2046 (2004) – Film Review
Good film about love and the pain that such feeling can bring but also, besides this more obvious element, very nice story looking into the life, and creative and professional approach of a writer.
Good film about love and the pain that such feeling can bring but also, besides this more obvious element, very nice story looking into the life, and creative and professional approach of a writer.
A story full of life about suicide. Abbas Kiarostami submerges us into the (maybe) last hours of Badii (Homayoun Ershadi) while he is trying to seek someone to either bury or help him get out of the hole he has dug after attempting suicide.
Te-di-ous. Experimentation for the sake of experimentation. Derek Jarman supposedly tries to take us on a visually poetic journey accompanied by the poems of William Shakespeare, but the result is just a mess of repetitive, unbearable, and near to meaningless images either not linked at all or too simply connected to some of the minor pieces (for a reason) from “England’s national poet”.
Beautiful documentary that takes a look at the political journey of one of the most important figures of the 20th century in Latin America.
In this magnum opus of the Nouvelle Vague, François Truffaut devises magnificent use of narration, dialogue, imagery and editing one of the most literary pieces ever created on film.