From the very beginning, this movie gave me an extremely uncomfortable feeling. Admittedly, most moviegoers found this movie shocking and thought-provoking, but I was filled with a deep sense of rejection (until the middle and later stages). I don't feel that way.)
The director's soundtrack is full of a solemn and solemn atmosphere, which makes people's hearts always in a state of suspension, and the pictures, from Buddhist studies, to natural scenes, to artificial sculptures, historical legacy, changing years, and modern industry.
In the second segment of the movie, the volcano, the lava is hot. At that time, I didn't feel the beauty. I even felt that the director was depicting hell. The various pictures and music in the back give people a visual impact. From an aesthetic point of view, this is a picture full of beauty and evil of nature and humanity, and it is also a legacy after years of carving. The loneliness from the depths of the heart, with the addition of music, gives people a feeling of depression and makes people resist in their hearts. This is my experience watching movies, I don't know how other people feel.
I read other people's film reviews and thought they were very profound. They thought deeply about the content of the film, but most of them looked at it in a positive way and explained the film, thinking that the film has a deep philosophical meaning. And what I saw was fear, indifference, and no temperature. Those pairs of eyes reflect the helplessness of the world, including the Buddhas on the top of the mountain, the workers in the factory, the eyes yellowed by the sun in Africa, and the American daughter who shows disgust with guns. Too much too much.
In the middle, there is a clip that expresses that animals become food in the human population. It is very well shot. It is an assembly line slaughterhouse, and people are only high-level animals, and they are no different from captive animals, except that animals are in circles. People in society. Nor do they (animals) realize that they are in the circle. At the back, they ate food with their big stomachs and stuffed them into their mouths. I laughed while the doctor in the hospital drew the line on my stomach.
The clown part is very good, the actor's performance is in place. That inner struggle, disgust. Covering the face again and again, poking open the mouth and eyes again and again, the suppression and catharsis in the deepest part of the human heart, the expression is dripping and delicate.
The director is a very philosophical person, but I don't like this kind of film. It's too deep. Life is chai, rice, oil, salt, sauce, vinegar and tea. We are using our lives to cover up and forget the despair in the depths of human hearts, but the director puts it in the In the movie, let people face such tragedies.
Personal factors aside, this movie is a 5. Aesthetics, visuals, philosophical undertones, and so much more, deserve a 5. If anyone has the same fear of watching movies as me, please leave a message and let me know.
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