People were dumb back then amirite amirite?Apparently when they first screened this, people were running out screaming thinking the train was going to hit them![]()
People were dumb back then amirite amirite?Apparently when they first screened this, people were running out screaming thinking the train was going to hit them![]()
People were dumb back then amirite amirite?
Haha no I'd be running too if it was the first time I saw it. Image if the first film ever made was something like Pacific RimPeople were dumb back then amirite amirite?
Haha no I'd be running too if it was the first time I saw it. Image if the first film ever made was something like Pacific Rim![]()
The Hunger Games - The Running Man for Twilight tweens as designed by Vivienne Westwood doing a Gilbert & Sullivan opera. About as deep as a shot glass.
I saw Catching Fire first and thought it was pretty good, the first one didn't have much depth and was more focused on the setpieces than the characters/political dimension. Had I watched 1 first I doubt I'd have bothered with 2.Much to my surprise, I was quite impressed with Hunger Games: Catching Fire..
There was far less silly production design, and less of the half baked Battle Royal element in this. This was actually well written, and political, with characters who did things for interesting reasons.
Alright it's not Battleship Potemkin, but if it's the kind of thing teenagers are being encouraged to read/watch these days, I'm all for it. Pisses on something like Twilight or even Harry Potter from a great height.
I saw Catching Fire first and thought it was pretty good, the first one didn't have much depth and was more focused on the setpieces than the characters/political dimension. Had I watched 1 first I doubt I'd have bothered with 2.
I liked it, it was also quite funny cant really say much more than that without giving the plot away.Gone Girl
Superbly made. Visuals are exquisite, casting is perfect, acting is strong (Pike should earn an Oscar nod here), plot is exhilarating. Best film of the year so far for me. Two and a half hours flew by.
That one scene, holy feck.
Gone Girl
Insidious. Why Rosamund Pike decided to play a role which is essentially the textbook misogynist illusion of woman is baffling. 0/10
Gone Girl
Insidious. Why Rosamund Pike decided to play a role which is essentially the textbook misogynist illusion of woman is baffling. 0/10
I haven't seen the film yet but aren't some scenes supposed to be from the subjective view points of both characters?
I wouldn't want to spoil it, but as it goes on it becomes clear what the objective reality of the situation is, and when it becomes clear about who Rosamund Pike's character really is, I became very uncomfortable with how she was being constructed for the viewer, and the implications that had on the themes of gender that are in the film.
Reading other reviews, no one else seems to have this problem, so maybe I'm reading too much into it. But, as someone who generally rolls their eyes when such and such film or show is accused of being racist or sexist (e.g. Breaking Bad), it seemed to me very blatant that the film's perspective on women was problematic. I don't know if that's the problem of the film or the book, frankly I have no interest in reading the book now.
I wouldn't want to spoil it, but as it goes on it becomes clear what the objective reality of the situation is, and when it becomes clear about who Rosamund Pike's character really is, I became very uncomfortable with how she was being constructed for the viewer, and the implications that had on the themes of gender that are in the film.
Reading other reviews, no one else seems to have this problem, so maybe I'm reading too much into it. But, as someone who generally rolls their eyes when such and such film or show is accused of being racist or sexist (e.g. Breaking Bad), it seemed to me very blatant that the film's perspective on women was problematic. I don't know if that's the problem of the film or the book, frankly I have no interest in reading the book now.
I don't get this viewpoint at all.
Nothing sexist about it at all - it's a character.
@TooBias I agree entirely with the idea that a just because a character is such a way doesn't necessarily mean the film's ideology is a reflection of that character. My favourite film is Taxi Driver; Travis Bickle is an explicitly racist character, but the film's not racist because the viewer isn't made to easily identify with him and his views. If this was just the case of a character, I wouldn't mind, but I think Gone Girl's doing something else. I'll briefly give examples but they'll include spoilers, and Liverpool are just about to kick off and so I'll leave it to after the game to post them here. I do want to justify my view though.
Also, I don't really read all that much into the author being a woman, if you're critiquing a piece of art you take that art on its own merits, what you see in it, not what you think the artist's personal politics are. After a piece of art is made it's out of the artist's hands imo.
The Rover
I thought this was a quality film. I went into it knowing absolutely nothing about it other than it was Australian. It's set in a sort of post-apocalyptic outback 10 years after a global economic depression. It's about a man trying to get his stolen car back, that's the plot in a nutshell. Obviously the film is more than that. Guy Pearce is brilliant. Really liked the ending.
7/10
Gillian Flynn has talked about it a bit, and quite well. I don't think it has a sexist agenda, the characters are just cliches.I wouldn't want to spoil it, but as it goes on it becomes clear what the objective reality of the situation is, and when it becomes clear about who Rosamund Pike's character really is, I became very uncomfortable with how she was being constructed for the viewer, and the implications that had on the themes of gender that are in the film.
Reading other reviews, no one else seems to have this problem, so maybe I'm reading too much into it. But, as someone who generally rolls their eyes when such and such film or show is accused of being racist or sexist (e.g. Breaking Bad), it seemed to me very blatant that the film's perspective on women was problematic. I don't know if that's the problem of the film or the book, frankly I have no interest in reading the book now.
The King's Speech - ...four Oscars?
I wouldn't want to spoil it, but as it goes on it becomes clear what the objective reality of the situation is, and when it becomes clear about who Rosamund Pike's character really is, I became very uncomfortable with how she was being constructed for the viewer, and the implications that had on the themes of gender that are in the film.
Reading other reviews, no one else seems to have this problem, so maybe I'm reading too much into it. But, as someone who generally rolls their eyes when such and such film or show is accused of being racist or sexist (e.g. Breaking Bad), it seemed to me very blatant that the film's perspective on women was problematic. I don't know if that's the problem of the film or the book, frankly I have no interest in reading the book now.