rebecca_saunders
Joined Jul 2017
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Ratings357
rebecca_saunders's rating
Reviews6
rebecca_saunders's rating
I'm Still Here is a quietly powerful drama that refuses to simplify its subject. It finds strength in the ordinary-small gestures, imperfect relationships, uncelebrated courage. Dan Burman's grounded yet sensitive performance, the subtle direction of Kris Smith, and the film's cohesive technical craft make it an affecting and memorable portrayal of life, death, and what lies in between.
The accuracy was good for neural networks, AI, and I liked the nod to Karl Friston's "active inferencing" they drew out for the characters on the dry-erase board.
The ending caught me by surprise a little, so that is always good! A slow burn thriller of 2 men that made a machine to relive back memories. Gloomy and atmospheric with sounds that might hurt your head but good music.
Solid performances from the leads and co-supporting actors and the leads did "bro-tech" pretty well.
The movie itself is a mix between Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and a kind of Flatliners. I kind of dig how they mashed it together.
The ending caught me by surprise a little, so that is always good! A slow burn thriller of 2 men that made a machine to relive back memories. Gloomy and atmospheric with sounds that might hurt your head but good music.
Solid performances from the leads and co-supporting actors and the leads did "bro-tech" pretty well.
The movie itself is a mix between Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and a kind of Flatliners. I kind of dig how they mashed it together.
"Support The British Film Industry", says the opening monologue of this shoddy British found footage anthology feature from director Steven M. Smith SCARE ATTRACTION, THE HOWLING 2017, THE HAUNTING OF BORLEY MANOR as it deals with the zombie faced title character delivering several nasty fates to a group of Internet based Zoom room chatterers(both male and female), as nothing special, shocking, sensual, or splat happy happens here. And yes, we all indeed have to support British films and British horror / genre films even if sit through stale cinematic fare such as this very feature. Another lockdown disappointment.