The Birthday Cake 2021 Online Subtitrat in Romana

The Birthday Cake Online Subtitrat in Romana – [1080p]

The Birthday Cake

cap : The Birthday Cake
a elibera  : 2021-06-18
arhivare : 93 Minutes
gen muzical : Crime, Thriller

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On the Rocks 2020 Online Subtitrat in Romana

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On the Rocks

calitate : On the Rocks
a achita  : 2020-10-02
arhivare : 96 Minutes
compoziţie : Drama, Comedy

Perhaps my expectations were too high, but I wanted so much more than the product we ended up with here. While I enjoyed ‘On The Rocks’, I can’t push myself past saying it was simply cute and sweet – and while it bolstered my love of Bill Murray just a little further, for Rashida Jones it just made me shrug.
– Jess Fenton

Read Jess’ full article…
https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-on-the-rocks-another-sophia-coppola-and-bill-murray-collab-with-a-splash-of-water
If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @
https://www.msbreviews.com

Before jumping into the movie itself, I need to offer my appreciation for Sofia Coppola’s career so far. With such a renowned filmmaker as a father (Francis Ford Coppola, the famous director behind the classic The Godfather trilogy, Apocalypse Now, and much more), Sofia was able to create a distinct career, avoiding condescending comparisons with her father’s success. Most people in her situation would crumble to the pressure and succumb to a total failure. Fortunately, Sofia started showing her own unique talent early by delivering one of the best rom-coms of the 2000s, Lost in Translation (only her second feature film). Therefore, I was actually pretty interested in the simple premise of On the Rocks.

This latest installment in Sofia’s filmography continues one of her trademark characteristics: a light movie that addresses not-that-light themes. The main narrative follows the answer to a binary question: is Laura’s (Rashida Jones) husband, Dean (Marlon Wayans), having an affair? The two possible outcomes don’t allow the film to carry any impactful surprises regarding this storyline, but Sofia writes a screenplay filled with astonishingly captivating character interactions, mostly between Laura and her father, Felix (Bill Murray). The movie’s beginning focuses on demonstrating Laura’s day-to-day basis, developing this character in an exceptionally smooth manner.

These first minutes without Felix in the picture establish Laura’s mental state perfectly. Her feelings, thoughts, doubts, everything is shared with the viewer either through clean exposition or subtle expressions from the remarkable Rashida Jones, who delivers a nuanced, extremely rich performance. Then, enter the phenomenal Bill Murray. Felix is a charming yet complicated old man who can’t be around a woman without hitting on her or stating dumb things like, “I think I’m getting deaf to women’s voices”. His relationship with her daughter seems quite close to the point of Laura trusting his crazy conspiracy theories based on exaggerated facts.

Here lies my number one issue with the film. Until the third act, I could describe On the Rocks in one word: real. Every scene, conversation, or action is displayed in such a realistic way that I struggle to find a single sequence that didn’t need to be in the movie. At the end of each scene, the viewer always learns something new, whether about a character, an event, or merely a detail of someone’s life. However, the last half-an-hour takes the main characters (father and daughter, to be clear) through a path that crosses the line of common sense and makes me doubt if Laura would truly do such a thing, based on what the film showed of her personality until then.

Nevertheless, that’s not the problem. The real issue is the revelation that comes with this final act that raises a few questions concerning the father-daughter connection. I can’t get into spoilers, but Sofia develops Felix as a fun, entertaining, not-to-be-taken-seriously old guy who makes a few too many jokes that maybe he shouldn’t. However, after discovering a certain part of his life and how it affected his family, I partially lost empathy. The revelation is probably the only slightly surprising aspect of the movie, not because it’s shocking (the film clearly points in that direction), but due to the viewer’s focus being on finding out if Dean is cheating on Laura.

This new development makes me question how Laura can be so close to her father without ever showing on-screen how she dealt with this situation, especially at the very end where the subject matter is brought back into her life. Don’t be mistaken by this extensive explanation, I still enjoyed the movie! I can’t deny the impact of this negative issue, but it’s far from destroying the film. It’s beautifully produced, with every technical aspect complementing each other. Sofia controls both the pacing and the tone of the movie in a flawless fashion.

Still, Rashida Jones and Bill Murray steal the spotlight. Both deliver outstanding performances, carrying the dialogues effortlessly and fully embracing their characters’ personas. Marlon Wayans is also pretty good, even though he doesn’t have that much screentime. With a short runtime, the premise gets surprisingly more captivating than what I thought it was going to be. I felt significantly invested in the process of finding out the answer to the big question, and despite the partially disappointing third act, this storyline is brilliantly executed.

In the end, On the Rocks is yet another success for A24 and Apple TV+. Sofia Coppola continues her already remarkable, distinct career with another film defined by one of her trademark attributes. A serious subject depicted through a lighter perspective, possessing fascinating character interactions, and a premise that ends up being a lot more engaging (yet still somewhat predictable and formulaic) than what’s expected from it. Rashida Jones and Bill Murray are genuinely impressive, sharing palpable chemistry, ultimately carrying the whole narrative on their shoulders. It doesn’t feel like a movie. It feels like a real story with real people… at least until the third act, where an over-the-top, hard-to-accept sequence leads to a revelation that questions the father-daughter bond, as well as the rushed resolution of such declaration. I still recommend it as a weekend’s evening pick due to its short runtime and overall enjoyable story.

