Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAs altered foods ravage the world, voodoo forces dysfunctional family SheepPsyche to play live reggae K-pop in VR.As altered foods ravage the world, voodoo forces dysfunctional family SheepPsyche to play live reggae K-pop in VR.As altered foods ravage the world, voodoo forces dysfunctional family SheepPsyche to play live reggae K-pop in VR.
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Opiniones destacadas
David Kim's "Ximbi XombiX" is many typically disparate things at once, mixing elements of fantasy, comedy, and music film genres into its technicolor and dystopian blender. Against all odds and largely in defiance of explanation, they coalesce into a film that's paradoxically great and completely its own, and one that's wholly unshackled from any obligations to convention.
Shot in South Korea, "Ximbi XombiX" presents to the American consumer an Alice in Wonderland-esque, acid trip reality painted with attractively outlandish and unfamiliar colors and cultural undertones. This is a world where Soylent Green-style, scientifically overhauled food is fed to its zombified masses. And as is the case with most societies that have lost track of humanity's true plot, art is either a constantly blaring, vapid magnifier of those distortions, or the underbelly's infrequently-aired pushback against them. Ricco (embodied by Kim himself) eschews the banal trappings of his own affluence, swimming against the mainstream's currents most grotesquely exemplified by its popular music. As mastermind of "K-hop" band Sheeppsyche, he's steadfast against pop star Jo Bin (Claudia Pak) joining his counterculturist insurgency, but we soon pay witness to the pitfalls noble artists can fall into when intoxicated by the possibility their art might somehow be surfaced to a huge audience.
"Ximbi XombiX" is hardly a film for everyone: Kim directs his actors to present with a knowing, over-the-top artifice specifically reflective of perceived societal dehumanization, and the movie's structure may be too wildly ramshackle for conventional consumers. Yet for those drawn to social satire tinged with dark comedy, "Ximbi XombiX" is likely to elicit true admiration for its unrestrained ambition and uniquely colorful footprint. - (Was this review of use to you? If so, let me know by clicking "Helpful." Cheers!)
Shot in South Korea, "Ximbi XombiX" presents to the American consumer an Alice in Wonderland-esque, acid trip reality painted with attractively outlandish and unfamiliar colors and cultural undertones. This is a world where Soylent Green-style, scientifically overhauled food is fed to its zombified masses. And as is the case with most societies that have lost track of humanity's true plot, art is either a constantly blaring, vapid magnifier of those distortions, or the underbelly's infrequently-aired pushback against them. Ricco (embodied by Kim himself) eschews the banal trappings of his own affluence, swimming against the mainstream's currents most grotesquely exemplified by its popular music. As mastermind of "K-hop" band Sheeppsyche, he's steadfast against pop star Jo Bin (Claudia Pak) joining his counterculturist insurgency, but we soon pay witness to the pitfalls noble artists can fall into when intoxicated by the possibility their art might somehow be surfaced to a huge audience.
"Ximbi XombiX" is hardly a film for everyone: Kim directs his actors to present with a knowing, over-the-top artifice specifically reflective of perceived societal dehumanization, and the movie's structure may be too wildly ramshackle for conventional consumers. Yet for those drawn to social satire tinged with dark comedy, "Ximbi XombiX" is likely to elicit true admiration for its unrestrained ambition and uniquely colorful footprint. - (Was this review of use to you? If so, let me know by clicking "Helpful." Cheers!)
This is an interesting film. It is a sci-fi film and art film all blended into a story out of today's headlines. Like most art films it is open to interpretation. To me, it says we all should be concerned about the possible evil of altered foods and vaping. The story wrapped around several live music performances like a video music album. The music is good and bit edgy as it emphasizes this virtual reality.
Ximbi XombiX is a clever, genre bending musical mash-up! If your like me and always on the hunt for something with a unique point of view, man does this film delivers. Definitely worth checking out!
A creative, inventive, strange and unique tale. With arresting visuals, a lot of music, and a strangeness to whole affair that can best be described as Lynchian.
Zombie movies are kind of like those statues you see in certain cities where they are all the same, but different artists decorate them in a way that reflects their artistic mind. You have straight forward zombie (The Walking Dead), comedic zombie (Sean of the Dead) and cinematic zombie (World War Z) to name a few. Enter Ximbi XombiX. As the title suggests, it's unlike any zombie movie you've seen. The K-Pop, Vudu, Virtual Reality zombie movie. Indie film is the only medium that could take a stab at something like this, and these filmmakers did a fine job. It's risky, innovative, and ultimately a successful foray into the zombie genre. Like zombie movies? You have to see this one. There's nothing else like it.
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 60,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 38min(98 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.78 : 1
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