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Chadrick 2022-04-23 07:06:06
It is more regarded as an artistic carrier of "allegation of architecture and emotion" and "reflection and parting of the American dream", because the process of emotional advancement is somewhat unconvincing. But the text is very good, the director's inner control of the positioning, mirror surface, blank space, architectural angle and character relationship is in place, even the heroine's smile contains different levels of "shyness, contempt and enjoyment of...
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Kellie 2022-04-23 07:06:06
The buildings and spaces in the restrained shots are in harmony without any discomfort. Every shot is also a very good photo. The combination of the two protagonists, the uncles and the loli, reminds me of "Lost in Translation". The Ministry is a little paranoid in audio-visual language. Two souls trapped in their original families meet in Columbus. Looking at the same restrained building, it is probably a kind of...
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Marcel 2022-04-22 07:01:57
Looking forward to making a Brasilia version...definitely more fun. . . The old man who was picked up by the children at 6:30 in the morning fell asleep for a short time. . . #literary youth...
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Winston 2022-04-22 07:01:57
twenty minutes...
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Cora 2022-04-22 07:01:57
Asian myths about family relationships are indeed common. In addition, it is the first time to see architecture participate in the construction of narrative in such a direct way, which is wonderful. [The green color of this film is so beautiful, the art is well selected, and the frames are...
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Westley 2022-04-22 07:01:57
The garden state photographed by Ozu. Is Haley Lu Richardson the best of the bunch of young actresses right...
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Camylle 2022-04-22 07:01:57
The director created a video world with space as the protagonist. For 101 minutes, he was immersed in the extremely beautiful pictures composed of lines. The pictures were clean and able to take a deep breath; the light was gentle and always followed the steel jungle. Architecture has changed from wrapping the body space to a space that accommodates the soul; Kogonada is so restrained and...
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Evans 2022-04-22 07:01:57
What a temperamental image, it is actually a maiden work. There are some chat parts that remind me of Linklater, and the plot parts have a richer meaning because of the gender, class, and race settings. Columbus is so...
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Joana 2022-04-22 07:01:57
Just like what Casey said when describing a famous church, this movie, regardless of the plot or the language of the shots, is a highly condensed statement of this sentence - asymmetric, yet...
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Vito 2022-04-22 07:01:57
63/100 The script structure, frame design is symmetrical like those landmark buildings in Columbus. The various symbols in the film strongly felt the distressing emotions of the two main characters trapped in their respective lives at the beginning, and then we saw how they resembled and the process of the final "identity exchange" . The narrative silence is reminiscent of last year's...
Columbus Comments
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Andrew 2022-04-10 09:01:08
A movie that uses architecture as the protagonist of the movie is still so good, it seems that it is the only one
Speaking of Columbus, the first thing that comes to our mind should be Christopher Columbus, the great navigator who discovered the New World. Historically, although Columbus was not the first European explorer to reach the Americas, he ushered in a great era of European exploration and...
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Michelle 2022-04-06 09:01:07
[Film Review] Columbus (2017) 7.5/10
Feature film debut from Korean-born American video essayist Kogonada (a nom de guerre in homage to Yosujirô Ozu's screenwriter Kogo Noda), COLUMBUS, its title unequivocally pins down the film's locality, entirely set in Columbus, Indiana, a city mostly famous for its modern architecture, and under...
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[Jin and Casey sit on the entrance steps of the Columbus City Hall]
Jin: I think this is what my dad was referring to.
Casey: That?
Jin: Yes.
Casey: Hm.
Jin: If it's not, I'm gonna say that it is.
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Jin: [translating his father's manuscript in Korean] It says, "Effort plus cost," uh, "to see what is invisible and always visible." No, "omni-visible." No, "always visible." "Always visible."
Casey: Wow. I should ask Gabe at work. He's really into these kind of riddles.
Jin: Yes. Yes, what the fuck? My father was always trying to be so profound. Why wouldn't he just write the name down or draw a better picture?
Casey: Well, I didn't think he thought someone was ever going to read this. He probably knew exactly what he meant.
Jin: Still fucking annoying.