pishloj
Entrou em ago. de 2003
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Classificação de pishloj
After all the build up. After all the hype. After all the philosophy papers written about this BRILLIANT movie concept. What a predictable, cheep, cop-out of an ending. I wish the Wachowski brothers could have a do-over on this one.
There were parts of the movie that made it worth the price of admission. Great bits of heroism on behalf of the humans in Zion. Some very suspenseful moments.
Oh, and a cheesy death scene that lasted for ever. I found myself wanting to yell at the screen "Die already!"
I recommend all Matrix fans to go and see this movie. But, just don't go there expecting much more than some awesome special effects.
There were parts of the movie that made it worth the price of admission. Great bits of heroism on behalf of the humans in Zion. Some very suspenseful moments.
Oh, and a cheesy death scene that lasted for ever. I found myself wanting to yell at the screen "Die already!"
I recommend all Matrix fans to go and see this movie. But, just don't go there expecting much more than some awesome special effects.
What the hell was that?!?
The movie started out great! Then, all of the sudden, there was some kind of mass Exodus to Helms Deep? Along the way some orcs on wolves decide to attack? Then that whole disappearance and dream sequence with Aragorn?!? Did Tolkien write two different versions of the story or something?
Oh, and the complete assassination of Bormamir's more noble, and honorable brother Faramir. And what about that little jaunt over to Gondor for Frodo, Sam, and Gollum? At one point Frodo speaks the line "We're not supposed to be here." I wanted to stand up and yell at the screen "You got that right mister!"
I only hope that the ring gets destroyed in the next movie. Unless P.J. comes up with some other plans for it.
I walked out of the movie and demanded my money back. My reason was that they didn't show the movie I came to see. I came to see "The Two Towers". I don't know what the hell that piece of crap was.
The movie started out great! Then, all of the sudden, there was some kind of mass Exodus to Helms Deep? Along the way some orcs on wolves decide to attack? Then that whole disappearance and dream sequence with Aragorn?!? Did Tolkien write two different versions of the story or something?
Oh, and the complete assassination of Bormamir's more noble, and honorable brother Faramir. And what about that little jaunt over to Gondor for Frodo, Sam, and Gollum? At one point Frodo speaks the line "We're not supposed to be here." I wanted to stand up and yell at the screen "You got that right mister!"
I only hope that the ring gets destroyed in the next movie. Unless P.J. comes up with some other plans for it.
I walked out of the movie and demanded my money back. My reason was that they didn't show the movie I came to see. I came to see "The Two Towers". I don't know what the hell that piece of crap was.
I've seen all of Eastwoods spaghetti westerns. I think Good, Bad, and Ugly is one of the best because it's not based around the typical "Revenge" cliché. All three guys are bad guys. Clint (The good), and Eli Wallach (The ugly) are nothing more than scam artists. Van Cleef (The bad) is a corrupt union sergeant that does murder for hire.
They all find out about $200,000 in gold coins stolen from the union army, now hidden in a grave in a graveyard. The only problem is the location is broken up into two secrets (the name of the grave yard, and the name on the grave), and neither one of them knows both secrets.
You set this against the backdrop of the Civil War. Thousands of real good men (both North, and South), fighting, and dieing each for what they believe in. We have a depiction of the hell of the Civil War, and we have these three bad guys weaseling their way through it to get to a fortune in stolen war funds.
This is one of the ultimate "Anti-Hero" films of all time. The "Good Guy" doesn't always win. In this case the "Lesser" of all the evil guys wins. He's still a thief, but you find yourself rooting for him.
They all find out about $200,000 in gold coins stolen from the union army, now hidden in a grave in a graveyard. The only problem is the location is broken up into two secrets (the name of the grave yard, and the name on the grave), and neither one of them knows both secrets.
You set this against the backdrop of the Civil War. Thousands of real good men (both North, and South), fighting, and dieing each for what they believe in. We have a depiction of the hell of the Civil War, and we have these three bad guys weaseling their way through it to get to a fortune in stolen war funds.
This is one of the ultimate "Anti-Hero" films of all time. The "Good Guy" doesn't always win. In this case the "Lesser" of all the evil guys wins. He's still a thief, but you find yourself rooting for him.