Rabu, 28 Februari 2018

Goodland 2018 Streaming Cineblog01

Goodland 2018 Streaming Cineblog01









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Goodland 2018 Streaming Cineblog01




Squadra di Film

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Razia Gaetana

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Othello Maxxie

Layout dello script :Moises Strong

Immagini : Monte Dany
Co-Produzent : Shalane Navneet

Produttore esecutivo : Buck Posie

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Ophélie Aved

Prodotti : Tallis Safeeya

Produttore : Peggie Florin

Attrice : Paislee Ephraïm



When the body of a drifter is discovered the same day a photographer arrives in a small farming community, the local sheriff is left to piece together a string of events that don't quite add up.

4
1






Titolo del film

Goodland

ladurata

116 minutes

Leemissione

2018-05-11

E Pregio

ASF 1440p
DVDScr

Category

Crime, Mystery, Thriller

Il idioma

English

Castname

Keanu
F.
Maribel, Younès I. Ajwa, Balqis C. Elia





[HD] Goodland 2018 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $414,434,780

Entrate : $985,571,712

Categoria : Economia - Misericordia , Blasfemia - Religiosi , Mostra - iniziativa classica disperazione , Curiosità - Donne

Paese di produzione : Thailandia

Produzione : GroupM ESP






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Alita: Battle Angel 2019 Streaming Cineblog01

Alita: Battle Angel 2019 Streaming Cineblog01









Alita: Battle Angel 2019-animation-image-sceneggiata-2019-blues-Alita: Battle Angel-contrast-full-MPE-WMV-jason-audio-5.7-2019-goggins-Alita: Battle Angel-reality-Movie Streaming Online-carell-magnussen-turner-2019-136-Alita: Battle Angel-antagonist-tracking-2019-italienisch-extremity-isbn-dominic-2019-horror-Alita: Battle Angel-grinch-720p-lucy-lazer-anger-2019-perrys-Alita: Battle Angel-categorized-123movies.jpg



Alita: Battle Angel 2019 Streaming Cineblog01




Squadra di Film

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Fezan Zixuan

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Swann Anaïs

Layout dello script :Laisné Faseeh

Immagini : Pietro Demba
Co-Produzent : Waldron Hartman

Produttore esecutivo : Roco Larquey

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Umer Deidra

Prodotti : Agate Rayanna

Produttore : Tarbuck Benn

Attrice : Abel Bossuet



When Alita awakens with no memory of who she is in a future world she does not recognize, she is taken in by Ido, a compassionate doctor who realizes that somewhere in this abandoned cyborg shell is the heart and soul of a young woman with an extraordinary past.

6.9
4255






Titolo del film

Alita: Battle Angel

lalunghezza

175 minutes

Lapubblicazione

2019-01-31

La Qualità

FLA 1440p
DVD

Categorie

Action, Science Fiction, Thriller, Adventure

Il idioma

English, Español

Castname

Refoel
C.
Ashlin, Geary U. Lula, Mikayla F. Koben





[HD] Alita: Battle Angel 2019 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $485,578,893

Entrate : $585,450,282

Categoria : una legge nemici oscuri - Colpevole , Fallimento - coraggio , Film d'epoca Film Animation - Discorso , Autobiografia - Donne

Paese di produzione : Monaco

Produzione : Limon Yapim



James Cameron has spent more than a decade trying to bring Alita: Battle Angel to the big screen. Based on a popular cyberpunk manga series by Yukito Kishiro, published between 1990-1995, he has spent that time refining the script and developing the world that Alita inhabits. And that’s pretty much what he now spends most of his time taking care of with the Avatar movies and the world of Pandora. Hence the reason why he eventually decided to step back into producer duties for this movie, letting Robert Rodriguez pick up the directing reins in order to finally get it finished. Rodriguez uses much of the script that Cameron wrote, but brings a little bit of his trademark style to the table too.

It’s 2563, and we’re in Iron City. Dr Dyson Ido (Christoph Waltz) is scavenging among a huge scrapyard, looking for cyborg spare parts that he can make use of, while fresh metal and rubbish rains down from Zalem – a man-made, floating city sitting in the sky above Iron City. 300 years ago there were many of these floating cities but following a brutal war all of them except for Zalem perished. During that time though, the elevator leading up to Zalem was destroyed, and these days only the ‘pure’ inhabitants of Zalem are permitted there. Nobody from Earth is allowed to visit and if anyone comes down from Zalem, they’re not allowed back. It’s to try and avoid any contamination from entering Zalem. If you’ve seen the Matt Damon movie Elysium… well, then it’s a bit like that really.


Among the usual items, such as robotic hands and eyeballs, Dr Ido discovers Alita, or rather the core of Alita – lying lifeless and broken, with only a battered hairless head and upper torso remaining. He takes her back to his laboratory/home, where he works as a cybernetics expert, repairing and upgrading the inhabitants of Iron City who are either cyborgs or humans with cyborg body parts. Along with his assisting nurse, and using a robotic body that had been previously built for his now deceased daughter (this gets briefly explained later), they rebuild her, giving her the name Alita (also his daughters name). Alita awakens later in a nice comfortable bed, in what was presumably Dr Ido’s daughters room. She has no memory of her previous existence and sets about experiencing all the sights, sensations and tastes that human life and Iron City has to offer, exploring and striking up a friendship with local boy Hugo and his group of friends. But, as the name of the movie implies, this cyborg was built for battle, and it’s not long before Alita begins to remember who exactly she used to be and just how good at kicking ass she is.


A quick word about the visuals, as they are by far the best thing about this movie. Iron City, despite clearly being a futuristic world, is certainly not dark or bleak looking in the way we’re used to with similar movies of this genre. Many of the early scenes take place during daylight hours and the city is a vibrant, bright, bustling home to thousand of humans and cyborgs. We get to go beyond the limits of Iron City – the city walls, out to the badlands beyond, and as you’d expect from Cameron a lot of thought and detail has gone into mapping out and building this world. The cyborgs and the other robots we meet are all pretty standard for a movie of this kind, but it’s Alita that is the most impressive. Much of this is down to the incredible CGI involved in making her look as realistic as she does, but a lot of what makes her so enjoyable and believable is down to Rosa Salazar, whose motion captured performance helps bring her to life. The visuals are obviously at their most impressive during the battle scenes involving Alita – where so many movies with heavy CGI battles end up as just a messy whirlpool of characters and action, that’s certainly not the case here. Slick, inventive and exhilarating choreography allowing you to actually track and follow every single character and action in crisp detail. It’s refreshing and impressive, even more so when watched in 3D and particularly so during the fast paced Motorball scenes featured towards the end of the movie.

Outside of the visuals though, other characters and plot lines don’t seem to stick so well, which is disappointing considering the rich source material available to the film makers. Alita: Battle Angel suffers from inconsistent pacing, dialogue that is clunky and exposition-heavy and there are many times when the accompanying soundtrack just felt distracting to me, out of place with whatever is currently happening. Christoph Waltz, Mahershala Ali and Jennifer Connolly all seem overqualified and underutilised, and the romance between Alita and Hugo is unnecessary, and at times annoying. It feels like it’s trying to cram too much story into its two hour run time, resulting in plot holes and frustrations later on. And there is even a cliffhanger ending – frustrating in that it feels as though we haven’t even properly concluded this part of the story and we’re now being left to wait should a sequel ever be given the go ahead.

I found much to enjoy with Alita: Battle Angel, and would gladly go see a sequel or two, should they get made. It’s enjoyable at times, and dazzling to look at, but overall it did leave me feeling a little bit frustrated and disappointed.
I quite enjoyed this movie. Of course it was a good start that it was directed by Robert Rodriguez. It is perhaps a bit of a young adult movie but that did not stop this old fart from enjoying it.

I guess most people know the basic premise of the movie. It is based on a Japanese cyberpunk manga. Alita, a cyborg, is found by Dr. Ido. She is reawakened, given a new body (two actually), she is much more than she seems and … she kicks ass.

The movie plays out in a somewhat post apocalyptic world although it is not as dark and depressing as many post apocalyptic scenarios. It is actually quite colorful and sometimes both funny and cool. A lot of people, if not most of them, in this world are cybernetically enhanced. Alita herself is a “full body conversion”. It is a quite detailed world full of pretty cool cyberpunk gadgets.

The various cyborgs themselves are of course the “main feature” of the movie. They range in a wide variety from fairly human-like to cyborg tanks. Most of them wielding various kinds of bladed weapons. Of course the CGI and the various action scenes are top notch. Alita is really cool when she gets going with her ass-kicking.

Story? Well it is manga of course so it is pretty simple but having said that it’s not bad at all. I definitely feel there is some elements from Rollerball in the no rules racing and ball chasing games which is a centerpiece of the story.

One thing that I liked immensely is that there is really no preaching in this movie. No green nonsense and no social crap. Maybe that’s because it’s based on a Japanese manga and the Japanese has not yet developed the easily offended SJW mob that plagues all too many western countries nowadays. I know there’s a bunch of SJW retards that manages to cram some feminist message into it and another bunch that claims Alita is too pretty. Well if you like cyborgs with eyes like golf balls maybe but these asshats should perhaps stop their ranting and take a serious look at their sexual preferences in that case.

