azmark1887
Joined Jul 2008
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azmark1887's rating
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azmark1887's rating
I was enjoying this series until this episode. The male characters are pathetic sniveling jerks. There's not a likeable character among them, and the female characters aren't much better.
I now actually feel sorry for Catherine for having to endure all of them for so long -- at home and at work. I'm so disappointed in the entire story at this point. Nothing in this latest episode ringed true. Do people, your closest loved ones and colleagues, turn on you because some stranger shows up with a few 20-year-old photos and spins a tale? Then they aren't worth knowing. Don't know if it's worth viewing the last two episodes.
I now actually feel sorry for Catherine for having to endure all of them for so long -- at home and at work. I'm so disappointed in the entire story at this point. Nothing in this latest episode ringed true. Do people, your closest loved ones and colleagues, turn on you because some stranger shows up with a few 20-year-old photos and spins a tale? Then they aren't worth knowing. Don't know if it's worth viewing the last two episodes.
Nolan's "Oppenheimer" is a momentous achievement, an engrossing film stunning in its art direction, cinematography, musical score, and sound direction; rhetorically clear though its narrative is dense and circuitous at times, and successful in bringing to life the paradoxical achievements, complex personality, and flesh and blood humanity of one of the 20th century's most brilliant, driven, and controversial scientists.
Through a non-linear story that moves forward despite numerous flashbacks and flashforwards over three hours, the film holds its center by using a tremendously talented ensemble cast of scientists, spouses, and bureaucrats to illustrate the race to beat Germany in developing a weapon that would end World War II.
As Niels Bohr (Kenneth Branagh) says to a young Oppenheimer, shown as a floundering graduate student in experimental physics at Cambridge University, you don't have to read the score if you can hear the music when encouraging the young scientist to not worry about his lack of skills in complex mathematics, the audience doesn't need to understand the equations of quantum physics to follow the story of a world-altering scientific achievement and the resulting political fallout.
Cillian Murphy is mesmerizing as the egotistical, self-absorbed, ambitious yet compassionate, charming, and brooding genius who is troubled by visions of a universe governed by probabilities as much as physical laws, concerned with the plight of workers, intellectually curious well beyond his chosen field, and reckless and naïve in his romances and friendships. Supporting roles are well played by Emily Blunt, Florence Pugh, Josh Hartnett, Alden Ehrenreich, Matt Damon, and a nearly unrecognizable Robert Downey Jr., who is superb in a supporting role.
Expect numerous Oscar nominations and several wins for this latest project by writer/director Nolan who, perhaps more than any writer/director of his generation other than Denis Villeneuve, so skillfully melds 20th-century cinema staples of location, staging, costuming, music, photography, and great storytelling with 21st-century technology.
Through a non-linear story that moves forward despite numerous flashbacks and flashforwards over three hours, the film holds its center by using a tremendously talented ensemble cast of scientists, spouses, and bureaucrats to illustrate the race to beat Germany in developing a weapon that would end World War II.
As Niels Bohr (Kenneth Branagh) says to a young Oppenheimer, shown as a floundering graduate student in experimental physics at Cambridge University, you don't have to read the score if you can hear the music when encouraging the young scientist to not worry about his lack of skills in complex mathematics, the audience doesn't need to understand the equations of quantum physics to follow the story of a world-altering scientific achievement and the resulting political fallout.
Cillian Murphy is mesmerizing as the egotistical, self-absorbed, ambitious yet compassionate, charming, and brooding genius who is troubled by visions of a universe governed by probabilities as much as physical laws, concerned with the plight of workers, intellectually curious well beyond his chosen field, and reckless and naïve in his romances and friendships. Supporting roles are well played by Emily Blunt, Florence Pugh, Josh Hartnett, Alden Ehrenreich, Matt Damon, and a nearly unrecognizable Robert Downey Jr., who is superb in a supporting role.
Expect numerous Oscar nominations and several wins for this latest project by writer/director Nolan who, perhaps more than any writer/director of his generation other than Denis Villeneuve, so skillfully melds 20th-century cinema staples of location, staging, costuming, music, photography, and great storytelling with 21st-century technology.
This understated, subtle, and beautiful film says more in its extended silences than in its terse and pithy dialogue. Gorgeously filmed, precisely acted, and generous of heart, "The Quiet Girl" is a story of important values too quickly escaping from this bustling, disposable, cruel, selfish, and loud world.
Bravi performances by all, especially by Bennett, Clinch, and Crowley. View this poignant film next to a loved one, with mobile phone turned off and heart opened wide. It is the most memorable film of 2022.
And please remember, "Manys the person missed the opportunity to say nothing, and lost much because of it."
Bravi performances by all, especially by Bennett, Clinch, and Crowley. View this poignant film next to a loved one, with mobile phone turned off and heart opened wide. It is the most memorable film of 2022.
And please remember, "Manys the person missed the opportunity to say nothing, and lost much because of it."