Costume Design
Kate Brokaw Editor
Lance Edmands Editor
Mary Chipman Makeup Department Head
Ludovica Isidori Director of Photography
Maxwell Nalevansky Set Dresser
Sedrina Bloome Costume Supervisor
Craig Mann Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Juan Carlos Rodríguez Sound Mixer
Jennie Shea ADR Recordist
Alex Burstein First Assistant Director
Christopher Dagostino Second Assistant Director
Vadim Aynbinder Additional Photography, "A" Camera Operator
David Grantham Second Assistant Camera
Nicholas Timmons Steadicam Operator
Albi Sala Gaffer
Esha Kallianpur Script Supervisor
Lauren Citera Hair Department Head
Johnathan Dorfman Visual Effects Supervisor
Szymon Weglarski Visual Effects Supervisor
Caspar Newbolt Title Designer
Mark DeSimone ADR Mixer
Nitasha Bhambree Stunt Coordinator
Declan Mulvey Stunt Coordinator
Name Title
David Lancaster Producer
Maxim Dashkin Executive Producer
Margaret Qualley Executive Producer
Ilya Stewart Co-Producer
Pavel Burian Co-Producer
Carole Baraton Executive Producer
Yohann Comte Executive Producer
Pierre Mazars Executive Producer
Elizaveta Chalenko Executive Producer
Micah Bloomberg Executive Producer
David Gendron Executive Producer
Ali Jazayeri Executive Producer
Nick Shumaker Executive Producer
Stephanie Wilcox Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 37 54 27
2024 5 39 50 30
2024 6 40 70 27
2024 7 37 67 25
2024 8 32 52 21
2024 9 29 41 23
2024 10 32 57 23
2024 11 31 58 21
2024 12 25 36 20
2025 1 29 47 20
2025 2 22 32 4
2025 3 8 28 2
2025 4 3 5 3
2025 5 3 5 3
2025 6 2 4 2
2025 7 2 4 2
2025 8 2 3 2
2025 9 3 4 2

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Reviews

screenzealots
4.0

A dominatrix and her wealthy client engage in the most elaborate power struggle during one night in a luxury hotel suite in “Sanctuary,” director Zachary Wigon’s twisted psychological love story / thriller. The film’s tone is uneven and inconsistent and the direction is lacking, but the two lead per ... formances are terrific. Hal (Christopher Abbott) is the heir to a major company and will soon be taking over as CEO, which means it’s time to cut ties with the longstanding professional relationship he’s had with a dominatrix, Rebecca (Margaret Qualley). When he tries to break it off with an expensive goodbye gift, she’s not having any of it. This leads to a wild night of sexual game playing and psychological torture, as the power shifts and sexual dynamics converge in a tornado of chaos. As a viewer, this constant back and forth makes the film extremely frustrating. By the very definition of her profession, Rebecca is a person who holds and exerts all the power over her client. The twist here is that Hal also has a significant amount of power. They both are master manipulators and can control each other on a whim. This aspect of the film becomes more irritating than compelling, especially when it’s impossible to tell who’s telling the truth at any given time. It’s one big charade. Hal doesn’t think much of himself, as it is made evident in the elaborate, belittling scripts he writes for Rebecca to recite, word for word. She knows he has daddy issues and plays to his weaknesses. His power over her is all about the money. The story loses its edge when Rebecca engages in a bit of blackmail, exposing an unfortunate pettiness from which her character never recovers. There are some sophisticated ideas about gender and capitalism at play, but they’re drowned out by situations that feel like they were solely added to the screenplay to push buttons or at least garner some uncomfortable, cringey laughter. What begins as a feminist-leaning story transforms into one that’s more off-putting and problematic. When a film has a cast of just two actors, they better be strong enough to support the material. Thankfully, that’s not a problem here. These are two complex characters, and Qualley and Abbott skillfully embody them. She plays Rebecca as an unconventional therapist of sorts, and he is believable as a broken man with a poor self image. The dominatrix thriller genre isn’t huge, and “Sanctuary” is well acted and provocative. I found the filmmaking to be amateurish and disappointing however, and this project is unlikely to find a large audience. It’s a festival film and nothing more.

Aug 04, 2023