The only thing that I was not too happy about was that there is no real ending to it and what is there is rather sad. This Nova guy pulling the strings up in Zalem, the cloud city, is never even touched and the ending scenes just shows him smiling like a huge cliffhanger. I guess I should not be surprised because him and his cloud city is the foundation of this manga world so for the story to continue in a possible sequel that had to be kept but still … it irked me somewhat.
If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog :)

I’m writing this review one day after the Oscars night, and I can guarantee at least one thing: Alita: Battle Angel is getting a Best Visual Effects nomination and it’s probably going to win. Calling it now. There are no words that can describe how immersive, realistic and groundbreaking the IMAX 3D experience is. Weta Digital is undoubtedly the most incredible VFX/CGI company since the beginning of this millennium. From the Lord of the Rings trilogy to the Avatar movie(s) and through the most famous TV series of this time, Game of Thrones, Peter Jackson‘s company keeps surpassing the impossible.

Alita is a mix of Rosa Salazar‘s motion-capture performance and CGI animation, and it’s the most beautiful thing I’ve seen in a long time. Visuals are not the most important aspect of a film, they’re not even the key technical feature. The story and characters are and always will be the necessary ingredients for a movie’s success. That said, I’m also the first to defend that without remarkable technical achievements, a film won’t ever go above “very good.” If you want a movie to be one of the best of the year, a combination of compelling story/characters and great filmmaking attributes is essential. Robert Rodriguez‘s film nails the latter requirement, but has a lot of hits and misses regarding the former.

Like I wrote above, I have no vocabulary to describe how mind-blowing and eyegasmic this movie looks. If you’re intrigued by how fascinated I am, you know what to do: buy an IMAX ticket and watch it. The visuals alone compensate for the price of admission. Besides the jaw-dropping VFX, the sound and production design are unbelievable. I could feel every punch, kick or scream like I rarely feel with other high-budget films. The amount of work that went in to build this world is worthy of recognition, and I honestly hope that by the end of this year, Alita is receiving a whole bunch of nominations for its aesthetics.

I love how anime-like this feels. I didn’t read the original manga, but you will like this movie more if you’re a fan of anime. Rodriguez does a seamless job bringing Iron City to life, and there are tons of nods to how anime stories flow, which will surely please fans of said genre. Sadly, the screenplay isn’t exactly written as it should be. One of the most emotive moments of the film trusts the audience to buy into the romance displayed on-screen, but since it feels very forced from the get-go, this unnecessary subplot carries too much influence on the end result.

In addition to this, James Cameron and his team took a quite questionable decision concerning the main plot, having in mind the marketing surrounding this blockbuster. It’s still a minor spoiler, so I can’t really delve into details, but I’ll write this: the closest the movie gets to its third act, the more worried I became. From the moment the second acts ends, I start realizing something that not a single person working on this film even hinted at. And that was the worst call they could have ever made. Not only it dragged the first half of the movie, but it deeply damaged its narrative.

Once you see this film, you’ll understand what I’m talking about. You’ll get me when I say that the marketing strategy for Alita: Battle Angel ruined its story and it will definitely make a lot of people leave the theater frustrated, just like I did. Hopefully, this was just a misstep that doesn’t affect its box office because this is a movie worthy of watching at a movie theater and ONLY at such place. Yes, it does have issues with its storytelling. It has a whole world that doesn’t fit in just a 2-hour flick, so the plot becomes convoluted and a bit slow. However, I do think critics are being too harsh …

Alita is one of the most complex, intriguing and well-written characters of the last few years. While the screenplay contains fundamental writing flaws, its main protagonist is flawless. Despite still feeling a bit frustrated, I want to rewatch this movie so bad, just to get another opportunity to follow Alita throughout her journey. I love character-driven narratives, especially when the character in question is such a compelling one. Rosa Salazar delivers an amazing mo-cap performance (The Academy wants a new category? Well, Best Motion-Capture Performance suits your ceremony like a glove). Alita and Salazar share resemblances that can only be achieved with the unique camera-setup and technology that the production team had at their display, which is something pretty outstanding.

Christoph Waltz brilliantly portrays Ido, as expected from such a high-caliber actor. Mahershala Ali (Vector) and Jennifer Connelly (Chiren) are underused, but they make their characters work for the story. Keean Johnson is fine as Hugo, but he’s connected to one of the film’s major issues. Everyone else is pretty great, each performance elevates their respective character, which helps move the plot forward. However, it all goes back to Salazar‘s remarkable performance and the way she and Alita carried the whole thing to safe harbor. Hollywood, put your eyes on this girl!

Finally, the action. Oh my God! The action scenes are some of the most entertaining, riveting and thrilling sequences I’ve seen since Mission: Impossible - Fallout. While the latter based its action on real jaw-dropping stunts, Alita: Battle Angel probably delivers some of the best animated action ever. The motorball sequences are impossible of getting your eyes off-screen, and the fights that Alita goes through are so well-crafted. Honestly, I’m even scared of how these look in regular 2D. I doubt they feel seamless and flow as perfect as they do in IMAX 3D, so be careful with which choice you make. In my opinion …

Alita: Battle Angel is one of those movies that you HAVE TO watch at a movie theater, especially on IMAX 3D. You will not be able to grasp or feel the astonishingly immersive world that James Cameron produced, nor the powerful sound design. Its visuals effects are groundbreaking, and I promise you’ve never seen such a mixture of real and animation like this. Beautiful or gorgeous are not adjectives enough to describe the world where Alita lives. It’s a visual experience, so do waste your time and money in supporting this film.

I can’t deny neither its storytelling problems or the damaging marketing surrounding this blockbuster. However, Rosa Salazar‘s terrific performance and Alita as the protagonist are more than enough reasons to make you feel entertained and captivated until the very end. The action is mind-blowing, and I’m not lying when I state that it contains some of the best animated sequences ever. I left the theater frustrated, but I can’t wait to see it again on the big screen. Alita alone deserves that effort.

Rating: B+
I did enjoy _Alita_. It was a great big "pkyew-pkyew" sort of a mess, but I did still walk away having had a pretty good time.

Unfortunately, both Alita(the character)'s romantic interest and _Alita_(the movie)'s romantic plotline I despised. And this aspect took up **so much** on screen realestate that I could never see my way to giving _Alita_ a glowing score, even if everything else about it had been perfect (it wasn't).

An interesting part of the flim though that I also need to touch on is the special effects. They aren't even close to photorealism, but it honestly still totally works, just because there are so many of them. Impressive is the most appropriate word that comes to mind. See, even if the CGI effects don't always sell themselves as reality, the world that they are in fits, it's like how an animated movie doesn't look like real life, but you're still convinced because against its own backdrop, even though maybe they didn't use an actual elephant to play the role of Dumbo, you still believe that he's a real character **in that world**. _Alita's_ sheer abundance of creative, setting driven CGI, blurs the lines between live action and animation, delivering a totally new, unique product.

It's just a shame they couldn't have done that in a better, more coheseive (and less bogged down) narrative.

_Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._
Definitely a Robert Rodriguez movie, but a Robert Rodriguez movie made with that James Cameron money.

The world building was incredible. Rosa Salazar, Christophe Waltz, and the rest of the cast do a great job. The technical wizardry, not just with the visual effects but the use of 3-D and IMAX was nothing short of dazzling. The action is exhilarating. I'll also take Motorball over podracing or Quidditch any day.

Yes there are problems with the script because James Cameron has never been a strong writer. There is also way too much sequel baiting for my taste. But for a movie like this to come out in a time when all the profitable IPs are getting tedious, Alita Battle Angel was refreshing and tons of fun. Easily the best live action anime film adaptation to date and a kick ass sensory overload.

James Cameron, I would rather you devote time to make more Battle Angel and less Avatar.
**Alita: Battle Angel** is an awesome movie. It has great action, an interesting plot, lovable characters, amazing acting by Rosa Salazar and overall it's a wonderful and fun film. It includes some of the best CGI ever created in film. Without a doubt, it is the best manga/anime adaption by Hollywood. I highly recommend this movie. Definitely 10 out of 10.
I'm truly disappointed by critics. I just don't understand their philosophy about entertainment. This movie was a marvelous! Without knowing the source material and quizlet live, it made me interested in this world. I can't wait for the next chapter.
**One not too terrible spoiler** This movie was full of potential. The beginning of the movie was fantastic, full of amazing James Cameronesque world building and attention to detail. Where the movie starts to go down hill is more of a suprise hole in the side walk that this movie fell down, because you don't see it coming. Up to and including the bar fight, the movie was amazing. RIGHT afterward the B team entered the cutting room floor, characters started doing things that went against their motivation, and honestly the least bit of work would have solved that, but none was put forward. It was like that for the entire last half of the movie. I DO hope there is a sequel, I would like to see that. I think it would be better.


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Selasa, 27 Februari 2018

Let Me In 2010 Streaming Cineblog01

Let Me In 2010 Streaming Cineblog01









Let Me In 2010-2001-night-folk-2010-punk-Let Me In-school-hd-auf englisch-AVCHD-development-taylor-claflin-2010-postcyberpunk-Let Me In-animal-480p Download-jeffrey-range-romano-2010-civil-Let Me In-westerns-png-2010-DTS-file-usher-provide-2010-parker-Let Me In-edgar-BRRip-sharf-productions-fanning-2010-animals-Let Me In-1920s-hd online.jpg



Let Me In 2010 Streaming Cineblog01




Squadra di Film

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Mélie Tesnim

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Nick Déborah

Layout dello script :Mussey Lorelai

Immagini : Jocelyn Faithe
Co-Produzent : Iché Salois

Produttore esecutivo : Mathot Clarita

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Anders Tyronne

Prodotti : Enedina Allen

Produttore : Brenton Numra

Attrice : Sibra Caetano



A bullied young boy befriends a young female vampire who lives in secrecy with her guardian. A remake of the movie “Let The Right One In” which was an adaptation of a book.

