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by Troler
Free Software fundamentally misses the point. It fails on a practical, ideological, economic, and political level. Letās examine precisely how (in a slightly different order for the purposes of presentation).
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I always had a gossamer relationship with horror. As it or any other genre is defined by the dominant aspects and themes. Early on, I believed jump-scares decreased life-expectancy, by stressing the heart. Later on, I viewed with skepticism the substance and meaning of horror. Viewing it more as an entertainment flick, best served for those searching for easy entertainment, rather than "real" cinema. As the later forms of ideas crystalized, I set clear lines of what I was and was not willing to watch, but the narrow-mindedness did not last.
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One of the movies that cracked the glass was 1980 film Dressed to Kill by Brian De Palma. It may have done so due to it not being an actual slasher, certainly not horror. Its language was far too cinematic and artistic to be considered a horror flick by my standards. As such, I did not really feel any antagonism against it. Neither did I for Last Night in Soho by Edgar Wright. Once again, it was not really a horror film. It's due to the same reasons, the movie just had too much cinematic flare. The gore was overshadowed by the handling of the sets, character depth and simply stunning cinematography. It is not say horror movies cannot have high artistic value, rather so I haven't encountered ones which did. This is not the first time I've considered horror as non existent. I did not find Nosferatu nor the original Godzilla as horror films, because I found them more tragic than horrifying. It could be argued, movies created more than 70 years ago were created for the tastes of that time. What was considered horror in those days is no longer now and vice-versa.
c:0 c:1 ā© Reply
Last Night in Soho depict horrifying imagery not so much through gore, the primal horror, more so from the traumatic past. It deals with the less so appealable aspects of the Swinging Sixties. The thriller is used more as a hook, to lure in audience to a film, mostly dissecting and understanding the spirit of the 60s. From the start of the film, the focus is put on the characters' mental state such as the protagonist Ellie Turner (Thomasin McKenzie). The movie's central theme is reflection. The great London reflects its pasts. The folk are reflection of the past. Mirrors do not show what is, rather what was. Ellie's hair is dyed to be ere. The protagonist sees her dead mother inside of the reflection. Ellie sees the briskly Sandy (Anya Taylor-Joy) in the mirror. Sandy sees Ellie in the reflection. Having such a clear motif, makes the story more potent. Since reflections are so tied to the plot, itās easier to use substitutes for them, for instance shots of glass, in ways it doesnāt make sense without the prior symbolism. Thatās why the fight scene on the glass staircase feels gratifying. Seeing the glass crack from the swings of a maniac murdered is more in place, when the reflections, mirrors and glass are endowed.
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Taking in more surreal scenes is assisted by the hypnotic scene flow. Edgar Wright seems to feel the beat of the shots. From the first shots, the pace is set very well. The way Ellie the camera tracks Ellieās movement sets her character straight on. I must applaud cinematographer Chung Chung-hoon for the work on more demanding shots. For instance, the dance scene between Sandy and Jack (Matt Smith). Watching the that scene from a different angle reveals there was no trickery, no secret cuts, just a single shot. The coordination must have been grueling, usually choreography and fight scenes require quite a lot of energy to feel lived in. The film delivers both, it does so competently.
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Since the focus on the gore and horror of mutilation is not as all encompassing, I would not term the horror. Really, why is there a need to label everything and argue whether it does or does not fall under one or another term? Last Night in Soho is a love letter to the 60s London. All the spooks are overshadowed by the intricacies of the plot, sidelining the thrills. I have on purpose not read BlenderDumbassā review of the movie, to keep my thoughts fully original. It remains to be seen whether what I had said on what constitutes a genre overlap. Whatever be the movie labeled, itās a pleasant watch.
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Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen - made me cry
![[thumbnail]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/c/cb/TF2SteelPoster.jpg/250px-TF2SteelPoster.jpg)
Blender Dumbass
š 7
It is infamous at this point that the production of the Michael Bay quickly assembled into something from which a good script could be written. This movie started production without a script, only a rough idea of the story, which is not a bad rough idea. But all of the little details were not there at all by the time of production, leaving Bay pretty much at the helm of coming up with stuff on the spot.
#transformers #revengeofthefallen #michaelbay #film #review #cinemastodon #movies
Domino 2005 is Tony-Scott-hem!
![[thumbnail]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/10/Dominoposter.jpg/250px-Dominoposter.jpg)
Blender Dumbass
š 17 š¬ 1
Tony Scott appeared to be trying to outgrow Michael Bay in the 2000s. In 2001 he does Spy Game which is a kind of slightly bayhem-ish movie. Where Tony Scott is no longer trying to make pretty pictures, but is trying to go for ultimate intensity. His Enemy of the State before that, is still more of a classic Tony Scott. While making Spy Game his brother Ridley Scott was making Black Hawk Down while Michael Bay was making Pearl Harbor. While Pearl Harbor has the Bay's explosions and stuff, the colors of the film still look relatively normal. Only his next film ( 2003 Bay Boys II ) go crazy with colors. Spy Game, while being more energetic in directing and editing department, than even Enemy of the State still looks like a normal movie, albeit it is a little desaturated. But Black Hawk Down ( probably in attempt of messing with Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan ) is super moody, with extreme contrast and intense colors. A thing that Michael Bay tries to replicate right away for Bad Boys II and then Tony Scott also replicated for Man on Fire in 2004. And then on Domino in 2005, Tony Scott goes even harder with the style. While Bay is doing roughly the same thing in his own way in The Island.
#Domino #TonyScott #MichaelBay #movies #film #review #cinemastodon
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