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Bones And All

October 03, 2023

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[avatar]by Blender Dumbass

Aka: J.Y. Amihud. A Jewish by blood, multifaceted artist with experience in film-making, visual effects, programming, game development, music and more. A philosopher at heart. An activist for freedom and privacy. Anti-Paternalist. A user of Libre Software. Speaking at least 3 human languages. The writer and director of the 2023 film "Moria's Race" and the lead developer of it's game sequel "Dani's Race".


From 3 years ago.
Information or opinions might not be up to date.


5 Minute Read



It is very hard to describe the style of Luca Guadagnino, the director of Bones And All. His films are very good. But it seems like he is not interested in plot, which is weird, considering that the movies are good. He is famous for his erotic dramas, films centered around a sexual tension between people, like his perhaps most acclaimed movie Call Me By Your Name, in which all the substance comes from very subtle things. A character looks a certain way on another character. Or perhaps holds onto another character's hand for way too long. And you have to piece together all these little clues to even start feeling some kind of presence of a plot. Because if you don't pay attention it all looks like people just casually hanging out. And then suddenly a payoff happens, which would make sense only if you paid attention to the little clues. ↩ Reply

In Bones And All he does something slightly different. The movie is still very much an erotic drama and it has a lot of subtlety. But it has a central concept that fills the screen with so much tension in every scene, that it's just amazing. As you probably already know the film is about two cannibals-lovers who go on a journey through the country. Which makes every shot of them even kissing a nightmarish horror-fest of absolute tension. Even if nothing is happening. ↩ Reply

The direction of the movie is obviously very good. Luca Guadagnino shoots his movies with very precise camera. Nothing too fancy. Everything serves emotional purpose. He likes people to do things that would be in their character, but not necessarily important to the story, like dance. Which makes his editing very intuition-based and less clarity based. Which reminds the style of Lars Von Trier but not quite there. If there would be a scale between chaotic documentary style and a very precise and calculated cinematic style, Lars would be way closer to documentary than Luca. Luca is more in control, but lets a lot of character and intuition through. Which is very interesting. ↩ Reply

The movie was filmed on 35 mm film, which gives it a very old school look that doesn't look like anything modern. Which may put off some people. But the movie is pretty to look at, even though most of it happens in very disturbing settings. Like apartments of very poor people with various layers of dirt. Or other unpleasant locations. But somehow Luca and the cinematographer Arseni Khachaturan pulled off making this ugly world pretty somehow. c:2 ↩ Reply

There is quite a bit of shocking and violent imagery in the film. I mean of course. It is a horror film about cannibals. So you kind of get what you expect. But the director seem like wasn't that much interested in all the violence. So it plays when it needs to, but the focus of the story is on the characters and their relationships. ↩ Reply

Acting-wise the movie kills it. Timothée Chalamet is very good as always. It's hard to think of him as an adult, because he looks 14. But he is older than me. And in this movie he has enough dirt on him to make him look more like an anorexic drug addict than a 14 year old. But he is supposedly way younger than himself in the movie. I would guess around 20. So his casting is nearly perfect. Along side him Guadagnino found another actress that is older than me and even older than Chalamet, and she plays an 18 year old. Her name is Taylor Russell and somehow both she and Chalamet just refuse to age, I guess. The movie also includes a rather unexpected role from Mark Rylance who plays nice and kind old men in Spielberg films. But here he plays a truly terrifying cannibal rapist. ↩ Reply

One interesting face that I was not expecting to see was Jake Horowitz who plays a guy that gets eaten. The thing is, today I reviewed a movie where he is one of the lead actors called The Vast Of Night which was supposed to be this small self funded movie. But somehow the actor got to be in a Luca Guadagnino picture starring Timothée Chalamet. ↩ Reply

Over all the movie is very dark, very tense, very scary and very emotional in the same time. When I saw it for the first time, I was so overwhelmed with emotions and it was so visceral that I remember having a near eye-opening experience. Like if I was spiritually changed by it. It was something. c:3 ↩ Reply

Happy Hacking!!! ↩ Reply


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[avatar]  elban c:0


Точно такие же впечатления от фильма, хотя с другой стороны он меня немного травмировал...

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass c:1


@elban а что именно тебя травмировало?

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[avatar]  Blender_Dumbass c:2 April 16, 2026


The movie was filmed on 35 mm film, which gives it a very old school look that doesn't look like anything modern. Which may put off some people. But the movie is pretty to look at, even though most of it happens in very disturbing settings. Like apartments of very poor people with various layers of dirt. Or other unpleasant locations. But somehow Luca and the cinematographer Arseni Khachaturan pulled off making this ugly world pretty somehow.
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The film is not from 2000s?!


[icon reply]
[avatar]  Troler c:3 April 16, 2026


Over all the movie is very dark, very tense, very scary and very emotional in the same time. When I saw it for the first time, I was so overwhelmed with emotions and it was so visceral that I remember having a near eye-opening experience. Like if I was spiritually changed by it. It was something.
⤴ View

You were corrupted.

Now, would you like to eat meat from my bag? It's ethically sourced.

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[icon articles]Plausible Deniability


[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

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"I think you may like it" - said Mendel to Sheiny one day as he was looking at his TV screen. He was just browsing the web in search of some interesting things to look about and found an old interview with Jacque Fresco who was talking about an idea for a language of the future. He claimed that the languages of today are to vague and allow for multiple interpretations of the same idea, which allows for things like religion to be so successful and for people like lawyers to have successful jobs. And that in the future people would develop a concrete scientific language which will not allow for misunderstandings. Which will make all people understand each other perfectly. And which will put an end to such things like Plausible Deniability.


[icon articles]Copyright Made People Do Useless Work


[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

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Oh the copyright! The system that many believe is there to "protect" artists from exploitation. But the system that is quite clearly one big exploitation in and of it self. I hope that my readers here have a job. Since I want to draw a very interesting parallel. Would you work if there was no contract? Would you do anything if the person that supposed pay you, would not pay you if he didn't want to? Or you would first sign a contract and then do the job? In the world of copyright, there is no contract to sign. There is no boss that will pay you. You have to risk everything to do something that might or might not interest other people in the first place. And no copyright will save you if you did something so utterly uninteresting that nobody will even pay you for it. Let's explore this!


[icon articles]Encryption Could Get Illegal To Protect Children


[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

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A number of countries are pushing at the moment laws that would undermine everybody's privacy by making it illegal to communicate with end to end encryption. They believe that this will stop criminals. And especially that it will save the children somehow. When an article about this was seen by Sheiny this is how she reacted to it.


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