ceefactor
Joined May 2006
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ceefactor's rating
To be completely honest, the only reason i saw this movie was because in our English class we read the screenplay by Nick Enright. And that was it. I wouldn't have watched this movie otherwise.
Yes, this movie contained an almost-taboo subject that hasn't been seen all that often before. But that is the problem: The whole movie rotated around that one happening, this one occurrence.
And, 10 years later, we have become somewhat desensitized to those occurrences, making them not as shocking as they would have been say, 10 years ago.
If that doesn't collapse an already shaky plot, nothing will.
Put it simply, this movie was made to shock people. It was made to bring to light a subject that usually isn't discussed. But the problem, the hole in this plan, was that it didn't.
Another thing i noticed was that the acting was extremely rushed. The dialogue was rushed. The reactions and emotions were rushed. Some of the characters would scream and cry and shout insults at mere words that would only at most leave us frowning. What the director was trying to convey as hopelessness and devastation only came through as characters in need of intense anger management.
Another is that the characters themselves were not given anything to hold onto. If i hadn't read the original screenplay, half of these characters morals would be foreign to me. I had an advantage not many would have had before this by actually having an idea of what these people were like. But the thing is, that shouldn't happen. People shouldn't have to read the original works just to get a genuine idea of the movie.
There were also tiny sub-plots that i guess were added in for extra depth, but only ended up being completely unnecessary.
And, finally, the dialogue. Now, because this movie was set in Australia, and hey, i'm Australian too, i can spot when the slang is forced - a feat that appears in so many other Australian movies. And my gosh, it's forced in this movie. It is all too bush for a bunch of teenagers.
One of the only things i can commend the director on is keeping me somewhat entranced for the better part of the movie. I was interested in what was going to happen, but after the climax i felt it was a little stretched. the dark underlying themes - domestic violence, rape, suicide and relationship issues, kept that interest, as weird as it is to admit.
Also, the party scenes in particular were spot-on. The director conveyed the frenzy of teenage parties so accurately i found myself comparing them to some of the own i've been to. And the locations were decent too, and convinced me. I was also happy to see a few familiar faces - a cameo-like appearance from Health Ledger, Jade Gatt off of one of my old favourite cartoon TV shows and that guy off all saints whose name i can never remember.
For what it's worth, the movie does make you think. I know the rape scene haunted me for a little while even after the movie finished. It is also a fact that when our teacher shut it off in class we were more silent than we ever had been before.
Mostly if you just approach it with the fact it is only a movie you'll appreciate it in the slightest.
Yes, this movie contained an almost-taboo subject that hasn't been seen all that often before. But that is the problem: The whole movie rotated around that one happening, this one occurrence.
And, 10 years later, we have become somewhat desensitized to those occurrences, making them not as shocking as they would have been say, 10 years ago.
If that doesn't collapse an already shaky plot, nothing will.
Put it simply, this movie was made to shock people. It was made to bring to light a subject that usually isn't discussed. But the problem, the hole in this plan, was that it didn't.
Another thing i noticed was that the acting was extremely rushed. The dialogue was rushed. The reactions and emotions were rushed. Some of the characters would scream and cry and shout insults at mere words that would only at most leave us frowning. What the director was trying to convey as hopelessness and devastation only came through as characters in need of intense anger management.
Another is that the characters themselves were not given anything to hold onto. If i hadn't read the original screenplay, half of these characters morals would be foreign to me. I had an advantage not many would have had before this by actually having an idea of what these people were like. But the thing is, that shouldn't happen. People shouldn't have to read the original works just to get a genuine idea of the movie.
There were also tiny sub-plots that i guess were added in for extra depth, but only ended up being completely unnecessary.
And, finally, the dialogue. Now, because this movie was set in Australia, and hey, i'm Australian too, i can spot when the slang is forced - a feat that appears in so many other Australian movies. And my gosh, it's forced in this movie. It is all too bush for a bunch of teenagers.
One of the only things i can commend the director on is keeping me somewhat entranced for the better part of the movie. I was interested in what was going to happen, but after the climax i felt it was a little stretched. the dark underlying themes - domestic violence, rape, suicide and relationship issues, kept that interest, as weird as it is to admit.
Also, the party scenes in particular were spot-on. The director conveyed the frenzy of teenage parties so accurately i found myself comparing them to some of the own i've been to. And the locations were decent too, and convinced me. I was also happy to see a few familiar faces - a cameo-like appearance from Health Ledger, Jade Gatt off of one of my old favourite cartoon TV shows and that guy off all saints whose name i can never remember.
For what it's worth, the movie does make you think. I know the rape scene haunted me for a little while even after the movie finished. It is also a fact that when our teacher shut it off in class we were more silent than we ever had been before.
Mostly if you just approach it with the fact it is only a movie you'll appreciate it in the slightest.
I'm sure i'm not the only one that hung on for the final installment of X-Men, and although i didn't expect a mind-blowing finale (because, let's face it... very few are) i did expect it to follow along in the same style of it's predecessors.
Unfortunately, it didn't.
This is probably due to the fact that Bryan Singer didn't stick around to see this one out. But you also have to give credit to the new director - Singer was, and always will be, a hard act to follow.
The storyline, as usual, was as good as it was believable. I wasn't disappointed on that front. I was, however, on the characterization of the cast. Unless you had seen the previous film/s, then you were left in the dark. You weren't given the chance to properly understand the characters or grow attached to them if this was the first time you had watched an X-Men movie. I also have to admit that a number of the new characters were not fleshed out at all - I was excited when i'd heard Ben Foster was in this, but it turned out that his character was barely mentioned. It was almost as if it was just an afterthought, a throw in. A character that was convenient to the plot, and had almost no substance. Although, thought must go out to the rather large cast - so many characters, and so little time to pay homage to them.
There were also many unanswered questions, or many scenarios that weren't seen to the end. You often had to piece together afterward what had happened, and even when you did come to a conclusion, it still didn't put your mind to rest.
But that is where the criticism ends. I believe that the X-men trilogy is one of the few Marvel movies that have turned out exceptionally well. Was i disappointed? No. I didn't leave the theater with a sense of 'but i wanted...'. I ate it all up, and enjoyed the final installment.
Unfortunately, it didn't.
This is probably due to the fact that Bryan Singer didn't stick around to see this one out. But you also have to give credit to the new director - Singer was, and always will be, a hard act to follow.
The storyline, as usual, was as good as it was believable. I wasn't disappointed on that front. I was, however, on the characterization of the cast. Unless you had seen the previous film/s, then you were left in the dark. You weren't given the chance to properly understand the characters or grow attached to them if this was the first time you had watched an X-Men movie. I also have to admit that a number of the new characters were not fleshed out at all - I was excited when i'd heard Ben Foster was in this, but it turned out that his character was barely mentioned. It was almost as if it was just an afterthought, a throw in. A character that was convenient to the plot, and had almost no substance. Although, thought must go out to the rather large cast - so many characters, and so little time to pay homage to them.
There were also many unanswered questions, or many scenarios that weren't seen to the end. You often had to piece together afterward what had happened, and even when you did come to a conclusion, it still didn't put your mind to rest.
But that is where the criticism ends. I believe that the X-men trilogy is one of the few Marvel movies that have turned out exceptionally well. Was i disappointed? No. I didn't leave the theater with a sense of 'but i wanted...'. I ate it all up, and enjoyed the final installment.