5 reviews
While I love watching gay-themes dramas, even indie and amateurish small productions, this one is strange. The actors are good-looking and - maybe - try their best, but obviously, the direction ans screenplay was so bad that they just didn't understand what they had to do. When they cry, well, I just laughed. They probably didn't even have a script to explain to them the character's very broken lives. One tries to have a straight life (because he is an EU high rank officer ?), the other wants a man at all cost to make her mother's warnings turn false, and the third one, well, unclear except that he's unhappy and/or envious.
Then, whenever they encountered or they broke, the complete lack of depth, let me wondered why so. I (we) just didn't understand much. At one point, it was even unclear if they had sex or not. When he brings the coffee, you are supposed to understand the unseen, that they are now together, that they just had sex that night. Deleted scene ? Did the moviemakers just didn't care ? Actors refused to play a gay scene ? The latter seems the highest probability, as Teun Luijkx never kisses Mark Waschke. Maybe it's been a problem with this actor and thus the director couldn't do much.
What chocked me, is that EU Commission propaganda about money expanse moving back and forth from Brussels to Strasbourg. Going to Strasbourg, of course, while truth is the complete reverse. The EU unelected commission built a second parliament house in Brussels, and forces MPs to do part of the parliament work illegally in Brussels, while it should all be done in Strasbourg. They show the trucks doing this costly move, wanting to make you believe it's stupid to go to Strasbourg while, once again by international treaty, it's the reverse.
The threesome drama looks like just a wrapping of that message, and thus no one cared really to build a real drama in that movie.
It was interesting to see some insides and life of both buildings. I thus rate it a little higher because of this interesting scenery. (+1 for this). I did watch it to the end (so I base rate it 5: watchable- but lost my time). Multilanguage acting was interesting too.
Too bad about the drama, could have been nice.
Then, whenever they encountered or they broke, the complete lack of depth, let me wondered why so. I (we) just didn't understand much. At one point, it was even unclear if they had sex or not. When he brings the coffee, you are supposed to understand the unseen, that they are now together, that they just had sex that night. Deleted scene ? Did the moviemakers just didn't care ? Actors refused to play a gay scene ? The latter seems the highest probability, as Teun Luijkx never kisses Mark Waschke. Maybe it's been a problem with this actor and thus the director couldn't do much.
What chocked me, is that EU Commission propaganda about money expanse moving back and forth from Brussels to Strasbourg. Going to Strasbourg, of course, while truth is the complete reverse. The EU unelected commission built a second parliament house in Brussels, and forces MPs to do part of the parliament work illegally in Brussels, while it should all be done in Strasbourg. They show the trucks doing this costly move, wanting to make you believe it's stupid to go to Strasbourg while, once again by international treaty, it's the reverse.
The threesome drama looks like just a wrapping of that message, and thus no one cared really to build a real drama in that movie.
It was interesting to see some insides and life of both buildings. I thus rate it a little higher because of this interesting scenery. (+1 for this). I did watch it to the end (so I base rate it 5: watchable- but lost my time). Multilanguage acting was interesting too.
Too bad about the drama, could have been nice.
- fabrizio-297-905998
- Jul 9, 2023
- Permalink
I would have loved to give this film more, but it is really at almost every level poor. First the script, I love meandering films about people who try to live their life and cope with it. But this is so utterly uninteresting: it never relates to anything deeply human, it is so very shallow. They talked a lot in the film, but I did not hear one interesting line: no good for a film about human emotions and interactions and no action movie. You did instead hear a lot of: "What do you mean?" or "What's the matter?" or "I love you", "Me too". Poor writing. Then the actors themselves. Quite bad casting or not knowing what to cast (I think the latter). And did the director tell the girl just one thing? To be stupid, naive and giggle all the time? Small part but also bad: her mother. So cliché, more cliché's by the way, for instance the opera with Maria Callas as an illustration for their mood (and not being from the street, the maker wants to tell us obviously). The German guy was OK, you saw him trying to make the best of it, but with such poor material he had no chance. The worst was the Dutch guy. He had to play someone who is gradually really understanding what was happening, to himself and the others, at least that's what I could make up from it, but failed heavily in the scenes he was supposed to act that out. The worst was their lack of chemistry. Not only among themselves they hadn't, but also I had not one moment of love or emotion for the characters, how hard the director tried, letting them cry on screen. They cried, I didn't.