Rating: B-

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Bitch Ass 2022 Online Subtitrat in Romana

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Bitch Ass

campionat : Bitch Ass
a lăsa  : 2022-03-14
arhivare : 83 Minutes
gen : Horror, Mystery, Thriller

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The Last Witch Hunter 2015 Online Subtitrat in Romana

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The Last Witch Hunter

titulatură  : The Last Witch Hunter
a dezlănțui : 2015-10-21
arhivare : 106 Minutes
gen muzical : Fantasy, Action, Adventure

There was a time when the movie gods were treating audiences to the omnipresence of zombies. One could not swing a dead cat without running into zombie-related cinema. It was all the rage at the box office that was experiencing a certain celluloid renaissance with overloading narratives within the “zombie zone”. Sure, zombies are still the norm in pop cultural media on both the big and small screen (anybody not heard of “The Walking Dead”?). However, another iconic horror-induced symbol–the witch–is making its way back into prominence in the cinema circles. Unfortunately, the “twitch of the witch” is explored in an over-the-top, messy and misplaced CGI-coated production of the outlandish The Last Witch Hunter.

So there are a number of reasons why the whimsical wasteland The Last Witch Hunter might be considered high-tech jumbled junk. Nevertheless, the consensus is that sometimes high-tech jumbled junk is one enthusiast’s treasured and enjoyable guilty pleasure worth its mindlessness in gold. Well, The Last Witch Hunter certainly will attract its share of followers as a gaudy and grainy fantasy adventure both big in scope and surreal absurdity. Still, this mythical monstrosity feels annoyingly strained and tries too hard to sell its outrageous, synthetic spryness.

The Last Witch Hunter is about larger-than-life throwaway silly thrills and cherishes its berserk-style entertainment with unapologetic relish. There is nothing inherently wrong with upping the ante in boisterous bounciness but Hunter is unfocused and all over the map while never committing fully to being a distinctive, impish-minded vehicle. Instead, Hunter is incoherent and erratically ridiculous as it shamefully incorporates bits and pieces from other better-made schlocky showcases.

The casting of the monotone and muscle-toned Vin Diesel seems inspired and logical for something as clumsily radical as The Last Witch Hunter. Diesel, the movie action star that made his notable mark in money-making film franchises that include The Fast and the Furious and Riddick entries, sinks his teeth into another so-called explosive characterization in Hunter’s 800-year old immortal witch hunter Kaulder. Of course Kaulder is a tortured soul and has made it his mission in hunting down naughty witches throughout his eternal existence. Kaulder needs to eradicate these magical misfits in his bid to deal with the tragic curse that has dominated his tattered psyche.

Kaulder may have an affinity for seeking and wreaking havoc on the notorious witches that threaten to corrupt the surroundings but he is partial to one witch in particular–the youngish Chloe (Rose Leslie from “Game of Thrones”) whose assistance is invaluable to the brooding Kaulder. Also, Kaulder is joined by diminutive cleric sidekick Dolan 37 (Elijah Wood) as well in the quest to hunt down these wily witches.

The mysterious vibes pertaining to Kaulder is somewhat realized. For instance, we know that Kaulder works steadily for the organization known as Axe and Cross. Plus, we are introduced to Kaulder’s only close buddy Dolan 36 (Oscar-winning Michael Caine) and are given a vague backstory about Kaulder’s troubled past and histrionics. The no-nonsense Kaulder’s passion for witch hunting is the only straight-forward sign that we definitely have no doubt about one way or the other.

“Witch” way to go? Who knows but only one witch hunter can answer that in Vin Diesel’s Kaulder from the flaccid fantasy THE LAST WITCH HUNTER
“Witch” way to go? Who knows but only one witch hunter can answer that in Vin Diesel’s Kaulder from the flaccid fantasy THE LAST WITCH HUNTER
In addition to highlighting Kaulder and company’s expectations to wipe away the “broomstick broads”, the plot starts to thicken as concerns are brewing involving the resurrection of the menacing creature in the Witch Queen (Julie Englebrecht). Naturally, the Witch Queen presents an immediate danger to the cautious Kaulder because of their nostalgic convoluted conflicts previously. Can the crazy-minded coven that looks to promote the Witch Queen succeed and overcome the slaying methods of Kaulder and his crew of crusaders?

Notoriously clichéd and cockeyed, The Last Witch Hunter is a corrosive concept meshed together with all the creative comparison of a tangled ball of yarn. Similarly, director Breck Eisner’s toothless witch fantasy adventure Hunter echoes the same kind of forgettable computer-generated gibberish that was evident in this year’s bombastic medieval miscue The Seventh Son featuring the Academy Award-winning Jeff Bridges front and center in another numbing sword-swinging, supernatural sideshow of sorts. The overall film project, plagued with Eisner’s scattershot direction and a tepid script by a trio of screenwriters in Cory Goodman, Burk Sharpless and Matt Sazama (responsible for the disastrous Priest and Dracula Untold), screams of a flavorless stew–many ingredients are mixed in but a natural taste for the concoction never comes into fruition. Relentlessly murky and misguided, The Last Witch Hunter fails to trigger anything remotely intriguing beyond the furious flourishes of shocking, cartoonish imagery.

The premise can be regarded as feeling woefully forced and choppy. The dank cinematography is indistinguishable and the visual special effects are an ambivalent hit-and-miss result depending on what frame of the movie’s indescribable spectacle that grabs your undivided attention at the moment. The storyline is hardly gripping or contemplative even from a campy standpoint. The Last Witch Hunter is frivolously flaccid and never manages to capture any of its dizzy-oriented imagination no matter how wildly off-kilter it tries to achieve in its aimless execution.

Diesel fans may buy his high-wire act in Hunter and go with the flow but the actor does not deviate away from the familiar characters he has revisited countless times over in his better known on-screen outings. For years Diesel has reveled in preposterous volt-making vehicles for the most part has captured the curiosity of his targeted demographics in both excitable fanboys and hormonal female followers alike. The question remains: can they show some solid consideration in having the balding bad boy of action-packed capers toil among the foolish inclusion of wayward witches and sorcerers in an exposition that looks as if it was conceived with a Middle Ages crayon? The supporting players in Hunter are as arbitrarily acknowledged as the saturated and over-indulgent whims of this far-fetched fable that seems uniquely colorless despite its chaotic grand package of black magic banality.

