I think films are like jelly beans; each one different and best enjoyed separately… I love the flavours of cinema.
I think films are like jelly beans; each one different and best enjoyed separately… I love the flavours of cinema.
Hi mr Wallace, I'm sorry, I'm kind of a volatile person, and I often forget to answer to kind messages (I'm working on that, but it doesn't seem to be convincive yet ;) So... I'm doing my best to see Battle in Heaven, even if I'm a little scared by the possible weirdness of the thing. Speaking of that, I've just seen A ma soeur of Breillat, and considering you liked it too, I was kind of interested in what you thought of it - I mean, in more explicit words than a four stars rating ;) I'm glad you tell yourself a french cinema admiror ! But I have to say - and it maybe is a shame - I have just a little and vague knowledge of our old classics (That's the limit for a french person, isn't it ?) Surrealism disconcerts me, I have the feeling I perceive it better when it comes to litterature. It still offers beautiful sequences in cinema, even if I don't enjoy them as much as I would. Oh, and should I really see Tropical Malady ? I'm not a non-adventurous person, but I don't know if I'm ready for Apichatpong Weerasethakul. Unless you tell me it's necessary to confront myself to him - and I guess this may be the only correct answer.
To people who have trouble with this film:
It’s simple and not overly complex, so there’s the good news.
It’s a film about individual perspective. Seeing what you want to see e.t.c. And… read review
over 1 year ago
over 1 year ago
almost 2 years ago