-
Eliza 2022-04-22 07:01:16
Miscellaneous
The philosophy of human nature under the hidden camera is a tragedy. In this tragedy, we watch for a moment and then play our part. ——Swift's "Miscellaneous Senses" The method of stage-based lens is extremely retro, which is different from the first and second generation directors who...
-
Alden 2022-03-14 14:12:23
Malik's Prose Poems
Using the smallest aperture to shoot the star rays from the half-shielded sun, it keeps reappearing at various times. It's beautiful, and it's also very funny. Even I have used this technique badly. The movement of the camera stops for a moment, it moves close to the person, and when the person...
-
Alexander 2022-03-20 09:01:39
Some scenes were shot really hard. For example, in order to let the audience understand the miracle of life, Malick did not hesitate to use awkward animation special effects to resurrect the "dinosaur". This kind of processing of sacrificing the integrity of the image is not as clever and easy as "a monkey" in "Super Body" and "the pioneer who died in the wasteland" in "Ghostbusters". But it is undeniable that this pre-philosophical film has a high degree of completion. The collision of the shots that capture the life experience and the shots beyond human perception produces a kind of peculiar effect, which makes people feel shocked when they come out of the vertigo of philosophy. The most mundane human emotions are easily defeated. ★★★★
-
Terrill 2022-01-26 08:17:44
Religion, the origin of life, there are too many things that people want to think about, causing the origin of the shooting and dinosaurs, asking God and so on to be very different from the family growth in the back. Although the beginning and the end echo, it is really tasteless. It's okay to record family growth later. Why does this kind of film have to be so literary and so imaginary? It is enough to record the growth of a family to think about the meaning of life. . . I fast-forwarded and read it, but I didn’t understand it at all.
Related articles
-
Young Jack: [voice over] I didn't know how to name You then. But I see it was You. Always You were calling me.
-
Father Haynes: He is in God's hands, now.
Mrs. O'Brien: He was in God's hands the whole time. Wasn't he?