Somehow labeling Diesel’s Kaulder as the “last witch hunter” feels deceptive because if the Hollywood sequel machine has its way their version of “last” will undoubtedly be continuous into the next eye-rolling chapter. The real sinful hex at large that some unsuspecting moviegoers will ultimately suffer is succumbing to the laughable supernatural spell that The Last Witch Hunter will cast in insufferable, confusing fashion.

The Last Witch Hunter (2015)

Summit Entertainment

1 hr. 46 mins.

Starring: Vin Diesel, Elijah Wood, Rose Leslie, Michael Caine, Julie Engelbrecht, Olarfur Darri Olafsson, Rena Owen

Directed by: Breck Eisner

MPAA Rating: PG-13

Genre: Horror and Fantasy/Supernatural

Critic’s rating: * 1/2 stars (out of 4 stars)

(c) Frank Ochieng (2015)
> Fighting the same witch twice in the 800 years!

I have seen Vin Diesel in many avatars, from the sci-fi to action, adventure and thriller, they all suits him better, but this supernatural theme seems weird. There was lots of action, so it does not feel like a fantasy film, which is merely the idea of film concept. From the director of ‘Sahara’, the story of an cursed with eternal life witch hunter named Kaulder. Except the opening, the remaining film sets in the present New York city where he has to stop a witch who is trying to bring back the witch queen from the dead.

It was just another those films where the ancient meets the modern world. Okay, I agree a few films did impacted from the last two decades since the evolution of the CGI. Even though, they were not considered the greatest, in the meantime, I don’t know where did this one come from. It was not based on any book, but I think just to make a few quick bucks using the star power. Other than that this film offers nothing new.

Yes, I liked the Diesel’s presence in this, but he should not do films like this, except if the screenplay and role developed to his caliber. It was not a big box office hit, but merely survived and critically didn’t. Even the film fanatics and fans of the star disappointed with it. Now I can’t believe the sequel is announced, but I hope it won’t take off. Anyway, it could become a decent television series rather than a film franchise.

Diesel is the reason for this film to look okay and the story was maybe the hundredth time used. Come on we all know this story, but with a new cast and the settings, it looks different. So for me the film was an average, other than that, I don’t think it is worth recommending to the others. If you still want to see it, then pick the digital 3D version where you can at least enjoy some special effects.

5/10
**The initial tableaux:**

**Initial, part I**: We’re in the black plague era in Europe, say 13th century. The spread of the plague is attributed to the spellcasting of evil witches. Vin Diesel’s character, Kaulder, is one of the witch hunters who finds the Witch Queen. Kaulder and company put an end to the plague, but at the cost of Kaulder’s wife, his only child, and most of his hunter friends. While dying, the Witch Queen curses Kaulder.

**Initial, part II**: In current New York City, Kaulder is still hunting witches. Yes, the same Kaulder. He’s allied with an old group within the church, the Axe and Cross, which tries and imprisons witches. They also keep secrets. Kaulder’s main contact with Axe and Cross is Dolan the 36th, played by Michael Caine, in one of those short roles that he does so well. Dolan is quite old, and Dolan the 37th seems ready to take over being contact with the immortal Kaulder.

**Delineation of conflicts:**
In the present, witch activity seems to be picking up. Something large is brewing. Kaulder suffers a number of reverses, and his list of allies shrinks.

The film began in apocalyptic mode, and near the end it is almost there again. Kaulder must face what he did not face the first time, 800 years ago.

**Resolution:** Will Kaulder find new allies, or must he carry the day himself?

**One line summary:** Attempt at another Vin Diesel movie franchise.

**_Statistics:_**

**Cinematography:** 8/10 Well done on the whole; the visuals kept my attention.

**Sound:** 8/10 Dialog is clear. Music seemed appropriate.

**Acting:** 5/10 Michael Caine was fine in his short role as noted above. Vin Diesel is convincing as an action hero, even here with swords, magic, fists, and intention instead of cars, guns, and explosives. Julie Engelbrecht had her fine moments as Kaulder’s arch nemesis, the Witch Queen, at the very beginning, and at the very end. Olafur Darri Olafsson was a blast as Belial, an in-your-face opponent for Kaulder.

Elijah Wood’s performance sucked rocks. Rose Leslie (Game of Thrones, 17 episodes) was almost interesting as Kaulder’s on-again, off-again witch ally. That was a bit weak, since she was supposed to be the female lead.

**Screenplay:** 5/10 Violence and threat moves the plot along, so the 106 minutes runtime does not drag too badly. I’m glad I saw the film, but would not watch it again. Why not? The narrative is not well-constructed. It seemed like every five minutes there was some change or rules, or some impressive (?) artifact to consider.

At the end of the film, I felt that I should have been happier for the protagonist, but just could not be. Would there be major challenges for him in the centuries to come? Would Chloe be a reliable ally? By this time I did not care, and I felt this to be a major failing of the film.

**_Final Rating:_** 6/10 I liked it better than most people did, but I would be hard pressed to say, ‘you must see this one.’
Arguably the coolest poster a movie’s ever had.

Vin & Co. lay the cheese on **thick** in this one. I’m talking slab of fried haloumi thick. But that’s not exactly the end of the world. It’s kind of like if _Constantine_ was way worse, or if _Seventh Son_ was way better. With a little 2004’s _Van Helsing_ thrown in for good measure.

_Final rating:★★½ – Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._
You cling to your pathetic life, those closest to you betray you and those you claim to protect don’t even know your name.

Hmm, okies. It feels like the studio execs sat around the big table and thought here’s Vin Diesel lets build a boisterous popcorn franchise setting piece around him.

Plot has Diesel as the title character who here in the modern world is all that stands between humanity and the combined forces of the deadliest witches in history. Cue lots of crash bang and wallop, digital blitzkrieg and Vin with a glint in his eye in spite of not having the emotional paths required for the role. In support are Elijah Wood, Michael Caine and Rose Leslie, all of whom arguably come under the miscast banner.

