interesting. It's boring again.

Roslyn 2021-12-23 08:01:59

What's interesting is the shooting technique and the scattered narrative. It's boring, it's still a plot like this.

But what is rare is that although this ending is a bit too beautiful, it is much more subtle than I thought, and it does not feel very unconventional. What I am wondering is whether the meeting place of Senate members will let a pregnant woman in casually? The terrorist can't just dress up in disguise. . . --?

We are familiar with the actor Douglas since "The Day After Day" and "Brokeback Mountain". The face of the big boy plays a role that is somewhat depressed and exhausted in his daily life. With a lot of blank silence, a little appealing, helpless eyes and a little body language shaking, it explains Douglas's next kind of turbulent situation. Forced to calm down in the face of helplessness. But personally feel that the role is a bit top-heavy. (But after watching it, you will feel that this is actually the result of a big star's lack of prominent performance.)

Isabella, a pregnant woman, started playing football with her pregnant belly in October, which made me ashamed. Then, under the pressure and pain of my anxiety, and running for my husband, it made me ashamed. It seems that pregnant women can't be so tossing about it! ? The final blow made her fetus in the Senate, and this was a good turning point. The director used a large floor-to-ceiling window as the background, and there was a clear blue sky outside. Because of the light, the figure was just a silhouette. Don't think that this is a very simple setting. The director has a moral meaning: things that are murky and unclear will gradually become clear with time. At such a critical juncture, the birth of the child brought a ray of life to the entire unmovable plot.

There are many perspectives in the film: different races, different countries, different families, different things, different identities, and different moods. . . Perhaps people who are dizzy are likely to be more dizzy. . At least when the film suddenly returned to the exploding scene, I didn't understand it. . I went back and pondered it again.

I remembered a sentence: This is how the picture of time and space is pulled back by the lens. It turned out to be based on the time of the suicide bombing incident, spreading out the staggered records of two times.

In fact, this kind of dizzy feeling is much better than when Godzilla appeared in the sky when watching "Chloe Vera". But the period in Morocco is very in love, with the feeling of independent movies. Continuously use slow motion to radiate the urgency of the plot, splashing mud or flying dust, all ingest your eyes in this way.

The overall feeling of the film gives people a sense of balance. I don't think which character is prominent, and which character doesn't feel the need to appear at all. The common interpretation of all the characters balances the senses of this film, although some slow motion is still a bit of anxious, because I don't know what will happen to him in the next second. But this feeling is really good.

PS: The original soundtrack is not bad.

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Extended Reading
  • Kenton 2022-03-27 09:01:12

    The pace of the story is smooth. Although it is an old-fashioned anti-terrorism theme, there is still something worth thinking about. Although many people will scold the United States for extorting confessions after watching this film, but it is the United States that produces this film. After 9/11, their anti-terrorist tactics are really outrageous, but does such a film show that they are also introspecting and thinking. And, the country continues to defend their freedom to express this introspection publicly.

  • Willis 2022-03-25 09:01:11

    A lot of familiar faces, a broken thing

Rendition quotes

  • Corrine Whitman: Honey, this is nasty business. There are upwards of 7,000 people in central London alive tonight, because of information that we elicited just this way. So maybe you can put your head on your pillow and feel proud for saving one man while 7,000 perish, but I got grandkids in London, so I'm glad I'm doing this job... and you're not.

  • Corrine Whitman: Why don't you ask your boss how badly he really does want to stick his neck out for a terrorist.

    Alan Smith: Well, he might for due process. Maybe I should have a copy of the Constitution sent to your office.