Extended Reading
  • Lois 2022-03-23 09:02:38

    This is not a movie made for the general audience.

    Originally, as an ordinary audience, when I first saw this movie, I felt that this movie was not very interesting, and I didn't plan to write a movie review, because I didn't have any impressions. Intrigued by the seemingly deep expression, I decided to scrutinize it again, and sure enough, I got...

  • Vinnie 2022-04-20 09:02:10

    movies and cities

    I just went out for a walk, and I forgot to take the key and smashed the door. The neighbor was already asleep. . .

    Passed by the

    parking  -rise building in the 13th district, the Taiwanese Buddhist shrine in the parking garage, the incandescent light with the bright smell of urine
     , walking...

  • Monica 2022-03-20 09:02:14

    A/ If the narrative does not start with "real" or "realistic", where should we begin to capture the emotional flow of the characters? This is the difference between the film and the general meta-film self-reflection, and it is also its thoroughness-even in the accidental encounter of "real people", what we see is still the cold embedding or folding of the real and the fake inorganic matter, rather than any arrogant promise of truth. It is also in the intersection of this imaginary streamline that has nowhere to go, the eyes of the audience are deprived step by step to nakedness, and finally a direct communication between inhumans and machines is achieved; at the same time, the movement in the image no longer belongs to The subject of something—the virtual image of the thing is only a tiny fold in motion. Hesitating, joking or pessimistic stances just re-finished the confirmation of the film, that all confusion, death and even nothingness are rebirth.

  • Laverna 2022-03-29 09:01:06

    A veritable "playing wild", the pain of the skin and the naked cock are all show tools

Holy Motors quotes

  • Mr. Oscar: [exhorting his accordion band] Trois! Douze! Merde!

    [English: Three! Twelve! Shit!]

  • Mr. Oscar: I miss the cameras. They used to be heavier than us. Then they became smaller than our heads. Now you can't see them at all.