largelyhappy
Joined Jul 2005
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Reviews20
largelyhappy's rating
It's good in parts and I agree that it starts slow but it's well worth sticking with it for the scenery alone (although that makes it sound as if nothing else is worth watching. I don't mean that, it is)
Actors some New Zealanders know and love, mainly from soaps, feature here which makes it interesting locally and the tension level is maintained by some good cliff-hangers.
I don't agree with another reviewer that the acting is terrible, though some of the script can verge on the corny but who takes this sort of thing entirely seriously anyway?
I have a vested interest in this series though, I own one of the white coffins used in the series :-)
Actors some New Zealanders know and love, mainly from soaps, feature here which makes it interesting locally and the tension level is maintained by some good cliff-hangers.
I don't agree with another reviewer that the acting is terrible, though some of the script can verge on the corny but who takes this sort of thing entirely seriously anyway?
I have a vested interest in this series though, I own one of the white coffins used in the series :-)
Incredible as it may seem, funding from the very people who should have been supporting this brilliant New Zealand film (from a book by established, best-selling author, Mike Riddell), was not forthcoming but the production team fought for it and their faith has been amply rewarded.
They may not want to thumb their noses at the short-sighted New Zealand Film Commission who ignored them but I'm quite happy to do so ! The Insatiable Moon is an award winner and you missed being part of it. Shame on you.
But if there is a message in this movie it is just that - we don't see the value, the insight and beauty of people who have been labelled mentally ill. We don't see them as people at all but as a problem, preferably ignored, certainly underfunded, usually scorned.
Arthur is convinced he's the second son of God and during the course of the movie, the audience moves from the easy, dismissive laughter at such a claim, to the idea that he just might be right.
Although a New Zealand film - and one of an increasing number of top quality productions from this country - the story will resonate in any society.
In every community there are those whose inability to cope with lifes's mental strains has relegated them to the background, even the scrapheap. But this movie shows that if we have the courage to think outside the square, with insight and perception, we will surely hear and see great truths.
A moving, beautiful, happy film with a message for everyone. Don't be like the New Zealand Film Commission and turn your back on something potentially wonderful. The forgotten people are forgotten no more thanks to The Insatiable Moon. Bravo.
They may not want to thumb their noses at the short-sighted New Zealand Film Commission who ignored them but I'm quite happy to do so ! The Insatiable Moon is an award winner and you missed being part of it. Shame on you.
But if there is a message in this movie it is just that - we don't see the value, the insight and beauty of people who have been labelled mentally ill. We don't see them as people at all but as a problem, preferably ignored, certainly underfunded, usually scorned.
Arthur is convinced he's the second son of God and during the course of the movie, the audience moves from the easy, dismissive laughter at such a claim, to the idea that he just might be right.
Although a New Zealand film - and one of an increasing number of top quality productions from this country - the story will resonate in any society.
In every community there are those whose inability to cope with lifes's mental strains has relegated them to the background, even the scrapheap. But this movie shows that if we have the courage to think outside the square, with insight and perception, we will surely hear and see great truths.
A moving, beautiful, happy film with a message for everyone. Don't be like the New Zealand Film Commission and turn your back on something potentially wonderful. The forgotten people are forgotten no more thanks to The Insatiable Moon. Bravo.
A great film utterly spoiled by the scriptwriters prejudice (or even fetish) about chubbiness. One leading character, thin as a rake was repeatedly referred to as chubby which made about as much sense as referring to her white face as black. Then later, extremely derogatory comments about another fat girl (made by her slob of a father who was twice her size!).
Throughout the film, several assumptions were made that fat women don't find love - what rubbish - so I can only assume that the scriptwriter has a BIG problem, not to say obsession about size, even to the extent of inventing it where it doesn't exist in order to get his prejudice across.
Otherwise a brilliant film.
Throughout the film, several assumptions were made that fat women don't find love - what rubbish - so I can only assume that the scriptwriter has a BIG problem, not to say obsession about size, even to the extent of inventing it where it doesn't exist in order to get his prejudice across.
Otherwise a brilliant film.