MikeKardec
One Too Many
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Not really pertaining to anything this site is about except community BUT ...
A really terrific film made by some of the same people (director, editor, composer) that worked on last year's Sicario. Both thoughtful, creepy, amazingly atmospheric films. They have little else in common except that the director, Denis Villeneuve, is a master at telling a story with the barest trickle of information. It's only late in the game that you realize you really know as much as you do and that things are going to make sense even though you have been following characters who are mostly bewildered by the situation they are in.
An absolute master class for the delivery of information with the first rule being strip what you need the audience to know to enjoy (be shocked and awed by) the story to the bare minimum.
A few possible criticisms depending on how you look at things: 1) the film narratively plays games with time and the film is about the nature of time. If you decide to worry about it all in a literal sense you may get a headache because those are two different elements. One is the style of film making the other is a reality of the story ... few will be inclined to sweat it. 2) there could be more chemistry between the two leads ... but if there was it would distract you in ways that matter. I'm trying to avoid spoilers here so I'm not being as clear as I'd like.
Villeneuve is a cool, as in distant, calm, non manipulative. Spielberg he is NOT. This movie packs an emotional wallop and it's because he's not telling you what to think or feel. I appreciate that. I felt the same way about Sicario despite the fact that it has 'action film' elements. That film was a thought provoking story laid out on a bed of creeping, though utterly true to life, horror. No fantasy. This is Science Fiction and also a very thought provoking story laid out on a bed of creeping awe, the kind we haven't had in the genre since the passing of so many literary greats like Clarke and Asimov. Both stories are very even handed politically, a great relief in this day and age. They both deal with the human condition in profound and revealing ways.
Big thumbs up. Highly recommended. A powerful and moving film.
A really terrific film made by some of the same people (director, editor, composer) that worked on last year's Sicario. Both thoughtful, creepy, amazingly atmospheric films. They have little else in common except that the director, Denis Villeneuve, is a master at telling a story with the barest trickle of information. It's only late in the game that you realize you really know as much as you do and that things are going to make sense even though you have been following characters who are mostly bewildered by the situation they are in.
An absolute master class for the delivery of information with the first rule being strip what you need the audience to know to enjoy (be shocked and awed by) the story to the bare minimum.
A few possible criticisms depending on how you look at things: 1) the film narratively plays games with time and the film is about the nature of time. If you decide to worry about it all in a literal sense you may get a headache because those are two different elements. One is the style of film making the other is a reality of the story ... few will be inclined to sweat it. 2) there could be more chemistry between the two leads ... but if there was it would distract you in ways that matter. I'm trying to avoid spoilers here so I'm not being as clear as I'd like.
Villeneuve is a cool, as in distant, calm, non manipulative. Spielberg he is NOT. This movie packs an emotional wallop and it's because he's not telling you what to think or feel. I appreciate that. I felt the same way about Sicario despite the fact that it has 'action film' elements. That film was a thought provoking story laid out on a bed of creeping, though utterly true to life, horror. No fantasy. This is Science Fiction and also a very thought provoking story laid out on a bed of creeping awe, the kind we haven't had in the genre since the passing of so many literary greats like Clarke and Asimov. Both stories are very even handed politically, a great relief in this day and age. They both deal with the human condition in profound and revealing ways.
Big thumbs up. Highly recommended. A powerful and moving film.