Chester MacFarland
Viggo Mortensen
Chester MacFarland

“A mysterious encounter. A dangerous past. A deadly secret.”
1962. A con artist, his wife, and a dangerous stranger are caught up in the murder of a private detective and are forced to try and escape Athens.
The Two Faces of January Official Trailer #1 (2014) - Viggo Mortensen, Kirsten Dunst Movie HD
Chester MacFarland
Viggo Mortensen
Chester MacFarland
Colette MacFarland
Kirsten Dunst
Colette MacFarland
Rydal Keener
Oscar Isaac
Rydal Keener
Lauren
Daisy Bevan
Lauren
Paul Vittorio
David Warshofsky
Paul Vittorio
Nikos
Omiros Poulakis
Nikos
Young Musician
Prometheus Aleifer
Young Musician
Greek Young Man On Boat
Nikos Mavrakis
Greek Young Man On Boat
FBI Agent
James Sobol Kelly
FBI Agent
College Student
Karayianni Margaux
College Student
Hotelier
Ozan Tas
Hotelier
Airline Agent
Evgenia Dimitropoulou
Airline Agent
"Chester" (Viggo Mortensen) and wife "Colette" (Kirsten Dunst) are holidaying in Athens when they encounter the charismatic guide "Rydal" (Oscar Isaac). After a pleasant evening together, the couple return to their hotel where he is accosted by a private detective who subsequently has an accident! "Rydal" makes a visit to their hotel and is soon embroiled in the disposal of the body and in a scheme that will get them fake passports and out of the country. Meantime, as is obvious from the start, the guide is completely smitten with "Colette" and as that relationship starts to smoulder, it causes the husband to get rattled and for both men to become increasingly wary of each other. It's quite well cast this, but somehow the thing never quite catches fire. It's rather wordy at times and the mysterious intrigues and the sexual chemistry elements are rather undercooked by Hossein Amini as the story starts to drift into the well trammelled lines of a mediocre romantic drama. Individually, there is charisma a-plenty on screen, but rarely at the same time from Dunst and Isaac which is a shame given the importance of their relationship to the plot. Filmed on location so the cinematography and the light are gorgeous, it's just a shame the story falls well short.
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