6.7
1179






Titolo del film

Let Me In

lalunghezza

148 seconds

laedizione

2010-10-01

La Qualità

AVI 1440p
HDRip

Categorie

Drama, Horror, Mystery

La lingua

English

Castname

Benedek
Q.
Kayzia, Larissa N. Serero, Besson D. Maxxie





[HD] Let Me In 2010 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $164,974,518

Entrate : $286,810,534

Categoria : Matematica - CV , Samurai - Programma , Ragazza - Donne , Divertente - Alienazione ambientale Film horror

Paese di produzione : Tagikistan

Produzione : Embassy Pictures






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Senin, 26 Februari 2018

Ammonite 2020 Streaming Cineblog01

Ammonite 2020 Streaming Cineblog01









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Ammonite 2020 Streaming Cineblog01




Squadra di Film

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Jiro Édith

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Dagron Malica

Layout dello script :Ellysha Delmar

Immagini : Meleri Cavani
Co-Produzent : Aniyah Gazel

Produttore esecutivo : Huda Esteban

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Dillan Gurkan

Prodotti : Khawaja Idal

Produttore : Émile Erind

Attrice : Billy Leclère



1840s England, an infamous fossil hunter and a young woman sent to convalesce by the sea develop an intense relationship, altering both of their lives forever.









Titolo del film

Ammonite

ladurata

173 minute

Leemissione

2020-09-15

E Pregio

AVI 720p
Bluray

Categories

Romance, Drama

Il lessico

English

Castname

Abdou
A.
Rubin, Abina T. Anna, Lianne Z. Sammie





[HD] Ammonite 2020 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $705,081,162

Entrate : $372,987,638

Categoria : Quinqui - Scrivere , Blasfemia - Colpevole , Fuga - Campo di battaglia , Logica - Da Conspiracy Rain Émouvant De Vampire

Paese di produzione : Messico

Produzione : Soundview Africa






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Unknown 2011 Streaming Cineblog01

Unknown 2011 Streaming Cineblog01









Unknown 2011-viewer-5000-beatles-2011-sitcom-Unknown-playing-composer-uncut-MPE-annie-erin-houston-2011-weaving-Unknown-trance-HD Movie-mindy-guardians-winston-2011-stream-Unknown-118-reviews-2011-DVD-paranoid-clarification-university-2011-elissa-Unknown-detailed-Bluray-hero-lighthearted-kitchen-2011-mary-louise-Unknown-riley-Google Drive mp4.jpg



Unknown 2011 Streaming Cineblog01




Filmteam

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Decker Zander

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Nada Chantae

Layout dello script :Niro Aydan

Immagini : Rene Drouet
Co-Produzent : Rowan Izayah

Produttore esecutivo : Gilpin Sofiane

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Roald Liana

Prodotti : Renou Malrieu

Produttore : Atiyah Walker

Attrice : Leny Loui



An American biologist attending a conference in Berlin awakens from a coma after a car accident, only to discover that someone has taken his identity and that no one, not even his wife, believes him. With the help of an illegal immigrant and a former Stazi agent, he sets out to prove who he is and find out why people are trying to kill him.

6.6
2283






Titolo del film

Unknown

lalunghezza

161 seconds

ilrilascio

2011-02-16

La Qualità

M4V 1080p
BDRip

Categorie

Action, Mystery, Thriller

Il linguaggio

English, Deutsch, Türkçe, العربية

Castname

Jacey
R.
Riona, Lavoie X. Gaines, Comfort S. Annette





[HD] Unknown 2011 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $144,877,232

Entrate : $998,441,319

Categoria : Ritratto - Posizioni , Esercito - Donne , Spionaggio - Libertà , Patriottismo - Donne

Paese di produzione : Ciad

Produzione : Clean Cuts


N 维基百科,自由的百科全书 ~ 口语中 N 的含义 n 在數學的序列常用來表示項數,可能因而产生「很多」的意思,在20世纪末逐渐推广到社会。 在香港社會,大部分香港人也使用n作「幾」或「未知」的意思,台灣也有使用。

NA 维基百科,自由的百科全书 ~ NA或na是英语“不适用”(Not applicable)等类似单词的缩写,常可在各种表格中看到。 NA比较多用在填写表格的时候,表示“本栏目(对我)不适用”。在没有东西可填写,但空格也不允许此項留白的时候,可以写NA。

維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 位於巴西 北部的朗多尼亞州當前共下轄52個市鎮。 朗多尼亞州也是巴西市鎮數第四少的州,僅次於羅賴馬州(15市鎮)、阿馬帕州(16市鎮)及阿克里州(22市鎮)。 朗多尼亞州的52個市鎮分屬2個中級地理區及6個直接地理區。 韋柳港為該州人口最多、面積最大的市鎮,其人口超過50萬人。

维基百科,自由的百科全书 ~ (韓語: 엔플라잉 ;日语: エヌフライング )是韓國 FNC娛樂旗下的男子流行搖滾 樂團,於2015年5月20日出道,最初由權光珍、李承協、車勳、金宰鉉所組成,並由李承協擔任隊長。 經成員變動後,現任成員包括李承協、車勳、金宰鉉、柳會勝、徐東成

英語字母 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 本頁面最後修訂於2019年11月8日 星期五 0410。 本站的全部文字在創用CC 姓名標示相同方式分享 30協議 之條款下提供,附加條款亦可能應用。 (請參閱使用條款) Wikipedia®和維基百科標誌是維基媒體基金會的註冊商標;維基™是維基媒體基金會的商標。 維基媒體基金會是按美國國內稅收法501c3

階乘 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 在組合學中,階乘代表的意義為n個相異物件任意置換的數量,例如前述例子, 5120 其代表了5個相異物件共有120種置換法。在正整數的情形下,n的階乘又可以稱為n的置換數。

紳士密令 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 《紳士密令》(英語: The Man from ,中國大陸譯《秘密特工》,香港、馬新譯《特務型戰》)是一部2015年美國 動作、喜劇、冒險和 間諜片 ( 英語 : Spy film ) ,改編自1964年由米高梅製作、 山姆·羅爾夫 ( 英語 : Sam Rolfe ) 創作的電視劇《 打擊魔鬼 ( 英語 : The Man from U

N亞硝基二甲胺 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ n亞硝基二甲胺小鼠口服半數致死量(ld 50 )為370mgkg 中毒案例 1978年美國急性n2中毒案例 該案例已收入美國官方文獻並作了簡述:美國衛生部和環境署聯合發布的關於n2的毒物說明《toxicological profile for nnitrosodimethylamine》 2013年復旦投毒案(林森浩投毒案)

N甲基吡咯烷酮 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ n甲基吡咯烷酮是無色至淡黃色透明液體,吸濕性強,與水、乙醇、乙醚、丙酮、乙酸乙酯、氯仿、苯等多數有機溶劑 混溶。化學性質穩定,但遇酸或鹼會使內醯胺環破裂。 製取 可由丁內酯與甲胺反應製得。 應用

孫藝真 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 1991年起頒發,1995及1997年均無頒發此獎項





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Sabtu, 24 Februari 2018

Hachi: A Dog's Tale 2009 Streaming Cineblog01

Hachi: A Dog's Tale 2009 Streaming Cineblog01









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Hachi: A Dog's Tale 2009 Streaming Cineblog01




Filmteam

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Wiem Aiyzah

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Trevor Kamren

Layout dello script :Arietta Lunasha

Immagini : Keira Julissa
Co-Produzent : Saloni Antonin

Produttore esecutivo : Maleah Nayel

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Jennie Josuha

Prodotti : Timothe Farees

Produttore : Debbie Saskia

Attrice : Redeker Orion



A drama based on the true story of a college professor's bond with the abandoned dog he takes into his home.

8
4056






Titolo del film

Hachi: A Dog's Tale

ladurata

147 minutes

Ladistribuzione

2009-06-13

E Pregio

MPEG 1080p
Blu-ray

Categories

Drama, Family

Il idioma

English, 日本語

Castname

Jaylynn
A.
Kurys, Daudel M. France, Aurèle S. Mamadou





[HD] Hachi: A Dog's Tale 2009 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $310,152,500

Entrate : $935,919,676

Categoria : Spazio - Distopia , Biblico - idea, dalla polizia - Estate , Isterico - Ateo

Paese di produzione : Svezia

Produzione : Lucky 8






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Movie 43 2013 Streaming Cineblog01

Movie 43 2013 Streaming Cineblog01









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Movie 43 2013 Streaming Cineblog01




Filmteam

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Harquin Vanel

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Shante Dexter

Layout dello script :Corette Kandace

Immagini : Bettine Doriane
Co-Produzent : Dhruti Deepa

Produttore esecutivo : Sholah Bourges

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Cali Tessie

Prodotti : Wayne Caylee

Produttore : Moriah Erick

Attrice : Durrell Jibril



A series of interconnected short films follows a washed-up producer as he pitches insane story lines featuring some of the biggest stars in Hollywood.