I stumbled upon this during a sneak preview and I must unfortunately admit it is probably one of the worst movies I've ever seen. It has a terrible screenplay, most actions and characters in the story are utterly unbelievable. It is so badly edited that the pacing is wrong in almost every scene. Camera-work is amateurish (Dutch cameramen usually ARE reliable in this regard) and the unexperienced director has no clue about making the story work for the screen. Most acting here is so laughable that the audience laughed at scenes that should be heartbreaking. The only acceptable performance comes from Rossy de Palma, known from several Almodóvar movies.
The story is about several European civil servants meeting at the EU-center Brussels and starting and finishing relations. It is somewhat in the realm of Bertolucci's The Dreamers: Young people experimenting with their lives, sexuality and ending back in reality again. At first sight it seems like some sponsored EU propaganda, showing how great it is to meet all kinds of different Europeans. Many scenes are filmed in Brussels and Strassbourg, the EU color blue is prominently used (even the plaster is blue). However as the movie progresses more criticism arises: unnecessary locations to Strasbourg, nobody actually works in the movie (the only work scenes are afternoon drinks). Add to this that you can see the characters not only as standing for themselves but also for their respective nations, the whole pointlessness of European integration comes to light (intended or not?). In the end everybody is alone again, signified by the atom symbolism in the Brussels Atomium.
It seems like an intelligent movie, it even could have been, but it fails so utterly in all movie departments that I can unfortunately only recommend that you avoid this like the plague.
The story is about several European civil servants meeting at the EU-center Brussels and starting and finishing relations. It is somewhat in the realm of Bertolucci's The Dreamers: Young people experimenting with their lives, sexuality and ending back in reality again. At first sight it seems like some sponsored EU propaganda, showing how great it is to meet all kinds of different Europeans. Many scenes are filmed in Brussels and Strassbourg, the EU color blue is prominently used (even the plaster is blue). However as the movie progresses more criticism arises: unnecessary locations to Strasbourg, nobody actually works in the movie (the only work scenes are afternoon drinks). Add to this that you can see the characters not only as standing for themselves but also for their respective nations, the whole pointlessness of European integration comes to light (intended or not?). In the end everybody is alone again, signified by the atom symbolism in the Brussels Atomium.
It seems like an intelligent movie, it even could have been, but it fails so utterly in all movie departments that I can unfortunately only recommend that you avoid this like the plague.
You've got Dutch film, French-, British, German, Portugeuse etc. But what is a European film? To me &ME is a good example. Actors and actresses from different countries, at least two or three different languages and and sometimes don't bother with the subtitles.
&ME has all that, besides a bizarre plot(or no plot), sometimes weird acting and a story (is there one?) you can write on a napkin. But if you sit back and enjoy the movie, don't wonder to much about the friendship you see unfolding, or the bizarre workings of the EU-council you'll have a good time.
It's a small movie about a love story that takes some weird twists. There is some nudity in it, but not something us Main-land-Europeans worry about. And because it's a small movie you'll forgive it it's fault.
&ME has all that, besides a bizarre plot(or no plot), sometimes weird acting and a story (is there one?) you can write on a napkin. But if you sit back and enjoy the movie, don't wonder to much about the friendship you see unfolding, or the bizarre workings of the EU-council you'll have a good time.
It's a small movie about a love story that takes some weird twists. There is some nudity in it, but not something us Main-land-Europeans worry about. And because it's a small movie you'll forgive it it's fault.