There’s some smart ideas at the film’s core, the nightmares and dreamscapes narrative smarts particularly hint at what might have been a potent asset to the pic. There’s some nifty set-pieces on show as well, which just about stops this from being a boring picture – but it comes mightily close, and in HD form it looks and sounds terrific. Yet it’s never a fully realised whole for dramatic impact, with the casting decisions only compounding this feeling.

In nutshell terms The Last Witch Hunter is a passable time waster that entertains if one is in an undemanding mood. 5/10
***Pedestrian horror sorta-superhero starring Vin Diesel***

An 800 year-old immortal Witch Hunter (Vin Diesel) now lives in swank New York City, still hunting malevolent witches with the help of two priests, an aged one (Michael Caine) and a novice (Elijah Wood). Rose Leslie plays a winsome witch with mettle while Ólafur Darri Ólafsson is on hand as a formidable evil warlock.

I thought I’d like “The Last Witch Hunter” (2015) since it mixes “End of Days” (1999) with “Van Helsing” (2004) and elements of “Ghost Rider” (2007) and “The Mummy” (1999) but, while Vin Diesel towers in the lead role, the story is meh. The overblown intro with its CGI-laden witch grotto sequence wasn’t a good first impression. By the halfway mark I wanted to turn it off, but I persevered.

Everything is here for a quality movie of this sort, but the story isn’t captivating and doesn’t build any drive. It just goes through the motions. The script needed a serious rewrite. But Vin Diesel is charismatic as the witch-hunting ‘James Bond’ and redhead Leslie has some appeal.

The film runs 1 hour, 46 minutes and was shot in Pittsburgh and Southern Cal.

GRADE: C/C- (4.5/10)

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Venom 3 2024 Online Subtitrat in Romana

Venom 3 Online Subtitrat in Romana – [1080p]

Venom 3

titulatură  : Venom 3
a elibera  : 2024-06-04
arhivare :
gen muzical : Science Fiction, Action, Adventure

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Hello, My Name Is Doris 2015 Online Subtitrat in Romana

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Hello, My Name Is Doris

titular  : Hello, My Name Is Doris
a lăsa  : 2015-11-27
arhivare : 95 Minutes
gen muzical : Comedy, Drama, Romance

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Shoplifters 2018 Online Subtitrat in Romana

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Shoplifters

titular  : Shoplifters
a răspândi  : 2018-06-02
arhivare : 121 Minutes
gen muzical : Drama

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Hillbilly Elegy 2020 Online Subtitrat in Romana

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Hillbilly Elegy

titlu  : Hillbilly Elegy
a răspândi  : 2020-11-09
arhivare : 117 Minutes
gen muzical : Drama

If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @
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This film is based on a memoir of the same title written by J.D. Vance, the man who gives name to the main character or, in better words, the character whose point of view is what the movie describes. As I always do, my preparation for any film means I don’t watch trailers nor try to know too much about the story. I knew this movie was based on a supposedly true story or in some sort of book, and I knew that this could very well be an Oscar-bait due to the talented cast and late date of release. That’s it. I had no idea about its political background nor Vance’s personal statements. I’m from Portugal, so I don’t live in a Republicans vs. Democrats or a Red vs. Blue country. Politics is and always will be an extremely irrelevant, depressing, unimpactful topic in my life.

I don’t live in the USA, so unless the controversies surrounding films are global problems, I couldn’t care less about them. To me, Hillbilly Elegy looked like another family melodrama featuring lousy parenting, drug addiction, bullying, discrimination, and all those formulaic plot points developed in this type of movie. Expectations-wise, I couldn’t avoid the first (tremendously negative) reactions from fellow critics on social media, so I prepared myself for the worst. However, there’s a reason why I wrote this prologue above, explaining my origins and what I consider to be important in my personal life…

Not trying to justify other people’s opinions (everyone has their own right to love/hate any film for whatever reasons they choose to), but it feels awfully clear to me that a lot of American critics were influenced by the real-life J.D. Vance, his memoir, and what some people interpreted about his point of view. I repeat: everyone is in their own right to hate this movie (it has more than enough reasons to, and I’ll get to those), but I find “the worst film of the year” statement as exaggerated as the movie’s overdramatic sequences. My biggest issues with Hillbilly Elegy concern its editing choices and its looping narrative structure, besides its generic developments of known cliches.

Starting with the first problem, Ron Howard (Solo: A Star Wars Story) should have managed to create a really great film from the original story. At its best, Hillbilly Elegy could have been a heartbreaking account about the emotional struggles of living in such a violent, problematic family and about trying to escape this harsh lifestyle and reaching a better life overall. However, the constant flashbacks to J.D.’s young life damage the viewer’s connection to the character and the rest of his family members, especially his mom, Bev. The non-stop back-and-forward in the timeline breaks the movie’s pacing (James D. Wilcox’s editing lacks consistency and coherence) and leads me to my next issue.

The entire film is a cycle of dramatic scenes quickly escalating to unbelievable actions. From the repetitive drug abuse and consequent relapses to the horrible parenting displayed in the most random of fashions (in one minute everything’s fine, in the next one, chaos ensues), Vanessa Taylor couldn’t break her screenplay loop, and Ron Howard failed to realize these sequences in a distinguished manner. In addition to all of this, Hillbilly Elegy also does very little to avoid the common formulas regarding this type of narrative, possessing zero surprises throughout the entire runtime, ultimately being entirely predictable practically from the beginning.

Nevertheless, as I mentioned before, this is far from being a contender for the worst piece of cinema in 2020. In fact, it might even get some nominations in the awards season, including the Oscars. As usual with “real-life stories”, their cinematic adaptations always fill the end credits with images or videos of the real people portrayed in the movie. It’s easy to notice the impressive work made by the make-up department. Glenn Close looks incredibly similar to the real Mamaw, and her charismatic portrayal is definitely getting her some nominations, at least in other ceremonies besides the main ones. She delivers yet another emotionally compelling performance, packed with powerfully handled dialogues, detailed expressiveness, and a phenomenal physical display.

