One of the reasons it worked for me was because it didn't try and do the whole traditional 'entire backstory in one scene' thing for any of its characters; it simply placed us in the moment. And what a moment it was. Did anyone else experience a palpable sense of doom when they introduced the characters at the airport?
Glenn is a twentysomething freelance writer from Melbourne, Australia. Apart from this blog he is the film editor for Onya Magazine and writes regularly for Trespass Magazine. His work has appeared in The Big Issue, Encore Magazine, Forte Magazine, The Film Experience Blog and was the film correspondent for The Outland Institute radio program on JOY 94.4.
Stale Popcorn, noun, 1. A veritable cornucopia of movie geekdom, celebrity worship, Australian film discussion and all with occasional musical interludes! All wrapped up in the salty buttery taste of movie popcorn that's been sitting in the box for too long. What's not to love?
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8 comments:
I had the same reaction. Good to see you aren't freaking out and proclaiming "One of the best films of the year!" like everyone else.
We'll see about that, Ali.
Don't do this to me, Glenn!
...we'll see?
Well I liked it a lot. I do think it's one of the best films of the year. Not "masterpiece" super great, but really really good. Did everything right.
Nah. C+ from me. Maybe lower.
One of the reasons it worked for me was because it didn't try and do the whole traditional 'entire backstory in one scene' thing for any of its characters; it simply placed us in the moment. And what a moment it was. Did anyone else experience a palpable sense of doom when they introduced the characters at the airport?
Yeah, nobody on the plane new each other so it made sense to just act as another passenger in that sense.
Doom was the word of the day though. And anxious.
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