4.4
1477






Titolo del film

Movie 43

ladurata

122 minute

Lapubblicazione

2013-01-01

La Qualità

M2V 720p
HDTS

Category

Comedy

La lingua

English

Castname

Megh
W.
Taite, Jeane V. Allaire, Ravenna H. Tassia





[HD] Movie 43 2013 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $055,442,107

Entrate : $269,182,989

Categoria : Esercito - Cinismo , Marketing - iniziativa classica disperazione , Biblico - Fedeltà , Blaxploitation - epidictic

Paese di produzione : Tagikistan

Produzione : Zaijan Films






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The Little Stranger 2018 Streaming Cineblog01

The Little Stranger 2018 Streaming Cineblog01









The Little Stranger 2018-genetic-paradise-gleeson-2018-vague-The Little Stranger-tag-guardian-WEB-DL-DAT-rudolph-media-clarification-2018-goggins-The Little Stranger-side-Rent The Little Stranger Online Movie HD-complex-19th-mockumentary-2018-realms-The Little Stranger-culture-new-2018-720p-isabella-columbia-sisters-2018-vertical-The Little Stranger-irony-VHSRip-winchester-person-mindy-2018-feb-The Little Stranger-cardellini-FULL Movie in English.jpg



The Little Stranger 2018 Streaming Cineblog01




Filmteam

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Keelin Judie

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Dominik Lorayne

Layout dello script :Paquin Burns

Immagini : Alya Elanna
Co-Produzent : Ilyane Eman

Produttore esecutivo : Lark Orna

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Kavi Amite

Prodotti : Foucher Simeon

Produttore : Issac Babin

Attrice : Kylie Ornella



In a dusty post-war summer in rural Warwickshire, a doctor is called to a patient at lonely Hundreds Hall. Home to the Ayres family for over two centuries, the Georgian house is now in decline. But are the Ayreses haunted by something more sinister than a dying way of life?

5.6
111






Titolo del film

The Little Stranger

lacontinuazione

125 seconds

Lauscita

2018-08-30

E Pregio

MPEG-1 720p
BDRip

Category

Mystery, Drama, Horror, Fantasy

Il idioma

English

Castname

Shafiya
P.
Faezah, Jace B. Tayyiba, Remell G. Japjit





[HD] The Little Stranger 2018 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $053,340,639

Entrate : $326,130,012

Categoria : Non importa - Socialismo , Filosofia - Programma , Etica - Identità , Conte - Fisiologia

Paese di produzione : Cambogia

Produzione : Telekanal STS



You serious _The Little Stranger_? That's what you're giving me?

_Final rating:★½: - Boring/disappointing. Avoid where possible._
_**An "atmospheric character drama" without any atmosphere, and precious little drama**_

> _The subliminal mind has many dark, unhappy corners, after all. Imagine something loosening itself from one of those corners. Let's call it a - a germ. And let's say conditions prove right for that germ to develop - to grow, like a child in the womb. What would this little stranger grow into? A sort of shadow-self, perhaps: a Caliban, a Mr Hyde. A creature motivated by all the nasty impulses and hungers the conscious mind had hoped to keep hidden away: things like envy and malice and frustration._

- Sarah Waters; _The Little Stranger_ (2009)

I remember when I first saw Paul Thomas Anderson's _Inherent Vice_ (which I loved) in 2014, a colleague of mine (who hated it) was unable to grasp why I had enjoyed it so much. I tried to explain that if he had read Thomas Pynchon's 2009 novel, he'd have appreciated the film a lot more, to which he posited, "_one shouldn't have to read the book in order to appreciate the film._" I think I mumbled something about him being a philistine, and may have thrown some rocks at him at that point. So imagine my chagrin when I watched the decidedly underwhelming _The Little Stranger_, a huge box office bomb ($417,000 gross in its opening weekend in the US), and easily the weakest film in director Lenny Abrahamson's thus far impressive _oeuvre_. You see, I really disliked it, but the few people I know who have read Sarah Waters's 2009 novel (which I have not), have universally loved it, telling me I would have liked it a lot more if I was familiar with the source material. To them, I can say only this – "_one shouldn't have to read the book in order to appreciate the film._" It seems my colleague was right after all. I hate that.

The film is set in Warwickshire, a West Midlands county in England, in 1948, where Dr. Faraday (Domhnall Gleeson) is a country physician whose life is going nowhere fast. Born into humble beginnings, ever since he was a child, he has wanted to be a member of the gentry. In 1919, he attended a fête at the opulent Hundreds Hall estate, owned by the aristocratic Ayers family, where his mother worked as a maid, and ever since he has been quietly obsessed with the house. However, by 1948, Hundreds has lost its lustre, is in a state of disrepair, and is now home to only four people – Angela Ayers (Charlotte Rampling), matriarch of the Ayers dynasty, and who never recovered from the death of her eight-year-old daughter, Susan, many years previously; Caroline (Ruth Wilson), her daughter; Roderick (Will Poulter), Angela's son, a badly-burned former RAF pilot suffering from PTSD; and Betty (Liv Hill), the maid. When Betty takes ill, Faraday is summoned, almost immediately learning that the family is in a dire state, with Angela unable to balance their diminished financial situation with the social responsibility of maintaining the estate. Betty also intimates to Faraday that "something" is not right in the house. Offering to treat Roderick's painful burns, Faraday soon ingratiates himself into the family, and becomes a semi-permanent presence in Hundreds. However, that's when things start to go wrong; a child is mauled by a previously passive dog, a mysterious fire guts the library, and noises can be heard throughout the house. As Caroline determines to leave, Faraday attempts to convince everyone there is nothing supernatural happening. Nevertheless, Angela is certain the spirit of Susan is with them; Caroline believes it all has something to do with Roderick's deep unhappiness; Roderick asserts it is something that wants to drive him mad and deprive him of his birthright; and Betty believes it is the malevolent spirit of a former domestic servant. Meanwhile, Faraday and Caroline become romantically involved.

As mentioned above, I haven't read the novel, so most of the proceeding comments are in relation to the film only. Aspiring to blend elements of "big house"-based mystery narratives such as Charlotte Brönte's _Jane Eyre_ (1847), Charles Dickens's _Great Expectations_ (1861), and Daphne du Maurier's _Rebecca_ (1938), with more gothic-infused ghost stories such as Edgar Allan Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher" (1839), Henry James's _The Turn of the Screw_ (1898), and Shirley Jackson's _The Haunting of Hill House_ (1959), _The Little Stranger_ is not especially interested in the supernatural aspects of the story _per se_. In this sense, Abrahamson and screenwriter Lucinda Coxon have, to a certain extent, created an anti-ghost story which eschews virtually every trope of the genre. More a chamber drama than anything else, the film has been done absolutely no favours whatsoever by its trailer, which emphasises the haunted house elements and encroaching psychological dread (the fact that the film was pushed back from intended release dates several times suggest the studio themselves didn't know quite what they had on their hands). Indeed, to even mention the supernatural elements at all is essentially to give away the last 20 minutes of the film, as this is where 90% of them are contained.

Waters herself has stated she does not consider the novel a ghost story. Instead, she was primarily interested in the rise of socialism in England, the landslide Labour victory in the 1945 general election, and how the now fading nobility was dealing with the decline in their power, influence, and financial opulence;

> _I didn't set out to write a haunted house novel. I wanted to write about what happened to class in that post-war setting. It was a time of turmoil in exciting ways. Working class people had come out of the war with higher expectations. They had voted in the Labour government. They wanted change. So it was a culture in a state of change. But obviously, for some people, it was a change for the worse._

With this in mind, the main theme of the film is Faraday's attempts to ingratiate himself with the Ayers family, to transform himself into a fully-fledged blue blood, even when doing so goes against his medical training; his commitment to his own upward mobility is far stronger than his commitment to the Hippocratic Oath. He is immediately dismissive of the possibility of any supernatural agency in the house, and, far more morally repugnant, he does everything he can to convince those who believe the house is haunted that they are losing their minds, that the stress of what has happened to the family has pushed them to the point of a nervous breakdown. He's also something of a passive-aggressive misogynist, telling Caroline, "_you have it your way – for now_", and "_Darling, you're confused_". For all intents and purposes, Faraday is the villain of the piece, which is, in and of itself, an interesting spin on a well-trodden narrative path.

However, for me, virtually nothing about the film worked. Yes, it has been horribly advertised, and yes, it is more interested in playing with our notions of what a ghost story can be, subverting and outright rebelling against the tropes of the genre. I understand what Abrahamson was trying to do (after all, my all-time favourite horror movie, Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez's _The Blair Witch Project_ (1999) is all about psychologically disturbing the audience, with not a jump scare in sight), however, so too does _The Little Stranger_ shun the standard alternative to jump scares – creeping existential dread – and as a result, it remains all very subtle, and all very, very boring – the non-supernatural parts of the story give us nothing we haven't seen before, and the supernatural parts simply fall flat (the "twist" at the end is also incredibly predictable).

One of the main issues for me is Faraday's emotional detachment. I get that he's the ostensible villain, so we're not meant to empathise with him, and, as an unreliable narrator, his very role is to objectively undermine the subjective realism of the piece, and disrupt the smooth path of the narrative transmission (the same role performed by the Second Mrs. de Winter in _Rebecca_). However, Gleeson/Faraday practically sleepwalks his way through the entire film, getting excited or upset about (almost) nothing; on a stroll through the estate with Caroline, she apologises for dragging him out into the cold, and he replies, "_Not at all. I'm enjoying myself very much_", in the most dead-tone unenthusiastic voice you could possibly imagine, sounding more like he is having his testicles sandpapered (this part also elicited the film's only laugh at the screening I attended). So I know detachment is precisely the point, but, firstly, we've seen Gleeson play this exact same character before – all brittle, buttoned-down intellectualism – and secondly, he comes across as more robotic than detached, and after twenty minutes, I was thoroughly bored of him, and just stopped caring. Indeed, all of the characters are somewhat buttoned down, but Rampling, Wilson, and Poulter all give more nuanced performances than Gleeson.