Amy Adams (Justice League) doesn’t fall behind. If Glenn Close has chances as a supporting role, Amy Adams might receive a few Best Actress nominations. Her character, Bev, doesn’t receive a fair treatment script-wise, but Adams tries her best to compensate for that flaw. Her performance might be considered extremely over-the-top for many viewers, and I do acknowledge some exaggeration in a couple of scenes, but overall, she delivers a superb interpretation. Gabriel Basso is also pretty great as J.D. (as is Owen Asztalos), same for Haley Bennett (The Devil All the Time) as Lindsay. Hans Zimmer and David Fleming’s score is sweet, but it doesn’t get too many moments to shine.

In the end, Hillbilly Elegy suffers from its formulaic narrative stuck in a tiresome loop of overdramatic scenes that escalated incomprehensibly way too fast. The predictable melodrama features questionable editing decisions that hurt the film’s pacing and overall story consistency, as well as the viewer’s emotional bond with the characters. Ron Howard and Vanessa Taylor fail to depict an interesting premise in a distinctly captivating manner, consequently resorting to the award-worthy performances of Amy Adams and Glenn Close to save the whole movie from total disaster. In addition to the outstanding displays from the two actresses, the remarkable performances from the remaining cast elevate the flawed screenplay, ultimately delivering a few scenes worth hanging on to. Technically, impressively accurate make-up (guaranteed awards buzz) and a lovely score deserve a much better film. I still recommend it to everyone who enjoys melodramatic family stories, but don’t expect anything remotely special.

Rating: C+
Interesting and hearty story, which helps ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ overcome the fact it probably isn’t that great a film as a whole.

I enjoyed watching the cast. Gabriel Basso gives a good performance in the role of J. D. Vance, though is outshone by Owen Asztalos; who plays the younger version of Vance. Elsewhere, star names Amy Adams and Glenn Close support strongly. Freida Pinto is even involved, albeit in a minor and largely unimportant part.

I don’t love the way the story is told, or some of the elements it tries to force through. I did find myself caring for the lead character though, as well as feeling suitably invested in seeing the plot unfold. There’s a nice score in there, also.

I’d say it’s a good film, nothing more or less.
This is another entry in the wrenching genre of Oprah book club family dysfunction fare. The dysfunction extends through two generations here, plenty of material to mine for lousy parenting and distressing reality show-worthy bad behavior.

It is well done I suppose, as you would expect from Ron Howard, but I confess I have a low threshold for this genre and had to force myself to finish it. One bright light was that at least the brother and sister were there fir each other and counterbalanced the antics of Mom and Mamaw.

They show the real people at the end of the film, and I was intrigued by how close they tried to have the actors resemble them. But of course the home movies shown were all of positive moments in the family, as filming life’s awful moments blossomed much later with YouTube. So these cheerful videos acted to gloss over the pain and dysfunction the movie had worked so meticulously to represent throughout the two hour film.

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The Dark and the Wicked 2020 Online Subtitrat in Romana

The Dark and the Wicked Online Subtitrat in Romana – [1080p]

The Dark and the Wicked

subtitlu : The Dark and the Wicked
a lăsa  : 2020-10-29
arhivare : 95 Minutes
compoziţie : Horror, Drama, Mystery

I was excited to see Bryan Bertino’s latest offering. “The Strangers” was an interesting classic introducing masked home invaders in the most unsettling of ways. “The Monster” was a better-than-expected as an estranged mother and daughter are stranded in their car in the woods while being stalked by a monster.

“Wicked’s” Rotten Tomatoes/Metacritic score was a solid (90%/72) and user reviews were ok (3.2 on IMDB). But for me, it fell completely flat as I kept waiting for something to connect the disparate disturbing scenes and story-line together.

Many movies try to tease the viewer with unreliable narrators, leaving them to ponder whether what is happening is supernatural or all in the characters head. “The Babadook,” “Black Swan,” and “The Lighthouse” are examples of movies that do this right. Unfortunately, this doesn’t.

It’s clearly something supernatural that is haunting everybody but beyond some gory and violent scenes (all of which are well done), the movie is just too ambiguous in a very frustrating way.
I was excited to check out Bryan Bertino’s latest offering, “The Dark and the WIcked.” His debut, “The Strangers,” was an instant classic introducing masked home invaders in the most unsettling of ways. His followup, “The Monster,” was well-crafted as an estranged mother and daughter get stranded in their car in the woods while being stalked by a monster.

It was ultimately disappointing as there was nothing to connect the disparate creepy happenings to the story-line.

Many movies try to tease the viewer with unreliable narrators, leaving them to ponder whether what is happening is supernatural or all in the characters head. “The Babadook,” “Black Swan,” and “The Lighthouse” are examples of movies that do this right. Unfortunately, this doesn’t.

It’s clearly something supernatural haunting everybody, but beyond some disturbing and/or violent scenes (all of which are well done), the movie is just too ambiguous in a very frustrating way.
The scariest new film that I’ve seen in 2020, ‘The Dark and the Wicked’ is well-crafted, moodily evocative, and best watched through one’s fingers.
– Jake Watt

Read Jake’s full article…
https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-the-dark-and-the-wicked-2020s-scariest-film
> _loved this one_

let’s start with the poster. I expected some red vibes like from “_evil dead_” something. but turns out, it’s showed a _dark sepia tone_ which works. it’s been a while since I was gasped and terrified for a horror movie.

the sound and music are effective. I mean, this horror built by this sound. not like a creepy orchestra, but a chaotic chromatic sound. _beautiful and terrifying._

my interpretation is we should learn to let go of our loved ones. when the priest said:

> “the devil is already here”

yes, it’s there because you still cling to your loved ones. to let go is not to deny but to accept. to let go is to fear less and love more. I’m sorry if you find this overanalyze.
The film is all about madness at best. Main characters lose their mind and we watch their hallucinations. All the religious references in the film leads to nowhere. The film has a few good jump scares and quite a good beginning which makes you think the rest of the film is going to get somewhere. Unfortunately it doesn’t. **I wouldn’t watch it again, nor would I make my friends watch it**.

