FilmTx
Entrou em jun. de 2002
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Avaliações6
Classificação de FilmTx
This is just a fun movie. The acting is campy at parts but the action sequences are better than expected. We had a lot of fun watching this. There's a pointless out of the blue lesbian scene and "drug addict" acting of the caliber of an after school commercial.
I know it sounds like I'm taking digs at the film, but I'm not. Watch the trailer on the Blue Underground site... it might be on IMDb too... but the trailer was delicious enough to get me to rent it (just as the trailer for Street Law did that title). David Hemmings is great.
Basically... "fun" is the key point of this review. Fun.
8 out of 10
I know it sounds like I'm taking digs at the film, but I'm not. Watch the trailer on the Blue Underground site... it might be on IMDb too... but the trailer was delicious enough to get me to rent it (just as the trailer for Street Law did that title). David Hemmings is great.
Basically... "fun" is the key point of this review. Fun.
8 out of 10
This film is quite simply one of the best science fiction films made in recent years. The Fountain comes to mind for many, I'm sure... but depending on your interpretation of the film, you may not see it as science fiction. I don't. So it is out of the running. Soderbergh's Solaris is another. A film about individuality and emotional development when faced with the solitude of eternity... it's a great film... but it doesn't have the science fiction feeling to it. Soderbergh described his film as Last Tango in Paris meets 2001. It's a pretty good description.
Sunshine is an adventure. It is about the battle of logic vs. emotion and it is very intelligent. It is about power vs. sacrifice. It is about hope. It is about reality.
The film is very skillfully structured. It starts off at the appropriate pace to allow us to really grasp the different feelings on the space ship. From the obsession of the sun... which itself is sort of a matriarchal Freudian obsession... being so close to the source of all life would likely drive people to stare and be fascinated, much like people do with the sea. The ship has a sitting room where the computer allows in 2% of the sun's light so that they can see it. This is not for study or anything of that nature, this is just for admiration. One character reasons with the computer and the computer says she will admit 3.1% in for a few seconds and that should not cause damage to the character's retinas. This sight might hold a religious quality for many. People worshiped the sun for thousands of years. It was a God that they could see. Before development of more complex religions, it is only natural that such a sight might hold the same primitive comfort our ancestors may have felt.
I don't want to go into the story too much... or for that matter, anything past the first twenty minutes. The plot, known to those who have seen the trailer, is about the death of our sun. Not through it's own life coming to an end but due to a particle (currently theoretical) known as a Q-Ball - a super-symmetric nucleus, left over from the big bang - that is disrupting the normal matter. (Source: IMDb). And based on the trailer, you know that a return trip is not necessarily guaranteed. Now some may say that God decides when it's our time to go while others might say it's up to us to take care of ourselves. Instinctively, no matter who you are, you will shift towards the latter in a time of crisis. As living creatures, self preservation is our primal instinct. We won't let the sun die without a fight. BUT, if saving the rest of us may cost a few lives... a few astronauts and scientists... how can we not expect them, when faced with the reality that they may have to sacrifice themselves for the mission... how can we not expect them to decide that self-preservation is necessary to them as well? This film plays out beautifully. Even if you sit there with the thoughts you have during other sci-fi movies like the "why didn't he just..." or the "Nooo, what a dumb mistake"... you still feel the weight and the responsibility that the characters put into their decisions and you don't feel as if they're deliberately screwing up. It's a gamble. Cillian Murphy phrases it perfectly when asked to bring logic to a decision that he states is like asking him heads or tails.
The film has opened on 10 screens this past Friday and it will expand to 400 this upcoming Friday. I URGE everyone to see it. From last summer filled with X3, Nacho Libre and The Break-up. From this summer to which the most anticipated films have mostly rendered mediocre approval from the audiences spending the hundreds of millions on them... we need to make it clear that we can't put up with so many years of *beep* coming our way from Hollywood. We want our films smart. We started with Knocked Up. Hopefully Hollywood will listen. We didn't see Fantastic Four 2 and Evan Almighty... HOPEFULLY... Hollywood will listen. We're going to see SUNSHINE. Hollywood WILL listen. Maybe we can bring back the integrity that went into film-making thirty years ago... or even eight years ago.