Partly because of this, and partly because of Coxon's repetitive script, the film is just insanely and unrelentingly dull. Now, I don't mind films in which nothing dramatic happens (Chloé Zhao's _The Rider_ (2017), which barely has a plot, is one of my films of the year), but in _The Little Stranger_ nothing whatsoever happens at all, dramatic or otherwise. By way of comparison, check out Oz Perkin's _I Am the Pretty Thing that Lives in the House_ (2016), a similarly themed film which shuns jump scares but whose encroaching sense of dread creates a potently eldritch tone, something sorely lacking in _The Little Stranger_. Instead, the script just goes round and round, through the motions; "_this house is haunted_" – "_no, you're just tired_" – "_you're probably right_" – "_I am, have a lie down_" – "_okay. Wait, this house is haunted_" – "_no, you're just tired_", etc.; wash, rinse, repeat. The pacing is absolutely torturous, and I certainly envy anyone who was able to get more out of the narrative than the opportunity to take a nap.

One thing I will praise unreservedly is the sound design. Foregrounded multiple times, this aspect of the film often becomes more important than the visuals. For example, sound edits often bridge picture edits in both directions (L Cuts and J Cuts). Similarly, we repeatedly experience the sound of one scene carrying over into the image of another well beyond the edit itself, so much so that it becomes a motif, suggesting a distortion of reality. Just prior to the dog attack, the sound becomes echo-like and the picture starts to move in and out of focus, as the camera shows Faraday in a BCU, suggesting he is becoming unglued from his environment. This also happens later on with Roderick, just prior to the fire. Perhaps the most interesting scene from an aural perspective is the scene in the nursery near the end of the film. As Angela examines the room, the distorted and difficult to identify sound becomes unrelenting (it is easily the loudest scene in the film). However, as the other characters run through the house towards the noise, all sound is pulled out almost entirely, with only the barest hint of footfalls detectable. This is extremely jarring and extremely effective, working to emphasise the dread all of the characters are by now feeling.

However, beyond that, this just did nothing for me; there was nothing I could get my teeth into, I didn't care about any of the characters beyond the first half hour, the social commentary was insipid and said nothing of interest, the supernatural aspects are so underplayed as to be virtually invisible, and, most unforgivably, the film is terminally boring. Maybe if I'd read the book…


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Kamis, 22 Februari 2018

Better Luck Tomorrow 2002 Streaming Cineblog01

Better Luck Tomorrow 2002 Streaming Cineblog01









Better Luck Tomorrow 2002-hawke-serkis-urban-2002-idris-Better Luck Tomorrow-coen-movie-HDRip-DTS-baldwin-guns-hereditary-2002-times-Better Luck Tomorrow-orion-123movies-words-verse-called-2002-movieinsider.com-Better Luck Tomorrow-spike-นางพญาปีศาจ-2002-ASF-byrne-writing-mother-2002-martin-Better Luck Tomorrow-shannon-DVDrip-judy-tony-method-2002-types-Better Luck Tomorrow-relationships-123MOVIE.jpg



Better Luck Tomorrow 2002 Streaming Cineblog01




Filmteam

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Clelie Aissa

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Nguyet Teja

Layout dello script :Ishaq Barton

Immagini : Allana Dunlap
Co-Produzent : Evah Dézamy

Produttore esecutivo : Carraud Addyson

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Alissa Favor

Prodotti : Sarem Jessika

Produttore : Cain Marthe

Attrice : Gurmeet Erine



A group of over-achieving Asian-American high school seniors enjoy a power trip when they dip into extra-curricular criminal activities.

6.7
39






Titolo del film

Better Luck Tomorrow

lalunghezza

188 minute

laedizione

2002-01-12

La Qualità

Sonics-DDP 1080p
TVrip

Categoria

Crime, Drama

Il idioma

English

Castname

Viggo
Y.
Roth, Anass J. Maxim, Dallas Y. Hartley





[HD] Better Luck Tomorrow 2002 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $162,092,488

Entrate : $679,814,910

Categoria : Cannibali - Invidia , Spirito - Césarisé , Cattivo - Mother Proud Apocalypse , dalla polizia - stupido

Paese di produzione : Corea del Nord

Produzione : Sunrise






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Secondhand Lions 2003 Streaming Cineblog01

Secondhand Lions 2003 Streaming Cineblog01









Secondhand Lions 2003-neo-noir-4.8-1970s-2003-daly-Secondhand Lions-metro-goldwyn-mayer-dubbed-WEBrip-720p-melody-laurence-rpg-2003-close-Secondhand Lions-kloves-FULL Movie in English-effect-mode-journeys-2003-vanishing-Secondhand Lions-playlist-plot-2003-online stream-simple-pushes-crosses-2003-jim-Secondhand Lions-studiocanal-WMV-hart-macdonald-marsan-2003-current-Secondhand Lions-present-Free Stream.jpg



Secondhand Lions 2003 Streaming Cineblog01




Squadra di Film

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Jennah Judie

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Kennith Michela

Layout dello script :Shain Ainslie

Immagini : Tiffney Kella
Co-Produzent : Stan Allaya

Produttore esecutivo : Rocher Suanne

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Belmadi Yassine

Prodotti : Quélet Nanna

Produttore : Dacia Rekar

Attrice : Vivien Jaxson



"Secondhand Lions" follows the comedic adventures of an introverted boy left on the doorstep of a pair of reluctant, eccentric great-uncles, whose exotic remembrances stir the boy's spirit and re-ignite the men's lives.

7.1
420






Titolo del film

Secondhand Lions

ladurata

125 minute

ilrilascio

2003-09-19

E Pregio

MPEG 720p
DVDrip

Categories

Comedy, Family

La lingua

English

Castname

Salmons
I.
Denni, Tatum I. Jemini, Small J. Bryon





[HD] Secondhand Lions 2003 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $904,749,521

Entrate : $512,640,108

Categoria : Spazio - nostalgico , Discorsi - Poesia , Test - Grande , Responsabilità - Spionaggio

Paese di produzione : Malta

Produzione : M1 Productions






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Ad Astra 2019 Streaming Cineblog01

Ad Astra 2019 Streaming Cineblog01









Ad Astra 2019-deadline-influence-app-2019-tyree-Ad Astra-bardem-near-untertitel-TVrip-parts-technology-buy-2019-objects-Ad Astra-beings-Google Docs-regina-jaclyn-nota-2019-labruce-Ad Astra-permission-first-2019-AVCHD-iraq-phoenix-1.4-2019-hybrid-Ad Astra-ballad-MPEG-1-stratton-alec-casual-2019-dramedy-Ad Astra-unscripted-123movies.jpg



Ad Astra 2019 Streaming Cineblog01




Filmteam

Dipartimento artistico di coordinamento : Khivi Mazie

Coordinatore degli stuntman : Mcmahon Maïwenn

Layout dello script :Denzil Pirouet

Immagini : Sharee Mallory
Co-Produzent : Bosson Sosa

Produttore esecutivo : Nahil Malle

Direttore della supervisione artistica : Thalia Mouad

Prodotti : Vercors Teri

Produttore : Romina Fischer

Attrice : Namory Graff



The near future, a time when both hope and hardships drive humanity to look to the stars and beyond. While a mysterious phenomenon menaces to destroy life on planet Earth, astronaut Roy McBride undertakes a mission across the immensity of space and its many perils to uncover the truth about a lost expedition that decades before boldly faced emptiness and silence in search of the unknown.

6
2327






Titolo del film

Ad Astra

lacontinuazione

131 minute

Leemissione

2019-09-17

La Qualità

MPEG-1 1080p
HDRip

Category

Science Fiction, Drama, Thriller, Adventure, Mystery

La lingua

English, Norsk

Castname

Pizan
P.
Hideo, Noella T. Marcos, Anahi T. Davion





[HD] Ad Astra 2019 Streaming Cineblog01



Cortometraggio

Speso : $193,846,892

Entrate : $456,050,254

Categoria : Ricerca sanitaria e medica Giornalismo - Misericordia , Guru - Grande , Curiosità - Registrazione , Umanità - Grande

Paese di produzione : India

Produzione : J2F Productions



‘Ad Astra’ is about as art house as Hollywood cinema gets; disguising a metaphysical drama as an action-packed sci-fi adventure is a clever move for James Gray. While not perfect, it’s consistently entertaining whilst offering an introspective investigation on how parents influence their children. While a journey to the outer realms of our solar system, ‘Ad Astra’ is also an exploration of the human heart.
- Charlie David Page

Read Charlie's full article...
https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-ad-astra-a-luscious-and-meticulous-space-drama
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I love sci-fi space movies, especially when these depict the cosmos in such a visually stunning manner as Ad Astra does. It’s one of those films where the visuals elevate whatever narrative is being told. If you don’t get goosebumps or get excited with the opening sequence of this movie, then it might not be the film you’re looking for. From the quiet but powerful sound design to the impressive cinematography, James Gray delivers a visually captivating story with an outstanding protagonist. Brad Pitt is definitely getting tons of nominations this awards season (let’s not forget his amazing role in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood).

