Well, write a "Franklin" today.
I have vaguely heard of this movie, and I saw it on PPLIVE today. I took a look at the introduction, and it seems to be ok. Parallel worlds and multi-line plots are my dish.
After watching it for five minutes, it seems that the multi-line plot is inevitable, and the parallel world has a question mark. Gothic meanwhile city is another parallel London, it's too unreal, and it's full of David's inner monologue and... I don't know what the hell he's talking about, I'm not a philosophical person, and I can't understand the director What are you talking about, though, I think, a strong expression of anarchism.
Milo looks okay, kind of like a slightly deformed version of Twilight's trotters. About halfway through, Milo's childhood sweetheart girlfriend showed up, and it turned out to be Emilia. It's obvious that parallel worlds, childhood playmates are the director's trick. To put it simply, a film of two schizophrenics and a suicidal artist.
The script, the script comes first, and the director is the screenwriter. It's not bad. The four people who didn't have an intersection at first were intertwined because of Franklyn's apartment, especially the last scene of Milo and Emilia, which is still very interesting.
Next, director, I've watched a lot of these kinds of movies, but I don't feel the taste is very heavy. I don't want to express much, two, one is a satire of the power rule and the ignorance of the people in the real society, which is expressed in the utopian meanwhile city and Fragile religious beliefs; second, each unfortunate life has its own misfortune, but fortunately, in the end, each has its own place, which is shown in the final redemption of the four protagonists.
In the picture, he probably wants to be the Huachaosky Brothers (I don't know if they are sisters and brothers now, Khan), but I guess the funds are not enough, they are not exquisite, the meanwhile city is a few grades away from Matrix, and the colors are not good enough. Take it out to fool people.
The editing is a bit messy. 90 minutes is probably not enough for this guy. The four clues are cut back and forth, and some places are very blunt. In my impression, "Memento" is not so broken, but I can't remember, when to dig a grave to see. There is also a lack of flashbacks at the end of the movie, in addition to emphasizing the godly sweeping uncle.
In the end, I have to say that Peter is too pitiful. His daughter and son passed away one after another, and he didn't even explain it at the end. It was the weakest line.
No more, that's all.
Oh and also, David played "Crash", like a rookie police officer, you can watch it, it's a good movie.
View more about Franklyn reviews