"The Horde" is a 2012 historical film directed by Andrei Proshkin and written by Yury Arabov. The film is a narrative of how Saint Alexius healed Taidula Khatun, the mother of the Golden Horde khan Jani Beg from blindness.
Brilliantly shot, a window into a world that is probably more alien to most people here than that of Dune.
Cordelia » Thu Feb 16, 2017 1:57 pm wrote:Just started reading 'Never Let Me Go', Kazuo Ishiguro's dystopian novel about a group of children raised at a mysterious English boarding school called 'Hailsham'. I saw the film adaptation several years ago and it's one of the most powerful films I'll never watch again. Just too heartbreaking, about the human cost of science and medicine. Strong, poignant performances, especially actor Andrew Garfield's Tommy D.
WoW - Some films have that magic something that creates an atmosphere throughout as is the case in this gem but the feelings it evokes are so mixed but the underlying sadness, played or rather underplayed so Poignantly by the protagonists is a wonderful thing, a beautiful piece of cinema that I would have missed were it not for this thread : ))
There's holes in the sky where rain gets in the holes are small that's why rain is thin.
Interesting, "These events are all connected..." but then they create a fairy tale to tell you what those connections are without revealing their true connection tying the stings together to their source, the originators of the deception.
Look at the reaction and consequential cash flow to security and intelligence services that followed, but never deterred the 911 plot.
The Neon Demon is some high-quality stuff. Highly recommended - in fact I feel I should watch it again. Proper cinema with the camera playing an important role.
Cordelia » Thu Feb 16, 2017 1:57 pm wrote:Just started reading 'Never Let Me Go', Kazuo Ishiguro's dystopian novel about a group of children raised at a mysterious English boarding school called 'Hailsham'. I saw the film adaptation several years ago and it's one of the most powerful films I'll never watch again. Just too heartbreaking, about the human cost of science and medicine. Strong, poignant performances, especially actor Andrew Garfield's Tommy D.
WoW - Some films have that magic something that creates an atmosphere throughout as is the case in this gem but the feelings it evokes are so mixed but the underlying sadness, played or rather underplayed so Poignantly by the protagonists is a wonderful thing, a beautiful piece of cinema that I would have missed were it not for this thread : ))
Sorry that I didn't include warning that film (and novel) could be triggering to survivors because it's about dispensable people.
The film is a faithful adaptation of the novel, which is beautifully written; one scene, not included in the film, evokes a brilliant, dreamlike image. Both the novel & film remind me of Cormac McCarthy's 'The Road' in that reading & viewing once is a powerful experience I don't want to re-visit.
I think it's unusual when a film adaptation outshines its source material but another arresting drama (set within an entirely different social strata than 'The Road' or 'Never Let Me Go':)
The charisma & physicality of Jeff Bridge's performance as a philandering, alcoholic, misogynistic author of children's books is exceptional; well acted by all with moments of comic genius woven within tragedy....... fwiw
The greatest sin is to be unconscious. ~ Carl Jung
We may not choose the parameters of our destiny. But we give it its content. ~ Dag Hammarskjold 'Waymarks'
stefano » Mon Feb 27, 2017 5:46 am wrote:The Neon Demon is some high-quality stuff. Highly recommended - in fact I feel I should watch it again. Proper cinema with the camera playing an important role.
I'll have to disagree with you there. Although visually spectacular, with a few moments of inspired Lynchian surrealness, it should have been 30 minutes, max. Personally I was disappointed.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
"Evolution" should be equally divisive -- gorgeous, dream logic, baffling.
I strongly suspect its release has been delayed because Gore Verbinski wanted to make A Cure For Wellness, which seems more than slightly, uh....inspired, shall we say.
I realize I'm responding to a temporarily banned poster but the trailer for Logan was really quite intriguing and it gave me the impression of being a very unusual entry to the superhero genre. There's another batch of six or ten comic-book blockbusters coming this season and they all look dreadful, and all reduxes of the same old thing wherein everyone bridges their diversity and overcomes their differences to team up against the single god-like world-destroyer with many explosions and then the big final swirl in which the villain, having assumed all powers of the universe, suddenly must say: you dare? what? my omnipotence has been pentrated?! No, noooooooooo!!! etc. etc. (The first Marvel-produced Spider-Man might work to finally capture the actual nerd-loser spirit of the Ditko comics however.) So the Logan thingie really suggests something a lot deeper, with aging and loss and family and death and sadness and skepticism about the whole hero nonsense and no necessary happy ending in the mix. Now if it didn't also suggest convoys of 400 super-soldiers at a time coming to grab a single super and being ripped apart for 20 deafening epilepsy-inducing minutes...
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We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.
To Justice my maker from on high did incline: I am by virtue of its might divine, The highest Wisdom and the first Love.
I enjoy watching historical documentaries and history-based novels adapted for film. The flick recommended by Searcher at the top of the page has a weak storyline and is terrible in every way, even if it has a few picturesque scenes. There are far better documentaries to watch if this genre is of your liking.
Simply a difference of opinion, nothing more.
Cordelia, thanks for sharing Never Let Me Go
"...it's one of the most powerful films I'll never watch again."
Looks like one of the disturbingly unforgettable films that once watched, you wish you could forget, but I've bookmarked it and will watch it.
Mr. WRex, Evolution, a film or television show? I couldn't find anything related to a film by Verbinski being in production, but one, a French film with that title from 2015 or 2016 sure looks creepy: