juswes_
Se unió el dic 2020
Te damos la bienvenida a el nuevo perfil
Our updates are still in development. While the previous version of the profile is no longer accessible, we're actively working on improvements, and some of the missing features will be returning soon! Stay tuned for their return. In the meantime, the Ratings Analysis is still available on our iOS and Android apps, found on the profile page. To view your Rating Distribution(s) by Year and Genre, please refer to our new Guía de ayuda.
Distintivos2
Para obtener información sobre cómo conseguir distintivos, visita página de ayuda sobre distintivos.
Calificaciones397
Calificación de juswes_
Comentarios2
Calificación de juswes_
Rewatching The Departed only reaffirms what I've always felt: this is a near-perfect crime thriller, and possibly Scorsese's best work.
From the opening moments, the tension is coiled tight and never lets up. The performances are staggeringand every actor brings a level of commitment and nuance that makes every scene feel like it's teetering on the edge. DiCaprio's intensity, Damon's restraint, Nicholson's chaos; it's like watching a masterclass in character work.
The storytelling is razor-sharp, the buildup relentless, and the payoffs hit like a punch to the gut. It's smart, stylish, and brutal, but never hollow.
A peach of a crime movie. One of my all-time favorites.
From the opening moments, the tension is coiled tight and never lets up. The performances are staggeringand every actor brings a level of commitment and nuance that makes every scene feel like it's teetering on the edge. DiCaprio's intensity, Damon's restraint, Nicholson's chaos; it's like watching a masterclass in character work.
The storytelling is razor-sharp, the buildup relentless, and the payoffs hit like a punch to the gut. It's smart, stylish, and brutal, but never hollow.
A peach of a crime movie. One of my all-time favorites.
28 Years Later delivers a gripping, high-stakes continuation to the franchise that feels both timely and deeply cinematic. The tension is expertly sustained, the cinematography is striking; framing violence, dread, and stillness with equal weight, and the pacing keeps you on edge without feeling rushed.
What surprised me most was the emotional depth beneath the blood and terror. The film explores masculinity with quiet nuance, especially through Spike and his father. His father's obsession with forcing his son into manhood becomes a cautionary subplot about fragility, fear, and generational pressure.
There are moments that lean too heavily into spectacle, and a few character arcs feel underdeveloped. But those are minor flaws in a film that largely gets it right.
Not just a nostalgic retread, this is a bold, anxious, and thematically rich installment.
What surprised me most was the emotional depth beneath the blood and terror. The film explores masculinity with quiet nuance, especially through Spike and his father. His father's obsession with forcing his son into manhood becomes a cautionary subplot about fragility, fear, and generational pressure.
There are moments that lean too heavily into spectacle, and a few character arcs feel underdeveloped. But those are minor flaws in a film that largely gets it right.
Not just a nostalgic retread, this is a bold, anxious, and thematically rich installment.
Encuestas realizadas recientemente
9encuestas realizadas en total