kim-215-306612
Joined Jan 2015
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kim-215-306612's rating
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kim-215-306612's rating
Have you considered why so many Americans neither vote nor care about Ukraine and the world situation?
The Florida Project provides a good picture of a rapidly growing class in the USA, namely the poorest, who live from day to day, where there is absolutely no surplus to think about what is happening in a country 6000 km away.
In fact, it is more about finding a way to pay next week's rent.
Moonee is about 5-6 years old and lives with her mother Halley outside Disney in a rundown motel run by Bobby (Willem Dafoe). The mother has stopped working at a strip club because she did not want to provide extra service to the guests and now has to manage as best as she can.
Society is not much help, even when she tells the welfare office why she was fired, she is met with reprimands and told that her benefits will disappear now that she cannot hold a job - thanks for nothing.
Ingeniously, we see the world through Moonee's eyes, while we sense the mother's desperation out of the corner of our eye about how to manage the next day, the next rent, and truly experience how the slippery slope goes from real jobs to minor scams and further down.
But even in this decay, I was never in doubt for a second that Halley loved her daughter more than anything in the world, and that makes it impossible not to wish for things to end well, even though we know it probably won't happen. One cannot help but feel sympathy and ask oneself how she is actually supposed to get out of the situation she is in. Society is certainly of no help.
The Florida Project is a film that will leave a strong impression in your mind.
The Florida Project provides a good picture of a rapidly growing class in the USA, namely the poorest, who live from day to day, where there is absolutely no surplus to think about what is happening in a country 6000 km away.
In fact, it is more about finding a way to pay next week's rent.
Moonee is about 5-6 years old and lives with her mother Halley outside Disney in a rundown motel run by Bobby (Willem Dafoe). The mother has stopped working at a strip club because she did not want to provide extra service to the guests and now has to manage as best as she can.
Society is not much help, even when she tells the welfare office why she was fired, she is met with reprimands and told that her benefits will disappear now that she cannot hold a job - thanks for nothing.
Ingeniously, we see the world through Moonee's eyes, while we sense the mother's desperation out of the corner of our eye about how to manage the next day, the next rent, and truly experience how the slippery slope goes from real jobs to minor scams and further down.
But even in this decay, I was never in doubt for a second that Halley loved her daughter more than anything in the world, and that makes it impossible not to wish for things to end well, even though we know it probably won't happen. One cannot help but feel sympathy and ask oneself how she is actually supposed to get out of the situation she is in. Society is certainly of no help.
The Florida Project is a film that will leave a strong impression in your mind.
After a few successful good episodes of the series, its flaws quickly begin to shine through; among other things, only Callie Haverda can play sitcom, and the friends feel like some who are trying to be them from the '70s. Sam Morelos and Maxwell Acee Donovan are absolutely not a Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher even though they have almost been asked to play the roles 1-1. It doesn't work. With better actors in their places, the series might have worked, or if they had come up with roles that better supported the actors. Kitty and Red play themselves and they still have it in them, Donna and Foreman drop by now and then, and we even get the old neighbor back again, and that actually works fine, but it ends up being them who have to carry the show and their characters can't do that.
When the nostalgia has settled, and we have greeted the whole gang, the series has little to offer, and I stopped halfway through season 2.
When the nostalgia has settled, and we have greeted the whole gang, the series has little to offer, and I stopped halfway through season 2.
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