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Woah. Let's not start slagging of Django. In fact some of sets from that looked liked they were used in this.
Spoiler alert please Fishy!
I thought that too.
Grrrr, stopped reading after the second sentence but I guess it was too late already.
Pardon, I thought my post revealed nothing about the movie.
Woah. Let's not start slagging of Django. In fact some of sets from that looked liked they were used in this.
The only Tarantino film worse than Django was Death Proof.
Snowtown - Quietly horrifying, chillingly good.
Snowtown murders?
In your opinion of course
Django was a 9/10 movie for me
well giving the ending away was a massive spoiler.
Snowtown - Quietly horrifying, chillingly good.
Snowtown - Quietly horrifying, chillingly good.
So after watching '12 Years A Slave' the other night, I thought I'd get take a scotch or two and get round to finally polishing off the McQueen/Fassbender trilogy by watching Shame tonight and I have to say that for the first hour or so it blew me away. Some of the most genuinely honest and brave performances I've seen in a long time. It wasn't so much a film about sex addiction for me as it was about a guy trying to love but simply not knowing how to. Fassbender and Mulligan were both superb and the scene where Fassbender goes on a date with the woman from work was incredibly organic. Loved it. But..... For the first hour I was thinking why are people saying this film is about sex addiction when it's about a lot more than that but then they threw that scene in and sort of shit over the vibe I was getting from it. Shame (pun intended) because I think if that last half hour or so was tightened up you'd have a genuine masterpiece on your hands.the gay club scene didn't make sense at all for me and the suicide attempt from his sister was entirely predictable even if they did a clever switcharoo regarding the circumstances
I thought the gay scene and the bar scene were important. They show the lengths the character (and addicts in general) will go to in order to achieve, crucially not sexual gratification but a sense of self annihilation. Exploring the idea of the act (sex in this case but it could be drugs, alcohol, self harm) as being secondary to the compulsion, added a layer of legitimacy and understanding of addiction that very few films are smart enough, or brave enough to convey. It's that depth of portrayal that made it such an incredible, devastating and relatable film to me.
You probably could do with cheering up.
Go watch The Road.
Fair point. I think I just had a problem with the notion that he was so far gone that his sexuality wasn't even relevant. Up until that point I thought it was fundamentally about a guy trying to connect emotionally but finding it impossible and imo that scene made it more overtly "this guy is just a sex addict".
Still an incredible piece of film-making though.
You probably could do with cheering up.
Go watch The Road.
Watched Skyfall. Was odd seeing James Bond so vulnerable...then again he's only human isn't he?! Decent watch if only because it was different to Bond films of yesteryear. Thought it was great looking too. Now, not that I'm remotely a fan of the franchise but the next one will have to be different... not sure folk will be able to stomach Bond on antidepressants and the drink again.
I enjoyed Skyfall, just felt that from the time they leave London in the Aston up until the end of the movie really dragged on to long.