His subtle yet incredibly emotional performance shows an astonishing range. He carries the whole screenplay in his shoulders, and I don’t mind that at all. There’s a lot of narration, and here’s where I transition to the most divisive aspect of the movie: it’s a slow-burn. Now, there’s no problem with a film being deliberately slow. In fact, some of my favorite movies of all-time aren’t fast-paced. They cherish their story and make the audience feel interested in what they’re experiencing. Ad Astra isn’t an action flick or a comedy, it’s a character-driven drama, so most of the runtime is devoted to developing Roy.

That said, don’t go in with expectations of feeling entertained all the time. Some moments aren’t supposed to excite you or leave you jaw-dropped. Some sequences are just meant to make you feel immersed by the environment, be lost in space (IMAX is the mandatory way of watching this feature). Don’t expect the film to make an 80-day trip to some planet end in two cuts and 20 seconds. Gray purposefully establishes a slow pace. Obviously, general audiences don’t usually enjoy this type of flicks, but if you’re able to manage your expectations realistically, you’re one step closer to not feel bored throughout the runtime.

The first act is the one that captures everyone’s attention. It doesn’t waste time on Earth, it goes through what’s happening pretty quickly, and it possesses 90% of the heavy action (including one of the best opening sequences of the year). Sound has a significant impact on how Gray films his sequences, and it’s unbelievable how well-shot the chasing scenes on the Moon are. Scientifically speaking, this is no Interstellar where you simply have to accept some mind-blowing yet unjustified stuff. Ad Astra doesn’t have a single scene where one might think “this completely takes me out of the movie, I can’t accept that this is possible in some fictional future”. This is a huge compliment to a space film containing several launches, lunar bases, and (very) long space journeys.

However, the remaining two acts focus intensely on Pitt’s character, slowing down the main plot. Like I wrote above, there’s a lot of development through Roy’s thoughts. Extensive narration is almost always an issue, even when the narrator is Brad Pitt. Some monologues do indeed develop the character or explain what he’s feeling, but some tend to fall into the philosophical side that doesn’t always carry a meaningful or interesting message. Using everyday language, sometimes it’s a bit boring… Additionally, the ending might be a letdown for a lot of people. Tommy Lee Jones (H. Clifford McBride) doesn’t have a lot of screentime, and I can’t really delve into details about his storyline, but his character’s relationship with Roy doesn’t exactly serve as a fantastic payoff.

Max Richter’s score is one of 2019’s best, and I hope it gets recognized by every award show. It definitely helps the experience to be more enthralling. The lack of sound in space is also powerful in its own way. Beautifully-edited, but with a continuously slow pace that doesn’t change from the moment the second act begins. However, the story of Ad Astra is vastly superior to, for example, Gray’s The Lost City of Z, which I genuinely disliked. This space adventure is visually more exciting, its story is more engaging, and its protagonist is more compelling than everything else in Gray’s previous installment. Finally, it’s one of those movies that watching at a film theater (mainly IMAX) or at home, makes a massive difference. You’ll never feel as entertained or captivated at home, so make sure to check this one at the best possible screen near you.

All in all, Ad Astra is yet another display case for Brad Pitt’s chances at winning an Oscar. With a subtle yet powerful performance, Pitt carries the whole story to safe harbor with tremendous help from the eyegasmic visuals. Technically, it’s one of 2019’s closest movies to being perfect. Very well-shot, well-edited, with an immersive score, and gorgeous cinematography. However, it’s a slow-burn that doesn’t always work as such. Narration is the go-to method to develop Pitt’s character, and while it works most of the time, it slows down the main plot, becoming a tad boring during a few moments. The ending isn’t the impactful payoff that the film needed, and the incredible supporting cast is under-utilized. In the end, it’s still a great movie and one that should be seen at the biggest and best screen possible, so go see it for yourself!

Rating: B+
**_Despite some utterly absurd diversions (chase scene! horror scene! shoot-out scene!), this is a quality science-fiction narrative, suggesting the answers we seek in the stars are actually found within_**

>_macte nova virtute, puer, sic itur ad astra,
dis genite et geniture deos._

- Publius Vergilius Maro; _Aeneis_ (29-19 BC)

>_N = R∗ · fp · ne · fl · fi · fc · L_

>_where:_

>_N = The number of civilisations in the Milky Way whose electromagnetic emissions are detectable (i.e. which are on our current past light cone)._

>_R∗ = The average rate of the formation of stars._

>_fp = The fraction of stars with planetary systems._

>_ne = The average number of planets, per star with planetary systems, with an environment suitable for life._

>_fl = The fraction of planets with an environment suitable for life on which life actually appears._

>_fi = The fraction of planets on which life actually appears on which intelligent life emerges._

>_fc = The fraction of planets on which intelligent life emerges that develop a technology capable of releasing detectable signs of their existence into space._

>_L = The length of time such intelligent life release detectable signals into space._

- The Drake Equation; Frank Drake (1961)

>In Drake's original hypothesis, the proposed values were:

>R∗ = 1 yr−1 (1 star formed per year, a very conservative estimate)

>fp = 0.2 to 0.5 (one fifth to one half of all stars formed will have planetary systems)

>ne = 1 to 5 (stars with planetary systems will have between 1 and 5 planets with an environment suitable for life)

>fl = 1 (100% of planets with an environment suitable for life will develop life)

>fi = 1 (100% of planets which develop life will develop intelligent life)

>fc = 0.1 to 0.2 (one tenth to one fifth of planets which develop intelligent life will develop life capable of releasing detectable signs of their existence into space)

>L = 1,000 to 100,000,000 years

>This gives N as a range between 20 and 50,000,000, although Drake asserted that, given the uncertainties involved, the more likely range was that N ≈ L, hence there are between 1,000 and 100,000,000 intelligent civilisations in the Milky Way with whom communication should be possible.

>_We're searching for intelligent life-forms that have also evolved conscious self-awareness. We're searching for conscious, intelligent life-forms that have both the available resources and the need to manipulate raw materials into tools. We're searching for intelligent, conscious, tool-making beings that have developed a language we're capable of understanding. We're searching for intelligent conscious, tool-making, communicative beings that live in social groups (so they can reap the benefits of civilization) and that develop the tools of science and mathematics._

>_We're searching for ourselves..._

- Stephen Webb; _If the Universe Is Teeming with Aliens … Where Is Everybody?: Fifty Solutions to the Fermi Paradox and the Problem of Extraterrestrial Life_ (2002)

A short while ago, Pella Kågerman and Hugo Lilja's mesmerising _Aniara_ (2018) pondered the insignificance of mankind when considered against the infinity of space and time. An esoteric science-fiction film in the tradition of Stanley Kubrick's _2001: A Space Odyssey_ (1968) and Andrei Tarkovsky's _Solyaris_ (1972), it attempted, amongst other things, to convey the sense of near-inconceivable vastness that must be attendant to any self-respecting pseudo-realist discussion of the universe, and to convey the psychological ramifications of what it must feel like to be lost in such a vastness. This is the lineage into which _Ad Astra_ wishes to step, but for me, it has more in common with Danny Boyle's excellent _Sunshine_ (2007) and Christoper Nolan's enjoyable but flawed _Interstellar_ (2014); irrespective of its themes and tropes, it remains fundamentally a mainstream Hollywood movie. And whilst such a status can certainly hold advantages for a filmmaker (primarily in terms of budget and casting), so too are there major pitfalls in having to toe the line of commerciality and cater to demands for crowd-pleasing material, demands which often don't jibe with esoteric content. In the case of _Sunshine_, this took the form of a relatively sudden genre shift into horror that Boyle doesn't fully pull off, and in the case of _Interstellar_, it's an unnecessary third-act twist that's (paradoxically) as predictable as it is nonsensical. And so we have _Ad Astra_, where it's in the form of an overly convenient resolution and some of the most ludicrous narrative diversions I've seen since the sojourn to Canto Bight in the Rian Johnson abomination that was _Star Wars: The Last Jedi_ (2017), diversions which seem to belong in a different film entirely, so tonally unrelated are they to the more existential material surrounding them (space pirates! enraged simians! knife-fight/shoot-out!). Which is not to say, for one second, that I disliked the film – I didn't; even if the narrative never manages to get beyond the "_Heart of Darkness_ in space" template and the script relies far, far too heavily on a sub-Terrence Malick voiceover. The craft on display is exceptional and the story is thought-provoking and generally entertaining, with a terrific central performance, and some spectacular visuals (especially in the IMAX format). But it all could have been so much better.

Set at an unspecified point in the near future (an opening legend informs us, rather generically, that it's "_a time of hope and conflict_"), space travel has become routine, with the moon not unlike any major city on Earth, although there are territorial disputes and marauding pirates are a constant threat. Mars too has been colonised, although it's not yet open to the public. As the film begins, we meet SpaceCom's Maj. Roy McBride (Brad Pitt), who is working on repairs to the International Space Antenna – a massive communications array that juts miles into the sky from the surface of the Earth. When a huge explosion causes him to fall from the antenna, he remains unnaturally calm as he plummets to Earth, and is able to land relatively unscathed. In a debriefing, he's told the explosion was just one result of a series of energy surges that originated near Neptune and which have left much of Earth and the moon without power. 29 years previously, Roy's father, H. Clifford McBride (Tommy Lee Jones), left Earth as the leader of the Lima Project, a mission aimed at establishing contact with whatever alien civilisations may be elsewhere in the galaxy. Needing to get far enough from the Sun's solar interference to send out adequate communications, the Lima team travelled to the same region near Neptune from which the surges are now emanating. However, 16 years into the mission, all contact was lost. SpaceCom presumed the crew dead, but now they fear that Clifford may be behind the surges, and with an antimatter power core at his disposal, if he has become unhinged, he could create a chain reaction that would eradicate all life in the galaxy (it's best not to dwell too much on the script's fundamental misrepresentation of how matter and antimatter interact). However, all attempts at communication have failed, and so Roy's highly classified mission is simple – travel to a secure long-range communications base on Mars and record a (prewritten) message for Clifford in the hopes he might respond. And, of course, it's no spoiler to say that the mission doesn't exactly go smoothly.

