Bloody Sunday Reviews
2022-05-11 20:40
"Bloody Sunday" is very realistic. The director does not hesitate to destroy the beauty of the film to create a sense of reality. It feels like watching CNN's live news about war events. A story is told with rough material, while deeply concealing the cinematographic means without destroying the sense of reality. The film embodies the reckless paranoia of the British government, the IRA inciting and exploiting hatred, the idea that there are no good people in political battles, and no winners in bloodshed. The movie represents the conscience of Ireland, it is not only good-looking, but also great, bringing the audience an extraordinary touch
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In "Bloody Sunday", director Paul Greengrass shoots in a way similar to news event photography. The movie scene scheduling is flexible and realistic, and the rhythm is tight, as if to reproduce the bloody scene many years ago
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Paul Greengrass tried to use the eyes of a reporter to truly record and reproduce the bloody political massacre in the film. Although the film was organized by a TV station, in the film, Paul Greengrass cast more sympathy for the massacred Irish people, using the blood of the dead to shoot the arrow of condemnation at the government trying to cover up the truth. , its political metaphor is self-evident. Leaving aside the subject matter and political implications of the film, Paul Greengrass's unique shooting style is also revealed in this film. The film achieves realistic effects, well-defined jump cuts and a three-dimensional ordinary point of view, making people almost I don't feel that this is just a fictitious movie. What "Bloody Sunday" brings to people is an immersive shock
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Extended Reading
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Ivan Cooper: I just want to say this to the British Government... You know what you've just done, don't you? You've destroyed the civil rights movement, and you've given the IRA the biggest victory it will ever have. All over this city tonight, young men... boys will be joining the IRA, and you will reap a whirlwind.
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Chief Supt. Lagan: You call that minimum force?