Hank Monk

DeRank : 4,58 • DeAge™ : 5020 days

  • Contact
  • Here since 16 october 2011
Voto:
However. Very beautiful.
A scene I know very little about, so, besides being beautiful, it's also educational (for me).
Debase Educhescional
Voto:
I finally saw him.
It’s true that everything hinges on a great performance by JP, who for three-quarters of the film is anything but someone you want to empathize with. Toward the end, when he unveils his mask, you can’t help but think, "how cool." But everyone wears their masks.
The film is very linear, and it seems to me that it leans more toward the social than the personal.

Beyond the simplicities (or maybe because of them), it’s undeniable that a society with increasing divergences is a society that tends to react with anger. And those who fuel these divergences are also co-responsible for this anger, especially when they use the media to place the blame on the losers.

Our society is definitely heading toward a turning point. I hope the change comes through voting.
Voto:
I saw a guy on TV calling him "a Dostoevskian hero."
Well, I think I'll definitely watch it.

The observation about negative disenchantment in a value system is dangerous... well.
In rock, isn’t this trick as old as the world? (How many people here listen to black metal?)
I must say I don't have a precise opinion on the matter, but between the two, I would say that a lot of literature should also be deprecated.
Voto:
Incredible...the first and only review of Brel?
Bël.
Voto:
Great as always.
Voto:
"Hippies posed a threat to Western capitalism"
Voto:
I was listening to the Chinese restaurant the other day. You can tell I was in a good (or bad) mood because this time I liked it. Especially C.Rock.
Voto:
Beautiful review, congratulations.
Although meta-cinema has become quite tiresome, I must say that this is indeed a meta-cinema about meta-cinema and it could represent its end.

I must say, a great film.
You've already said it all about his directing and editing skills.
Voto:
Cool, I had missed that back then!
I went to London in 2013 (by myself) to see them at a thing called Jabberwocky festival.
The video game went something like this:
- level 1: delayed flight to London
- level 2: super dirty hostel in Hyde Park
- level 3: getting to that damn festival on the other side of London

- ending: arriving there and discovering that the event had been canceled the day before while you were already on the plane with your phone turned off and without TIM Passport

- Opening credits of curses
Voto:
In Infinite Jest, the plot is there. It's like "Il pasticciaccio brutto di via Merulana" by Wallace. The beautiful part at the end of the reading is connecting the dots (many interesting interpretations have been given). This too has that, and it’s also quite linear.

My ignorance—I’ve never read anything on or by Wittgenstein, and it seems that for this book, Wallace was heavily inspired by his thoughts.

I’ll read the rest later :)