Saputello

DeRank : 1,47
DeAge™ : 7321 days • Here since 25 may 2006
Ridley Scott Blade Runner
Voto:
"too long. Overrated film, with a flimsy plot for what is certainly not the best PKD. Watch A Scanner Darkly and flush Blade Runner down the toilet."---------------------> Ahahahahahahaha... hahahaha... hahahaha! Ok.
Massive Attack 100th Window
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The best albums by Massive Attack are this and Mezzanine, higher than Protection and Blue Lines.
Starfuckers Infrantumi
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Great Rece, concise yet as striking as a plate of pasta with horse shredded meat and walnut sauce. The album: I must have it.
Vanilla Sky Live @ Qube
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Certo! Inviami il testo che desideri tradurre e provvederò a farlo.
Stanley Kubrick Eyes Wide Shut
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"But neither the subject nor the screenplay, I believe, are important for the success of a film." ------> Look, when are you going to get the hell out of here? Are you trying to tell me that in some of Kubrick's films the screenplay doesn't play a fundamental role and have its own eccentricity? Are you saying that Kubrick's narrative method in some of his films (and therefore the construction of the plot) isn't one of the most important aspects of his cinema? When are you going to get lost?
Stanley Kubrick Eyes Wide Shut
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Hell yeah, you’re right! What a drag coherence is! That’s why one of my favorite movies is Jurassic Park! Uh!
Stanley Kubrick Eyes Wide Shut
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@ Odra: Be careful, you might find that you like it upon rewatching. Beautiful!
Stanley Kubrick Eyes Wide Shut
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Well, the whole thing about aging poorly has never particularly excited me either. Sometimes I even like things that have aged poorly; I find they have a different charm compared to things that still seem relevant. It’s not that they necessarily have to be worse. I love the surrealistic pillow disaster by Jefferson Airplane, even though many say it has aged poorly. I'm absolutely crazy about "La strada" by Fellini, which is a film that could objectively suffer more from aging compared to his more dreamy and popular films. I don’t care if something looks old or current. I couldn’t care less.
Stanley Kubrick Eyes Wide Shut
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"In E.W.S., the excessive representation you speak of devours the film, returning a rhetorical tangle that only unravels through the viewer's goodwill."------> If we want, this is a flaw that many of Kubrick's films share, this rhetorical tangle. It’s a flaw that could be attributed to A Clockwork Orange, as well as to The Shining, and also to 2001: A Space Odyssey. More than a flaw, I consider it a characteristic of many of his films (it would be a flaw if we were faced with a philosophical work or a moral fable, but that is not the case). Some enjoy it, while others do not, especially when it is pushed to the limit. Just like those who criticize the pacing of this film: I see no difference compared to other Kubrick films. The Shining is slow in pace, as is Barry Lyndon, and so on.
Stanley Kubrick Eyes Wide Shut
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I know it may seem like a bit of a superficial point, but one of the characteristics I appreciate most in Kubrick is this artificial representation of reality, of images, this excess of representation that gradually became more and more sinister and unnatural.