Extended Reading
  • Orpha 2022-03-22 09:02:24

    Madness or liberating, hard to understand

    Tom Hiddleston touched it. He read the book which I listened to. One Chapter, probably. I couldn't get what it's about. But I know it's going to be heavy and dark. With movie, you can easily spend two hours on it and be briefed. Everything is too symbolic. How can I decipher it. The building, a...

  • Madisyn 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    refined egoist


    A replica of the Snowpiercer, the story is very dystopian. The characters in the story are divided into three kinds of people, the common people who live at the bottom, the elite who live in the middle, and the rich who live at the top. All three people live in the same building, and the architects...

  • Cullen 2022-03-20 09:02:18

    Absurd black allegory, rather pessimistic, staged. A building is a country, and a floor is a class. Class contradictions and conflicts are concentrated here. Ironically, the middle class represented by Tom Hiddleston is glamorous on the surface, but the substance is not high and low. Luke Evans (lower deck) was the brightest. It's a pity that Irons (upper layer) has a little less scene

  • Dayana 2022-03-22 09:02:24

    Shake the meat, other details of the B outfit are not important

High-Rise quotes

  • Charlotte: You know, you look much better without your clothes on. You're lucky. Not many people do.

  • [first lines]

    Laing: [narrating] For all its inconveniences, Laing was satisfied with life in the high-rise. Now that so many of the residents were out of the way, he felt able to relax. More in charge of himself. Ready to move forward and explore life. How and where, exactly, he had not yet decided.

    Nathan Steele: [checking teeth] I see the rot's set in. Do you fancy a drink? Cosgrove is here. All boys together.

    [indicates a dead man]

    Laing: Sometimes he found it difficult not to believe they were living in a future that had already taken place.