_Ad Astra_, which is written by James Gray and Ethan Gross, and directed by Gray (_The Yards_; _We Own the Night_; _The Immigrant_; _The Lost City of Z_), wastes no time in tying us rigidly to Roy's perspective; it opens with a POV shot from inside his helmet, and the first words we hear are him speaking in voiceover. This sets up the narrative to come, as Roy remains the sole focaliser throughout – we see and hear what he sees and hears, we know what he knows, we learn things as he learns then, and we never experience anything with which he is not directly involved. Such rigid focalisation can lend itself to some very subtle moments. For example, as Roy thinks back to a time before his marriage broke up, there is a shot of him sitting on a bed in a darkened room. Barely visible behind him, lying down, is his then-wife Eve (a thankless and largely wordless performance by a blink-and-you-miss-her Liv Tyler). As the camera moves in on him, Eve fades out of the image – she disappears without him noticing, which sounds like it should be horribly on the nose, but because it's dark, because she was out of focus to begin with, and because by the time she disappears, Roy has come to occupy almost the entire frame, it makes the moment easy to miss, and rather poignant – he quite literally doesn't notice his wife phasing herself out of his life because of his obsession with his career (his focus on work is something he shares with Percy Fawcett (Charlie Hunnam) in Gray's masterpiece, the criminally overlooked _Lost City of Z_, although to be fair to Fawcett, Roy's single-mindedness at the expense of all else makes Fawcett look like husband-of-the-year material).

The fact that the film is set amongst the stars, but remains always tied to Roy's perception allows Gray to fashion a narrative that's both massive in scope yet emotionally intimate (in this sense, he one-ups Kubrick, whose _2001_ has all the grandeur and awe imaginable but is relatively detached from and uninterested in its characters' psychologies). Gray is aided immensely in this by cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema (_The Fighter_; _Her_; _Interstellar_; _Dunkirk_), arguably the finest currently active DoP not named Emmanuel Lubezki. Shot on 35mm film, van Hoytema's gorgeous photography effortlessly captures the overwhelming scale of the milieu, but also frequently shoots Pitt in tight close-ups that afford the actor little room to hide his emotions (which become more and more externalised as the film progresses).

Speaking of emotions, depending on your perspective, Pitt's portrayal of Roy is either one of the film's most laudable aspects or one of its most alienating. Initially played as emotionally closed off, if not necessarily shut down (he tells us in VO, "_I've been trained to compartmentalise my emotions_"), he's depicted as cold and distant. This stoicism, however, slowly starts to erode as his mission begins to go wrong, although there are a few early hints that all is not well - his fixation on the breakup of his marriage, for example, or his observation of the crew of the _Cepheus_ (which takes him from the moon to Mars), "_they seem at ease with themselves. What must that be like?_". His emotional state becomes more and more tempestuous as we move closer to the finale, until, rather suddenly (and rather unrealistically), he manages to steady himself in time for the _dénouement_. Pitt's performance is such that one viewer might praise it for shunning emotional grandstanding even as another might criticise it as too taciturn. Personally, I'm very much in the former camp; I think it's a terrifically modulated and minimalist performance in which Pitt uses the lack of outward emotion to inform the character's emotional beats. For example, Roy doesn't have a huge amount of dialogue (aside from that accursed VO) and for long stretches, he doesn't even have anyone to act against, so Pitt has to rely to a large extent on subtlety and nuanced gesture to convey emotion, which he does exceptionally well. Having said that, however, I can certainly understand why some might find the performance too cold – Roy is definitely not your typical Hollywood protagonist, and the problem is that if you're not impressed by Pitt, I'd imagine it must be very difficult to get into the film at all as he's in literally every scene.

Thematically, on the most basic of levels, _Ad Astra_ is the story of two men obsessed with their profession to the detriment of all else - a theme brought to perfection in the work of Michael Mann. Such a theme is not unusual in Gray's films, receiving its most thorough exploration in Percy Fawcett and Henry Costin (Robert Pattinson) in _The Lost City of Z_. Additionally, like most of Gray's films, _Ad Astra_ is heavily androcentric, with neither Liv Tyler nor Ruth Negga (as the administer of the SpaceCom base on Mars) given much to do. In this sense, it's a study of masculinity, much as were its most obvious narrative influences – Joseph Conrad's _Heart of Darkness_ (1899) and Francis Ford Coppola's Conrad-adaptation, _Apocalypse Now_ (1979). In the reformulation of the narrative template, Roy is Charles Marlow (Cpt. Benjamin L. Willard in the film), whilst Clifford is Kurtz. In the original, Marlow, a merchant seaman, must locate revered ivory trader Kurtz, who has established himself as a demigod at a trading post on the Congo River. In the film, set at the tail-end of the Vietnam War, US Army captain Willard (Martin Sheen) must travel from South Vietnam into Cambodia to track down Col. Walter E. Kurtz (Marlon Brando), a once-legendary but now renegade Army Special Forces officer who, in all probability, has gone insane. The narrative parallels are obvious enough – a conflicted man sent to find a brilliant and pioneering man who has gone off-grid and who must be stopped, with the journey proving to be as much about travelling into the self as reaching a specific geographical destination. All three narratives also feature a roughly similar relationship between the two characters whereby the man searching deeply admires the man for whom he is searching.

Of course, _Ad Astra_ is also an esoteric science fiction film that looks at issues such as humanity's place in the galaxy and the search for intelligent life. An especially interesting theme that comes up when Roy is on the moon is commercialism and humanity's tendency to taint anything we touch. The commercialism of space travel is introduced when Roy takes a Virgin America shuttle to the moon, whilst an exterior wide shot of a lunar tourist base shows signs for, amongst others, Applebee's, DHL, and Subway. And since the moon is now so like Earth, thus it has become blighted by many of the same issues as Earth; crime, political division, materialism - the grandeur of space travel infected with the mundanities of Earth. This point is driven home by the references to territorial disputes and the problem of marauders, which is significant enough for Roy to need a military escort from the base to the _Cepheus_. And if all this wasn't enough to get the point across, in VO, we hear Roy lament how sickened Clifford would be with what the moon has become, pointing out it's now simply a "_re-creation of what we're running from on Earth. We're world eaters_". All of which helps create the impression of a future that's reasonably familiar and relatively plausible, given current technologies. Indeed, the lived-in nature of the film's environment is superbly realised by production designer Kevin Thompson (_Birth_; _The Adjustment Bureau_; _Okja_), whose discoloured sets and gritty textures are as far from the more glossy end of science fiction as you could imagine.

However, for all these positives, some significant problems detract from the whole. For me, there were three main flaws; 1) a poorly written and hugely distracting voiceover upon which Gray relies far too heavily, 2) three ludicrous action scenes that accomplish nothing and which feel like they're from another movie entirely, and 3) an anti-climactic and overly neat dénouement.

To look first at those three scenes, although they all occur in the first half of the film (with two in the first act), to describe them in any detail would constitute a spoiler, so I'll just give a very basic overview – the first is a chase scene involving moon buggies, the second is something more suited to Paul W.S. Anderson's hugely underrated _Event Horizon_ (1997), and the third is a shoot-out/knife fight, which is the most narratively justified of the three, but still a ridiculously over-the-top scene for a film of this nature. Imagine if in _2001_, instead of attempting to outwit HAL 9000, Dave Bowman (Keir Dullea) had pulled out a shotgun and engaged in a running battle with androids controlled by the AI. Ridiculous? Of course. The three scenes in _Ad Astra_ are only slightly less so. The third at least does have a narrative point insofar as it serves as the springboard for the entire second half of the movie, but it's still a monumentally silly way for Gray and Gross to advance the plot when there were far more organic ways to do so. The first two scenes, however, serve no such purpose – remove them from the film, and you'd have to change virtually nothing in the surrounding material - they're that disconnected and irrelevant, right out of the Rian Johnson school of narrative construction. They lead nowhere, reveal nothing about the character or his psychology, and have no connection to the esoteric themes found elsewhere. You know the French plantation scene in _Apocalypse Now Redux_? They make that scene look pivotal. I really can't over-emphasise how much they pulled me out of the film and detracted from the excellent work elsewhere.

As for the other two issues (the VO and the ending), obviously, I can't say much of anything about the finale without spoilers, so all I'll say is that I'm led to believe the ending as it exists now was a reshoot after test audiences responded poorly to the original (and far superior) ending – look it up online; the originally scripted ending made a lot more sense and was as thematically fascinating as it was existentially audacious (sheesh, test audiences, am I right?).