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Destroyer 2018 Online Subtitrat in Romana

Destroyer Online Subtitrat in Romana – [1080p]

Destroyer

titlu  : Destroyer
declanşator : 2018-12-25
arhivare : 121 Minutes
compoziţie : Thriller, Crime, Drama, Action

**_A superb central performance and an impressive aesthetic design elevate a quotidian plot_**

> _I think women are constantly reminded of the biological circle of life, the giving of life, the end of life, and I feel like we are so defined by and bound to our biological capabilities. I wanted to imagine the masculine construct of narrative filmmaking in Western civilisation having a different feeling. And to me, there is something about the circular shape of the story that begs for reconsideration of everything you’ve just seen. It invites a deeper look, a recontextualising. And I feel lik__e that process, which is quieter, and demands insight and self-reflection is inherently female or feminine, given the culture we live in right now, which is so fast, so aggressively linear, and in many respects, completely unreflective. So there was just something to me about the idea that the audience is put into this female psyche, as damaged as it is, and then forced to reconsider it from a new angle. That felt radical in narrative storytelling terms._

– Karyn Kusama; “‘Maybe at this point I equate femaleness with being radical’: Karyn Kusama on _Destroyer_” (Tasha Robinson); _The Verge_ (January 17, 2019)

In a career spanning nineteen years, the output of director Karyn Kusama has been chequered, to say the least, with her oeuvre ranging from the excellent (_Girlfight_, _The Invitation_) to the average (_Jennifer’s Body_, her section of the horror anthology _XX_) to the unwatchable (_Æon Flux_). With _Destroyer_, she once again teams with writers Phil Hay (to whom she is married) and Matt Manfredi, having previously worked with the duo on _Æon Flux_ and _The Invitation_. Partly a film noir along the lines of Robert Siodmak’s _The Killers_ (1946) or John Huston’s _The Asphalt Jungle_ (1950); partly an anti-hero narrative depicting someone taking the law into their own hands, à la Don Siegel’s _Dirty Harry_ (1971), Michael Winner’s _Death Wish_ (1974), or Abel Ferrara’s _Bad Lieutenant_ (1992); and partly a heist movie borrowing more than liberally from Michael Mann’s _Heat_ (1995), _Destroyer_ is an unashamedly pulpy genre piece, confrontationally ugly and unapologetically nihilistic. It’s the kind of film one might imagine were we to follow Det. Mills (Brad Pitt) after he opened the box at the end of David Fincher’s _Se7en_ (1995), with crippling emotional trauma the protagonist’s most salient characteristic. Of course, a damaged cop determined to settle one last score isn’t exactly an original concept, and Destroyer never strays too far from the generic tropes seen in films such as Richard Fleischer’s _The New Centurions_ (1972), William Friedkin’s _To Live and Die in L.A._ (1985), and Oren Moverman’s _Rampart_ (2011), or on TV shows such as _Miami Vice_ (1984-1990) and _The Shield_ (2002-2008). However, what it does bring to the table is that the archetypal “he” of such narratives is here a “she”, with Kusama relying heavily on Nicole Kidman’s startling warts-and-all performance to do most of the heavy lifting. Although the film does seem to be under the impression that it offers some portentous revelation about the nature of revenge and psychological torment, approaching every scene with an air of self-seriousness that can become grating, there are undeniably individual moments of great brilliance. And then there’s that lead performance.

The film begins with burnt-out and psychologically damaged LAPD homicide detective Erin Bell (Kidman) awakening in her car looking decidedly worse for wear. Heading to the nearby scene of a John Doe murder, Bell is not welcomed by the other cops, who can’t believe she still has a job. Upon examining the body, Bell notices a distinctive tattoo on the victim’s neck. Telling the other cops she may know who the John Doe is, she leaves. Back at the station, she receives an unmarked envelope containing a $100 bill stained from a dye pack. Ascertaining that the bill is from a botched bank robbery committed years previously, Bell comes to believe that the leader of the crew, Silas (Toby Kebbell), who hasn’t been heard from in almost 20 years, is back in the city. Determined to find him, dead or alive, she begins to work her way through the surviving members of the crew in an effort to locate him – Toby (James Jordan), who’s terminally ill and has been released from prison on compassionate grounds; Arturo (Zach Villa) who has turned his life around and is offering pro bono legal services to immigrants; DiFranco (Bradley Whitford), who wasn’t a member of the crew, but did launder money for them and acted as their fence; and Petra (the always-excellent Tatiana Maslany), Silas’s girlfriend. Meanwhile, Bell is also trying to deal with her rebellious 16-year-old daughter, Shelby (Jade Pettyjohn), who is dating Jay (Beau Knapp), a man in his 20s. Running concurrently to the film’s present, via a series of flashbacks, we learn that 17 years earlier, Bell and her then partner, Chris (Sebastian Stan), were given an undercover assignment to bust Silas and his crew. Posing as a couple, they successfully infiltrated the group, getting the same style of tattoos as seen on the John Doe. However, somewhere along the line, they fell in love for real, with subsequent events resulting in the damaged person Bell has become.

