Power and Struggle: a review of āTriangle of Sadnessā
From the get-go, the satire hits hard as the film explores and pokes fun at all its characters.
From the get-go, the satire hits hard as the film explores and pokes fun at all its characters.
Who knew that facts alone could be so emotionally charged?
There are only two episodes that I felt actually made the world feel bigger, and both these episodes are working on two different frameworks altogether.
As light and as frivolous as āThe School for Good and Evilā can be, it manages to question the morality of this world, the one-dimensional look into the binary of good and bad.
The movie subversively puts forward the notion that Georgia and David are the villains of the film despite its tone and genre.
Honestly, Iāve never seen anything like it before on the big screen and I was just sitting in my seat in the movie theater transfixed to the screen and enjoying every minute of it.
Park Chan-wook delivers another mind-blowing experience at the cinema.
Itās relentless and it gets exhausting at some point as it starts to feel repetitive, and itās a shame because thereās a lot of good filmmaking involved in āSmile.ā
Florence Pugh channels her character from āMidsommarā and then takes it to a different level in āDonāt Worry Darling.ā
The documentary is not just a historical review of the bandās beginnings and struggles to be taken seriously, it also examines their talents and their impact in the industry.