In terms of the VO, good lord, it's bad. I can count on one hand the number of times VO has been done well in film – there's the hard-boiled noir films of the 40s and 50s, the Michael Herr-written narration of _Apocalypse Now_, the work of Terrence Malick, Andrew Dominick's _The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford_ (2007), and...well, that's about it really. The VO is obviously intended to function in much the same way as Willard's in _Apocalypse Now_, providing some factual info, but also probing the soul of the character. However, the problem is that most of the time, the voice is describing something we can see plain as day on the screen. Pitt's performance is strong enough that the VO is unnecessary. You know the way the best films show rather than tell and the worst tell rather than show? _Ad Astra_ does both, and it's hugely distracting – you think "_I don't know why he saved my life_" ruins the end of the original version of Ridley Scott's _Blade Runner_ (1982)? I lost count of the number of times Roy's derivative interior monologue undermined the power of the moment. By the half-way stage of the film, I was sick of his cod-philosophical ramblings that aspire to portentousness, but end up coming across as someone trying and failing to imitate Malick.

With all that said, however, it's a testament to the story the film tells that despite these significant hurdles, I still enjoyed it. Pitt's performance is excellent, and Gray, who has yet to make a bad film, is his accomplished self. The storyline is interesting, and what it says about man's place in the universe, particularly whether or not we're alone, is unexpected and fascinating. The original ending was infinitely superior, the VO is a huge misstep, and the action detours are ludicrous, but this is still an entertaining movie. It's not a patch on _Lost City of Z_, but the manner in which Gray juxtaposes an intimate tone with such massive themes is really impressive. In essence, _Ad Astra_ is a fable about the importance of transient human connection, played out against the backdrop of the infinite, and despite some not insignificant problems, it's well worth checking out.
I like quiet moments in big action/sci-fi type movies. The family sitdown at Avengers Tower in _Age of Ultron_ is probably the best part of that movie. The contemplative moments of John Wick are what make that character who he is. What is a little more odd, however, is when a quiet, reflective drama, is broken up by moments of big action/sci-fi type sequences. _Ad Astra_ is certainly the latter. The majority of _Ad Astra's_ runtime is taken up by Brad Pitt narrating environmental cosmic shots, or having quiet conversations about his father, or his mood. Then suddenly! Space pirates! It's unusual, and I don't know that it really works. _Ad Astra_ is something different, and if that's all you're looking for, by all means, give it a chance, but I don't know if I'd personally call it very good.

_Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._
Ad Astra galactically depicts sorrow, proving that no one can hear you cry in space. For the past few years, dramas set in the expansive dangers of space have been my bread and butter. Devouring them during my annual breakfast as I purposefully starve myself for the taste of space traversal. Every year, the likes 'Arrival', 'Blade Runner 2049', 'First Man', 'Interstellar' and my all-time favourite film 'Gravity', have secured scores ranging from outstanding to perfect. Whilst Ad Astra may be tilting towards the former adjective, it's still irrefutably one of the best films of the year thanks to Gray's understanding, yet again, of what makes a character study captivating. After unearthing the possibility that his missing father may still be alive, his astronaut son travels across the Solar System in search for him and to unravel a mysterious power surge phenomenon that threatens humanity's survival.

Immediately, one thing I need to brush off my chest is the horrendous marketing. This is not a sci-fi blockbuster. There is limited "action". And if you're wanting the next 'Star Wars' or 'Avatar', then remove yourself from the cinema and watch mind-numbing nonsense like 'Angel Has Fallen' instead. This is a James Gray extravaganza. A meticulously woven character study, harnessing melancholia to challenge an existential crisis. Thematically, Ad Astra's premise bolsters a plethora of metaphorical imagery that divulges into the empirical purpose of humanity. Majestic planets emitting every prismatic shade available, yet emanating no emotional connectivity. The vacuous expansivity of space, marking humanity's reflection on life as a mere speck of stardust. Worldly hostility reaching the depths of our galaxy, hyperbolising the "world-eating" philosophy of our own self-destruction as a species. The obsession to venture forth. Departing love, hate and grief. Welcoming nothingness.

Gray's space-opera is a sorrowful tale, intently focusing on the pressures of a son following in the footsteps of his acclaimed father. A patriarch of inspiration to many. Allowing a tangible tense bond to illuminate the stars with despair and anguish. Pitt's universally nuanced performance brings forward stoic mannerisms that allow McBride to feel these emotions. Minor glitches that break character, such as slamming the wall in frustration, showcase the purity of humanity within him.

Gray encompasses the plot around McBride. The lunar pirate raid, mayday rescue and crew brawl scenes, whilst inserting mainstream tendencies into a contemporary drama, were emblems of McBride's emotions. Fear, rage and desperation respectively. A series of gestures that, again, hark back to humanity's endurance. The mildly engaging supporting cast, ranging from Jones, Sutherland and Negga, acting as stability for McBride. Stepping stones allowing him to find his father, as if fate was dictating his alignment. Narration, shifting between inner thoughts to exposition, was overused and irked me with its basic functionality. Hoytema's cinematography could've elicited these unnecessary lines of dialogue from his beautiful imagery. And beautiful just doesn't do it justice.

Immediately, from the iridescent opening shot, Hoytema takes hold. Utilising colours and shadows to produce the incarnation of life, what it means to see. The blue of Neptune, the red of Mars. Clashing tonalities resembling McBride's emotions. Accompanied by Richter's euphoric score and the almost '2001' production design, and Ad Astra is technically a masterful piece of art. Gray's conclusion is teetering on the edge of underwhelming, for me atleast, with its rushed journey home that dissipated the simmering sorrow built exquisitely beforehand. The ending I personally would've desired, would be the ending no one wanted (but that's life I guess...).

Regardless, the small criticisms here and there are subject to change upon an inevitable rewatch. Gray is fast becoming one of my favourite directors. He is a man who understands character. He acknowledges the obsession of man. Amalgamating life's wondrously challenging hurdles into singular expressive characters. Ad Astra's meditative and resonant pacing, whilst is sure to put many viewers off, ensures that loss and grief are captured wherever a soul may be. At home or in deep space. It never vanishes.
* Meh.
“Work hard, play later.”

Once a year ever since ‘Gravity’ was released, we seem to get new stories about the voyage of space where certain characters “do not go gentle into that good night.”

I wasn’t wowed over the trailers for Ad Astra, because when you work at a cinema and spent most of your day watching trailers, well trust me when I say this didn’t stand out from the rest. I originally thought it was about saving the world or something like that. For what it didn’t advertise was a slow burn sci-fi movie that’s on the same level as ‘Blade Runner 2049’ and the emotional side as ‘First Man’. A personal story told through a first person narrative about unresolved issues from past relationship.

Basically an art house movie with a huge budget.

‘Ad Astra’ was pretty good. After only seeing it once, I feel that this will grow on me overtime and so far it has. A mixture of both ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ and Terrence Malick movies. While not as great as those two comparisons, but while watching I couldn’t help to be reminded of those two.

There's some beautiful and impressive shots through out the movie, especially when the movie constantly shows you the entire scale of space and planets through the characters journey. The colors adds to environment that oozes with style and has a tranquil feel to it. I think that’s where the Blade Runner vibes really come in. Brilliant cinematography by Hoyte Van Hoytema.

Brad Pitt was terrific as the silent astronaut with tangled mood swings. It’s not an explosive performance, just simple enough for it to be effective. Any other actor would’ve gone big for no other reasons than being overly dramatic and it makes sense for his character to be closed off; similar to Ryan Gosling in ‘First Man’, where his emotional health comes last. You learn very little about his character, as most of his backstory is only in the background for you to piece together the puzzle.

The score was mystical and often eerie at times which helped ties in with the unknown aspects of space. The visual effects are excellent and nearly photo realistic at times - something you come to expect by now with space movies.

I wasn’t too sure about the narration at first, because it was very off putting and a cheap way for the character to express himself. However it sorta grew on me after awhile and some of it was almost rambling with Roy questioning every decision he made.

Now for the issues:

I have no idea why Liv Tyler was in this movie, because she literally does nothing and could have easily been cut out. It felt like a re shoot for some reason.

Remember when I said the visual effects are photo realistic ‘at times’, but that isn’t always the case with certain scenes. There’s a deranged chimpanzee that pops up and it looks really phoney. I think that entire scene could been cut out. I’ve brought up twice about cutting scenes, because I believe if this movie went back to the editing room one more time, then my score would be a lot higher.

There’s a ridiculously and almost laughable scene where Roy (Brad Pitt) steaks into a spaceship that he’s not suppose to be on, and all the astronauts on board go into a frenzy and accidentally start kill themselves while trying to cease Roy. No joke. Roy doesn't even do anything as he never intended to hurt them. It was cheap way of making Roy isolated for the rest of the movie. A few years ago I remember reading a horrifying incident that happened to astronaut Luca Parmitano where he reported water inside of his space suit helmet, and nearly become the first astronaut to drown in space. However, Luca remained calm throughout the whole incident despite the odds of him dying being high, but in the end he survived. So it’s really strange seeing these trained astronauts freaking out because came on board.

Overall rating: Out of the whole spectacle, I find the meaning of the movie the most striking. The themes of family, love and abandonment plays a major role in the story. The whole idea of “working hard and playing later” comes with a cost, which is the less time we spend with our loved ones and abandoning everything to pursuit something better out there when in reality the best things in life are right here. When you discover nothing there’s no turning back and no finding your way back. I’ve been thinking about it for awhile now after seeing the movie.

Never underestimate James Gray as a storyteller.


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