Although Kusama doesn’t explicitly foreground it, gender politics are an important aspect of the film. Much has been made of Kidman’s physical transformation, although both Kusama and Kidman have argued that her appearance is not what the film is about, nor should it be critics’ focus. Still though, we’re not quite at a point where a woman altering her appearance for a role is unremarkable (when women do it, it’s “brave”; when men do it, it’s “acting”), and like Charlize Theron in Patty Jenkins’s _Monster_ (2003), Kidman’s commitment to the part can only be applauded. In terms of the type of character she’s playing, much as did Caoilfhionn Dunne in Ciaran Creagh’s little-seen Irish film _In View_ (2016), Kidman commits to Bell as an unlikable, violent, and psychologically ruined character, which in and of itself challenges conventional notions of what a female lead should be. It’s undeniably fascinating seeing an actress (and a major one at that) get her teeth into the kind of gritty, embittered, and irredeemable character we usually see a man play, especially insofar as the film resists the urge to soften Bell or provide her with a clear road to redemption. In this sense, she has a lot in common with LT (Harvey Keitel) in _Bad Lieutenant_; much of what she does has just as good a chance of dragging her down further to hell as it does of lifting her up. But she’s beyond caring about herself, concerned only with busting (and preferably killing) Silas. Of course, she’s also a mother, and like so many male archetypes, she has not been there for her child. This aspect of her character in particular, compels the audience to ask questions of itself regarding how men and women are perceived on screen – is a woman neglecting a child more forgivable than a man doing so, or less; do we simply expect women to automatically be good mothers in ways we never consider in relation to men as fathers? What do our presuppositions about motherhood on screen say about us as individuals and as a society?

Kidman’s commitment to the role of Bell produces a chameleonic performance that carries most of the film’s weight. Never afraid to take risks (see Lars von Trier’s _Dogville_, Robert Benton’s _The Human Stain_, Jonathan Glazer’s _Birth_, John Cameron Mitchell’s _Rabbit Hole_, Lee Daniels’s _The Paperboy_, Kim Farrant’s _Strangerland_), Kidman completely immerses herself within Bell (who is both the destroyer of the title, and the destroyed). With Bell appearing in literally every scene, there’s a sense of authenticity in Kidman’s performance, almost as if this were a documentary, and Bell was a real person. It’s haunting, disturbing, and heartbreaking all at once. Of course, the makeup design by Bill Corso (_How the Grinch Stole Christmas_; _Foxcatcher_; _Kong: Skull Island_), the hair design by Barbara Lorenz (_Last Days in the Desert_; _Nice Guys_; _La La Land_), and, to a lesser extent, Audrey Fisher’s costume design all play their part in turning Kidman into this broken shell. The flashback structure is also important vis-à-vis the performance, as Kidman plays Bell very differently in these scenes – her hair is more kempt, her skin smoother (via some subtle de-ageing VFX), her eyes don’t droop, her teeth have not yet turned yellow, her gait is more upright, she smiles a couple of times, her voice is more authoritative. This contrast is also true for Toby and Petra. In the flashback scenes, Toby has bleached blond hair, with a loudmouth, devil-may-care attitude, whilst Petra is wide-eyed, something of an innocent, not really taking anything too seriously. When we meet them in the present, however, Toby is literally dying, confined to bed and hooked up to machines to help him breathe, whilst Petra has undergone a similar transformation as Bell – her innocence is gone, replaced by cynicism, anger, and bad skin.

An especially good scene for Kidman (and for Pettyjohn) comes towards the end of the film. Bell and Shelby are in a diner, with Bell trying to scare some sense into her daughter, telling her that she has the potential to do something really good with her life. The dialogue then turns to Shelby explaining that when she was asked to talk about a happy memory with her mother, the only thing she could think of was getting lost in a forest in the middle of winter, with Bell carrying Shelby on her back. Shelby says, “_I felt safe because I was with you_”. However, she then immediately turns it around, talking about how she realised something was wrong when she noticed Bell’s shoes, which were not hiking boots, realising that they were completely lost, and prompting her to ask, “_why are we even out here?_” In the flashback, Bell has no answer. In the present, she sheds a couple of tears. But she still has no answer. It’s a powerful scene for both actresses, probably the most emotional in the film.

Thematically, the film concerns itself with the long-lasting psychological effects of experiencing significant trauma. No one says Bell is suffering from PTSD, but she sure ticks a lot of the boxes, and rarely has a film been so pessimistic about peoples’ ability to recover from emotional damage. DiFranco tells her, “_you know what successful people do? They get over things_”, and in this sense, she is one of the least successful characters you’ll ever see on screen. Her memories are a cancer which has taken over her body and soul, making her loathe herself, with her anguish subsuming every other facet of her being (she never even hints at a smile in the present day).

Aesthetically, Kusama’s LA is as cynical as you’re ever likely to see the city, and obviously owes a sizable debt to Michael Mann’s tendency to depict urban centres so vibrantly as to virtually make them characters – the rain-slicked streets of night-time Chicago in _Thief_ (1981); the bright metropolis of LA in _Collateral_ (2004) and the much darker vision in _Heat_; the neon and humidity of Miami and the clutter and poverty of Port-au-Prince in _Miami Vice_ (2006); the teeming modernity of Hong Kong and the traditions and rituals of Jakarta in _Blackhat_ (2015). The LA seen in _Destroyer_ is a place of dried out waterways, burnt grass, a glaring sun, endless concrete that looks hot to touch, pollution, corruption, betrayal, graffiti, indiscriminate violence. Cinematographer Julie Kirkwood (_The Blackcoat’s Daughter_; _I Am the Pretty Little Thing that Lives in the House_) shoots the present in washed-out anaemic hues, white, beige, brown, lots of sun spots and lens flares, whilst she shots the past with a more saturated palette giving the impression of comfortable warmth rather than stifling heat; a neat metaphorical representation of Bell’s mindset. Combined with the nails-on-blackboard quality of the score, by composer Theodore Shapiro (_Blades of Glory_; _Tropic Thunder_; _The Secret Life of Walter Mitty_), which burrows under your skin, the cumulative aesthetic effect is one of great discomfit.

