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Lois 2022-04-11 09:01:07
The neat black and white picture has the effect of a stage play, but this time Jeremy Irons' personal performance did not break through the...
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Trycia 2022-04-11 09:01:07
Soderbergh's films have never let me down in terms of cinematography, lighting, editing, etc.; the black and white parts are beautifully shot. I don't know much about Kafka and his works, so the plot is not good for evaluation. If you watch it as a feature film alone, the shooting level, performance and story are all very good, and it is worth...
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Marta 2022-04-11 08:01:01
Although the biggest setting is Kafka's "Castle", the worldview is more similar to "1984". This dystopia, which looks like "Big Brother is watching you" no matter how you look at it, has a lingering 90s America color. As the greatest novelist of all time, Kafka is also a clerk, and it's a bit reluctant to put him in the role of a dystopian detective. What makes a writer a writer is not struggle, but speech and...
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Lysanne 2022-04-11 08:01:01
Director Soderbergh blurs reality and dream, literature and film. Jumping from "The Metamorphosis" into the dystopian world of "The Trial", based on existential speculation and based on Kafka's experience (nightmare), Soderbergh presents a completely Kafka-esque black-and-white image and horror The text is absurd and full of real oppression and tension. It perfectly reproduces Kafka's strange and dreamy inner world. After reading it, it is like experiencing a...
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Tanner 2022-04-11 08:01:01
When I read every novel, every page and every line, no matter how bizarre the plot is, a colorful picture will be projected in my mind. Only when reading Kafka, it is always black and white, and it is always a silent film. No matter how long the dialogue is and then the fragments are separated, it seems like a white horse has passed through the gap, and it is only a matter of time. I don't know if I understand Kafka, but I vaguely think Soderbergh does. When can I see Kafka in color...
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Valentin 2022-04-11 08:01:01
When I read every novel, every page and every line, no matter how bizarre the plot is, a colorful picture will be projected in my mind. Only when reading Kafka, it is always black and white, and it is always a silent film. No matter how long the dialogue is and then the fragments are separated, it seems like a white horse has passed through the gap, and it is only a matter of time. I don't know if I understand Kafka, but I vaguely think Soderbergh does. When can I see Kafka in color...
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Dahlia 2022-04-11 08:01:01
Dear Father, I cannot deny now that I am part of the world around me, even though we are...
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Doris 2022-04-11 08:01:01
The director does not seem to have any intention of blurring the truth and fiction of the film's story, otherwise the ending should have made some changes in terms of color and so on. However, the film integrates Kafka's life story with the content of several novels he wrote, the intersection of reality and literature, and puts Kafka's different novels in the same dystopian world at the same time, which can be said to be very interesting....
Kafka Comments
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Rozella 2022-04-11 08:01:01
Excellent work
If it is just a biography, it is obviously not worthwhile, because throughout Kafka's life, his external life does not have a dramatic plot, but Soderbergh chose a scene that may be taken from a nightmare, and it is immediately different. The black and white color shows that this can indeed be...
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Gregory 2022-04-11 08:01:01
Synopsis
Kafka was a clerk at an insurance company who, despite his critical acclaim for the publication of "Metamorphosis," was still withdrawn from his colleagues. One day, the only colleague who had close contact with him died unexpectedly. His fiancée couldn't accept the police's statement that it was...
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Oscar: It's not too bad working here, though.
Franz Kafka: You've never felt it was a horrible double life, from which there was probably no escape but insanity?
Ludwig: Yes!
Oscar: No.
Ludwig: No.
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Franz Kafka: So, that's who the enemy is. Policemen and file clerks. Law and order, you might say.
Gabriela: You think what we're doing is wrong? What would you suggest, then?
Franz Kafka: Did any of you actually go up to the castle with Edward? You sit around twisting the facts to suit your inbred theories. In my experience the truth is not... that convenient.