It is a suspicious siege in which Vivian, aged 16, took part in the Vistalas Academy, a boarding school similar to the closed and strange prisons. When Vivian reaches that place, she finds herself in front of Sofia, a former friend. Vivian and Sofia must plan again to reveal the mystery of their encirclement within this horrible place. It is the cause of death or survival within this place where the girls must save themselves from that tragic disaster.
14 July 1987, Gander, Newfoundland, Canada
30 June 1966, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
1 January 1956, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
3 July 1995, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
November 29, 2018
Level 16 is an engaging, earnest and thrilling feminist fairy tale that both consciously riffs on earlier films and yet maintains an original vision without becoming clichéd or predictable.
March 01, 2019
Drawing on the disturbing hermetic worlds of Innocence, Never Let Me Go and The Handmaid's Tale, Level 16 places us in a supposedly educational environment that is rearing meek, docile illiterates for a purpose that will only gradually become clear.
February 27, 2019
The world in Level 16 feels like it was created because it's trendy right now to make art about repressed women.
March 01, 2019
But as it sputters toward its curtain-exposing conclusion, "Level 16" stays disappointingly thin, both as a dark-future cautionary saga and a genre exercise.
February 27, 2019
the big reveal undermines Esterhazy's carefully laid and creepy setup, a case of meticulous years long planning turning out to be utterly unnecessary to its end goal, if more dramatically interesting.
September 27, 2018
Don't sleep on this one!
November 12, 2018
Level 16 is a sharp little sci-fi thriller that does dystopia right, and like all the best bleak visions of a future world, it offers commentary worth sinking your teeth into.
February 27, 2019
Initial hints of a Mean Girls-meets-Lord of the Flies complication don't come to much in this straightforward pic...
December 10, 2018
Level 16 is a compelling thriller that serves as a powerful metaphor for the unnatural standards society places on women

