The independent film/pilot concert, film content and soundtrack all exceeded my expectations. The scene of the performance matched the rhythm of the movie screen accurately, and the whole vocal played stable, so that at the beginning I thought it was not a live recording, but a recording. Can't help but make crazy calls for Philip Glass's work! From the rhythm of the plane traveling across the water to the fields to the sky, every piece of dirt permeates the air and the design ends in a single tone, which makes people feel helpless and ethereal.
From the flow line that travels through the city to the flow line that is seen from the perspective of the characters. Obviously it is the arc of the road lights and the electronic sound in the casino to match the picture. Products produced by factories such as sausages, bread, cars, and televisions, crowds at the entrances and exits of subways and office buildings, and cars on the highways. The glass wall of the unlit building welcomes the sunrise and sunset every day. We are all following steps and daring to run faster and faster. Are we quality products manufactured and exported by this society?
The film finally returns to the mottled murals and theme melody. Murals should not be the last way to show the glorious civilization of mankind. The destruction of industrialization will make the living human civilization no longer exist and cannot be passed on from generation to generation. Human beings who are already imbalanced on the road to industrialization should not let the earth be traumatized and imbalanced again and again. When I hear vocal sing koyaanisqatsi again, there is a feeling that the soundtrack and the movie fit together! While enjoying the screen, you must also appreciate the soundtrack. The name of the live ticket is worth it. Philip Glass, who is in his eighties, still plays the audience. I really can't help but sigh that he is talented when he is young, and he can fight for physical strength when he is old.
As for the topic of remake, it must be far more technically than it was in the past. But many shots in the movie can no longer be reproduced. The factories that appeared are probably not all Americans anymore. This is the most precious treasure left by time and history called documentary records. There is nothing wrong with China now undertaking most of the world's manufacturing industry, and the country is making progress and developing step by step. From nothing to being, from being to creating more.
In general, koyaanisqatsi is a film and soundtrack worth enjoying in a quiet night. Friends who like this kind of movie can try it.
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