ほかげ
SimilarMoulin Rouge! (2001),
Watch afterA Quiet Place (2018), Anatomy of a Fall (2023),
Avatar: The Way of Water (2022) Don't Look Up (2021), Fight Club (1999), Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024), Green Book (2018),
Oppenheimer (2023) Priscilla (2023), The Holdovers (2023), WALL·E (2008),
Shinya Tsukamoto's film attempts to explore hope and sorrow in post-war Japan, with mixed results.
To make Shadow of Fire, Shinya Tsukamoto stitched together two films. As a result, it proves both unpredictable and unable to satisfyingly hit the tragic and devastating notes it aims for.
Recently, Tsukamoto has turned his attention away from the subversive and pulpy shock-oriented cinema that made him a cult figure among cinephiles. Instead, he’s pursued more soulful lamentations on the state and history of Japan. In particular, he seems preoccupied with stories about those who experience an aching sense of trauma following encounters with crushing violence. Continue Reading →
Persuasion
StarringAnthony Stewart Head,
There’s no kind way to say this, so let’s get it out of the way at the top: Netflix’s production of Persuasion thinks you’re stupid. Despite being an adaptation of Jane Austen’s classic novel, this film has faith in neither its source material, nor its audience. Continue Reading →
Emma
Clever, handsome, and rich but not necessarily in that order, Emma Woodhouse (Anya Taylor-Joy) is a self-made matchmaker. She tinkers in the personal lives of her peers; she fancies herself somewhere between a queen bee and a B-level goddess. That isn’t to say she plays god, though. She has just enough at stake for that to not be the case. It’s more that she, given her 1800s English setting and semi-detached friendships, is royalty in training. It’s an archetypal base that’s spawned adaptations both loose and tight, but when it comes to Autumn de Wilde’s, it’s a little too atrophied to be either. Continue Reading →