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nenneno (13)
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"The .45 ACP on the other hand, different story."
Yes, a neat little hole in the neck and unclear if it even went through.
haha.
Well, it is a dumb, stupid movie. No doubt about it. But it has great atmoshpere, which masks the flaws in a good way, so it's entirealy possible to go through the movie not getting hung up on them.
For me it's a 2/10, but mostly for being a waste of time rather than dreadful. This would actually probably be better as a 2hr movie.
It were handled quite well in Wandavision where it's obvious that even though there were no malicious intent, what she is doing is not ok and she realizes that throughout.
It is handled very weird in WW1984 where they kind of kill a man and they joke about it and never even mention what personal consequenses the wish had for people.
Yes, a nice, modest little film. Felt like direct-to-streaming, but sometimes that's ok.
"Not all men". I'm glad you are not a slime ball :)
Yes, she might not have known that, she only knew it was a risk that something went wrong and that may lead to serious consequences. If it didn't go south like it did, she would have been able to stop the plans she set in motion.
So, what happened only happened that way because she wasn't alive to stop it. If she was, she would have played it another way.
You are absolutely correct.
I would have liked if they focused much of the monologue on the times when he was alone. And that we got to spend more time when he was alone.
Now they got Brad Pitt to tell us that the loneliness is really starting to take a toll on him, but in the film it's about two minutes so we don't feel it. They should have cut something else, and made the time spent on the trip longer and let us join Brad Pitt alone with his thoughts then.
It's the same in the end.
"I am looking forward to the day my solitude ends" he says, but we haven't even gotten to feel or understand that solitude.
And that day his solitude ends? It's about a minute later. There's where the film should have slowed things down if they wanted some heft.
Absolutely agree, though Elisha Cuthbert almost sells it for the both of them.
They have a problem of establishing Emile Hirsch as someone of interest to her thought, and that's too bad.
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