Of course, there are problems. For the most part, the screenplay is unoriginal and by-the-numbers, and without the power of Kidman’s performance, this would have been a straight-to-Blu-ray. Kusama also struggles to break free of the restraints of the genre, which is especially disappointing when you consider the depth of emotion she brought to the otherwise schlocky thriller, The Invitation. The script also seems to be holding something back, teasing the audience with the promise of a big reveal that will transpose Bell’s story into something far more universal and esoteric. The first season of _True Detective_ (2014) employed this technique as well, but the difference is that when _True Detective_ pulled the trigger, the reveal was horrifying and worth the wait. In _Destroyer_, it’s hard to be certain if there even was a reveal. The script is certainly aiming for profundity, but it’s nowhere near as smart as it thinks it is. Along these lines, Kusama makes some very strange directorial choices. Look at the skateboarders near Bell’s car in the opening scene, for example, shot chiaroscuro in extreme slow-motion not once, but twice. What exactly is their significance? Why does Kusama shoot them as if they are offering some kind of life-altering revelation? Are they supposed to act as a voiceless chorus? Are they a metaphor for something? The pacing can also be sluggish at times, lacking in urgency, and thus undermining the existential crisis at the heart of the film. This is especially true if you figure out the twist, which my colleague did in literally the second scene.

_Destroyer_ is an average story elevated by the commitment of its leading actress and some laudable aesthetic choices. It’s a cynical and humourless film noir aspiring to something more substantial, but never really accomplishing it. However, its unflinching depiction of devastating emotional trauma, presenting Bell as an open wound, slowly bleeding out, is brilliantly handled. The complete inverse of films which depict characters responding to tragedy with humour, optimism, and determination, _Destroyer_ is brutally nihilistic, giving us a character whose obsession is both keeping her alive and killing her. Although it will be far too lugubrious for some, the film has much to recommend it, not the least of which is that extraordinary performance at its centre.
**Starring… Nicole Kidman’s Wig and Fake Crow’s Feet**

The final moments of this film came with what was supposed to be a dramatic fade out of the haggard, liver-spot riddled face of the protagonist evaporates into what is supposed to be wave of glorious white light. Only there is no glory in this film. As we are reminded at the end as we stare at the barely human image of latex over-spray clogging Ms. Kidman’s nostrils, we have to wonder what would have possessed her to take this role. Most of her acting in the film consists of her proving apparently that beautiful actresses who collectively spend the GDP of a small nation to look forever young can play dress-up and do boring and ugly on request. I found it to be an affront to both quality acting and homely women.

The plot is a redemption arc turned on its head with a twist of non-linear story-telling and “hide the salami” which attempts to maintain the audience interest by forcing to piece together who is who and what happened when. Not in a nose-bleed Tenet way, but in an “OMG! I can’t believe that’s Nicole Kidman!” way. Ms. Kidman plays a leather-skinned, bag-of-bones alcoholic who belongs in a trailer park! Could the producers have found a powerhouse actress to carry this film without 10 pounds of latex applied to her face? Of course. But in recognition of how flimsy the plot line was, they opted to follow the trend of other productions (e.g., Guy Piece playing Peter Weyland under more latex than his body weight) who prefer to retain a-list stars. The shock and awe of Ms. Kidman’s appearance wears off after about the thirteenth close up of her staring into space looking tired and haggard and walking like her legs have atrophied.

As bad as that sounds, it gets worse. The moralizing (and there is constant moralizing) in this film is not just confused, but goes nowhere. The good mom-bad mom idea fails as we have no clue about why Kidman’s character didn’t manage to do something at least somewhat decent for her daughter sometime in her life. I guess that’s because she’s a drunk? The greedy/haunted cop angle also goes nowhere because other than putting two nice looking individuals together in the flashbacks, there is almost no indication of chemistry between Kidman’s character and her sadly absent baby-daddy that we can believe in any kind of character arc leading to her ostensible self-destruction.

Getting back to what is supposed to pass for a plot, something shows up from the past in the old drunk cop’s life. That’s original! Old cop is apparently suffers PTSD related to an undercover op gone bad. That’s original too. Breadcrumbs are dropped slowly but pointedly so that there is never any confusion about the things you are supposed to piece together. When first twist finally comes, you’ll find it so obvious that might actually overlook the fact that the clue that was left at the crime scene makes absolutely no sense. A the second twist (which involves more flexing by the make-up artists) arrives immediately thereafter, and you are meant to feel a sense of loss for the protagonist, but my reaction was to curse screenwriter’s for making me sit through what was essentially mental (and visual) masturbation. I think I just threw up a little visualizing that scene again.

It is also worth noting that for an a-list production like this, the production team was a little sloppy with their set dressings. Unless Ms. Kidman’s character is supposed to be 65, there should not be any big 1980s station wagons parked in bank parking lots like that’s a car ordinary people were driving. In the cell phone department, they take us back to the pre- iPhone era, but why even have cell phones in the flashbacks? The only way the story works is if the flashbacks are supposed to happen around 1980 (i.e., the production team went out and got the right cars) but if the current day of the story is around 2005-2010 with Nokia phones (which also fits with Kidman’s police force driving around in crown vic… something you don’t see much of in 2020), then the station wagons are wrong. I suspect the timeline of the plot got muddles when the “out-of-control teenage daughter” plot thread was added, which could be integrated easily with the addition of smartphone technology, otherwise the plot would have been bogged down by “where’s my daughter” scenes.

Bottom line: save yourself the frustration and revulsion of enduring this film. Send a message to Hollywood that if they want to have diverse heroines of all ages and appearances, they should try casing diverse women into lead roles. If you are looking for a modern entry in the neo-noir genre, I recommend the overlooked “Small Town Crime”, or alternatively if you’d like to watch a focused, credible treatment of a self-destructive drunk cop suspense film, and don’t mind subtitles, check out “No Rest for the Wicked” (original title “Paz Para Los Malvados”).

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