See Sunshine. It's a science fiction masterpiece. It's a great film. It's an experience.
Sunshine is an adventure. It is about the battle of logic vs. emotion and it is very intelligent. It is about power vs. sacrifice. It is about hope. It is about reality.
The film is very skillfully structured. It starts off at the appropriate pace to allow us to really grasp the different feelings on the space ship. From the obsession of the sun... which itself is sort of a matriarchal Freudian obsession... being so close to the source of all life would likely drive people to stare and be fascinated, much like people do with the sea. The ship has a sitting room where the computer allows in 2% of the sun's light so that they can see it. This is not for study or anything of that nature, this is just for admiration. One character reasons with the computer and the computer says she will admit 3.1% in for a few seconds and that should not cause damage to the character's retinas. This sight might hold a religious quality for many. People worshiped the sun for thousands of years. It was a God that they could see. Before development of more complex religions, it is only natural that such a sight might hold the same primitive comfort our ancestors may have felt.
I don't want to go into the story too much... or for that matter, anything past the first twenty minutes. The plot, known to those who have seen the trailer, is about the death of our sun. Not through it's own life coming to an end but due to a particle (currently theoretical) known as a Q-Ball - a super-symmetric nucleus, left over from the big bang - that is disrupting the normal matter. (Source: IMDb). And based on the trailer, you know that a return trip is not necessarily guaranteed. Now some may say that God decides when it's our time to go while others might say it's up to us to take care of ourselves. Instinctively, no matter who you are, you will shift towards the latter in a time of crisis. As living creatures, self preservation is our primal instinct. We won't let the sun die without a fight. BUT, if saving the rest of us may cost a few lives... a few astronauts and scientists... how can we not expect them, when faced with the reality that they may have to sacrifice themselves for the mission... how can we not expect them to decide that self-preservation is necessary to them as well? This film plays out beautifully. Even if you sit there with the thoughts you have during other sci-fi movies like the "why didn't he just..." or the "Nooo, what a dumb mistake"... you still feel the weight and the responsibility that the characters put into their decisions and you don't feel as if they're deliberately screwing up. It's a gamble. Cillian Murphy phrases it perfectly when asked to bring logic to a decision that he states is like asking him heads or tails.
The film has opened on 10 screens this past Friday and it will expand to 400 this upcoming Friday. I URGE everyone to see it. From last summer filled with X3, Nacho Libre and The Break-up. From this summer to which the most anticipated films have mostly rendered mediocre approval from the audiences spending the hundreds of millions on them... we need to make it clear that we can't put up with so many years of *beep* coming our way from Hollywood. We want our films smart. We started with Knocked Up. Hopefully Hollywood will listen. We didn't see Fantastic Four 2 and Evan Almighty... HOPEFULLY... Hollywood will listen. We're going to see SUNSHINE. Hollywood WILL listen. Maybe we can bring back the integrity that went into film-making thirty years ago... or even eight years ago.
See Sunshine. It's a science fiction masterpiece. It's a great film. It's an experience.
Could we all go camping and exploring in a house owned by someone else while the house itself is sideways and on a cliff. Could we watch a one man show of Jurrasic park while eating tacos from our mailbox? Could we ride a Harley with God to the Porcupine Races? Could we play naked battleship in a prison with open gates while our hormones dance? Can a Jew, an Italian and a redhead-gay live in the same apartment without strange people jumping out and dancing? AND?????? Let's have staring contests and always remember that children of coal miners are worthless. Let's watch men in bikini thongs perform drama while a man in a suit and tie dips his balls in some things. Could there be a better show? If you don't get these references but want to, watch the show. Soon to be on DVD with commentaries!!! But most importantly, aquaman, go talk to some fish.