Call me a luddite as I'm sure you film hipsters will, but this movie is tremendously boring and dull. Acting is great, and there is nothing wrong with the film in any way besides being terribly dull. The plot takes place of two days but is shot and edited that makes it very real-time. Thats nice. Watching people in a car driving with awkward, stilted, sparse conversation might be calm poetry to some movie-goers and some might find some kind of hidden meaning. Bagh.
Waste of money and time. As a film buff and film major in college, I was bored to tears and don't give a *beep* if the director has some kind of secret artistic genius hiding non-diegetically, film is film and this one belongs as a installation piece at a self-important post-modern art gallery in New York that serves wine and cheese.
Definitely not. However, I'm not going to argue with someone who is oblivious to the pitfalls of being a hipster (pretentiousness, arrogance, contrarianism, elitism, and sheepish following behavior despite claiming to be different). I'm sure you can't be that sheltered from society that you don't know what I'm talking about - I think you are just being coy. Although, you clearly don't have a grasp of what demoralize means, so perhaps you are not from an English speaking country and thus a culture similar to mine that has a counter-hipster culture.
Hipsters. Are they different for the sake of being different? How does one act different without being vaguely and broadly labeled a hipster? It seems to be that the term is loosely thrown around on people who may not follow the social norm. No?
And what of those who don't prescribe to any sort of labeling? Do you call them the No Labeler's?
You call yourself a film buff although it doesn't look like you're familiar with Kiarostami's work. That automatically makes your opinion invalid. Well, at least you got a taste of the wine and cheese.
Everyone has their field of expertise don't they? Your expertise I'm sure is full of great movies that only intelligent and wise people like yourself would truly "understand." It certainly isn't in controlling personality flaws such as how not to bully people on the Internet because you can.
Thanks! I am! By the sarcastic, condescending tone of your reply which is certainly not the voice of someone who has experienced life and the splendid and terrible aspects of it that bring wisdom and culture.
Of course we came here to defend the film since you blankly asked people to avoid it. So that makes you the film snob asshat since you think your opinion is saving people's time and money.
Let's be fair here. Although I do believe the OP has a touch of the same disease that he accuses "hipsters" of having (tip for the future, aquafunk: if you sort of know what the word means, you don't know what the word means; do look up "luddite"), calling a film "boring" and a "waste of time" isn't tantamount to a presumption of saving people's time and money. We can all opine on films, even negatively, okay? And, to be perfectly honest, reviews are mostly the province of those who have already seen the given film.
All that said, despite my own love of arthouse films, I don't like Like Someone in Love, and I don't like Kiarostami's films in general. Moreover, I find that bending over backwards to defend his film-making leads people to make statements that range from bewildering to downright insane. A movie that doesn't engage the viewer and doesn't have a coherent plot is "more deep" than a conventional story-based film because it forces the viewer to work? Sure, whatever. I guess it would be even more deep and intellectual to just watch a blank screen for an hour and twenty minutes, a kind of a cinematic version of "Four Fifty-Five". I mean, can you imagine the amount of work a viewer would have to do with a film that not only had no story, but also no images and no sound? I've also read one review that praised, of all things, censorship in Iran for forcing Iranian film-makers to be more artistic and subtle; never mind that censorship places severe constraints upon artists and stifles artistic expression.
Aristotle had a point: drama needs a story. A story with a beginning, a middle, and an end. It's not enough to have a conceit, it's not enough to have an idea for a story, it's not enough to have a sketch. But, incidentally, taking those crumbs and constructing a compelling, engaging story is the most difficult part of the creative process -- the part that Kiarostami consistently skips, ostensibly out of great intellectual depth. He has no courage or skill to make the plot go somewhere. His dialogue is threadbare. And he has a bizarre obsession with car rides -- which, perhaps, isn't so bizarre after all, if you consider the fact that it's much easier to write a scene in which the participants are strapped in their seats and have very little freedom of movement. In other words, overrated as hell.
aquafunk is the worst kind of hipster. Nobody cares if you dislike a movie and nobody is going to begrudge you for it. But when you come onto a films board with a snide, holier than though attitude and belittle the movie and its fans for no other reason than being "dull", you look very foolish. That your only defense for credibility is being a film major (because that means anything. Let me guess, your minor is Journalism) just makes you look like more of an awful hipster.
Throw in the fact that for all your pretentiousness, you still have no idea what "Luddite" means...
I'm quite sure that nobody, with ten years to try and guess, would manage the undoubtedly obscure accusation that you are a "luddite" because you found this movie dull and boring. You are a blowhard and a fool (It's amazing how often those two things go hand in hand.) I would rather spend an evening in a room full of hipsters than to have to spend that same time with your sanctimonious self.