Rating: Summary: poor transfer Review: a really terrific movie, as everyone here's stated. I saw the film on its theatrical release in the same double feature a lot of people speak of. But on buying the DVD, I was disappointed at the dark, muddy transfer. The dance sequences are fairly well-lit, but a number of the scenes are so dark it's difficult to tell what's going on.
Rating: Summary: just to clarify, this is a box set... Review: From the wellspringworldwidesales website: 2000 Seen By is a collection of entertaining and dramatic films made by emerging and visionary young filmmakers from different countries and cultures. Each film includes the moment when the clock strikes midnight on December 31st, 1999. This ensemble of films offers a provocative and controversial look at the experience of entering the third millenium, navigated by very different points of view. Films include: The Book Of Life, 1998, 63 min. - Hal Hartley, U.S.; My First Night, 1998, 84 min. - Miguel Albaladejo, SPAIN; The Hole, 1998, 95 min. - Tsai Ming-Liang, TAIWAN; Life On Earth, 1998, 61 min. - Abderrahmane Sissako, MALI; Midnight, 1998, 72 min. - Daniela Thomas and Walter Salles, BRAZIL; The Sanguinaires, 1998, 68 min. - Laurent Cantet, FRANCE; Tama And Juli, 1997, 60 min. - Ildiko Enyedi, HUNGARY; and The Wall, 1998, 67 min. - Alain Berliner, BELGIUM.
Rating: Summary: a favorite apocalyptic love story Review: Gorgeous cinema, perfect acting and the Grace Chang "karaoke"/Dennis Poter-esque musical numbers are exquisite. Many people who are used to standard United States movies wil never enjoy/get it, but the rest of us love it.
Rating: Summary: a favorite apocalyptic love story Review: Gorgeous cinema, perfect acting and the Grace Chang "karaoke"/Dennis Poter-esque musical numbers are exquisite. Many people who are used to standard United States movies wil never enjoy/get it, but the rest of us love it.
Rating: Summary: Something a little different can be a good thing. Review: I saw this movie as part of a double feature. They first showed Hal Hartley's "Book of Life" followed by a 10 minute intermission and then they showed "The Hole". For a movie I almost walked out on before it started, I was happy I stayed even with the subtitles. This and Hartley's movie were part of a End of the Millenium Film series produced by a French company. (it has been some time and forget the details).This movie is about the annoyances of close living quarters, for anyone who has had a noisy upstairs neighbor knows what I'm talking about (next time live on the top floor). But this movie also brings up the idea of what can bring two people together, no matter what keeps them apart, they just need a little help to find one another. There is a lot of interesting camera work and character development. Where it goes I don't always know, but I am more than willing to watch it again. Purely enlightening experience. There are also musical dance sequences that come in to break up the scenes and carry the film through. Definately worth seeing, maybe not owning.
Rating: Summary: Something a little different can be a good thing. Review: I saw this movie as part of a double feature. They first showed Hal Hartley's "Book of Life" followed by a 10 minute intermission and then they showed "The Hole". For a movie I almost walked out on before it started, I was happy I stayed even with the subtitles. This and Hartley's movie were part of a End of the Millenium Film series produced by a French company. (it has been some time and forget the details). This movie is about the annoyances of close living quarters, for anyone who has had a noisy upstairs neighbor knows what I'm talking about (next time live on the top floor). But this movie also brings up the idea of what can bring two people together, no matter what keeps them apart, they just need a little help to find one another. There is a lot of interesting camera work and character development. Where it goes I don't always know, but I am more than willing to watch it again. Purely enlightening experience. There are also musical dance sequences that come in to break up the scenes and carry the film through. Definately worth seeing, maybe not owning.
Rating: Summary: Something a little different can be a good thing. Review: I saw this movie as part of a double feature. They first showed Hal Hartley's "Book of Life" followed by a 10 minute intermission and then they showed "The Hole". For a movie I almost walked out on before it started, I was happy I stayed even with the subtitles. This and Hartley's movie were part of a End of the Millenium Film series produced by a French company. (it has been some time and forget the details). This movie is about the annoyances of close living quarters, for anyone who has had a noisy upstairs neighbor knows what I'm talking about (next time live on the top floor). But this movie also brings up the idea of what can bring two people together, no matter what keeps them apart, they just need a little help to find one another. There is a lot of interesting camera work and character development. Where it goes I don't always know, but I am more than willing to watch it again. Purely enlightening experience. There are also musical dance sequences that come in to break up the scenes and carry the film through. Definately worth seeing, maybe not owning.
Rating: Summary: Sexy examination of the disaffected Review: Sexy as all get out. And I'm not talking about the "Calypso" or the "Sneezing, I'm allergic to you" song and dance numbers, either. But when one sits down and thinks about why it's sexy, it says alot about one's own fetishizations and brand of sexuality, I think. For example, consider the physical separation of the man and woman. One's on top, one's on the bottom. The voyeurism was also strictly one way, which forces the other person to be an exhibitionist. And despite the advantage/disadvantage environment that is dictated purely by things beyond their control (i.e. the weather, the Kafkaesque Gregor Samsa virus) a desire for one another was still nurtured. I found the film totally fascinating.
Rating: Summary: Sexy examination of the disaffected Review: Sexy as all get out. And I'm not talking about the "Calypso" or the "Sneezing, I'm allergic to you" song and dance numbers, either. But when one sits down and thinks about why it's sexy, it says alot about one's own fetishizations and brand of sexuality, I think. For example, consider the physical separation of the man and woman. One's on top, one's on the bottom. The voyeurism was also strictly one way, which forces the other person to be an exhibitionist. And despite the advantage/disadvantage environment that is dictated purely by things beyond their control (i.e. the weather, the Kafkaesque Gregor Samsa virus) a desire for one another was still nurtured. I found the film totally fascinating.
Rating: Summary: The development of a hole... Review: The government wants to quarantine an area after an outbreak of Taiwan Fever and they will turn off the water in the area after New Years Eve of 2000, which is seven days away. However, some people refuse to leave their homes as they have lived there for a long time. A young man, who lives in the quarantined area, goes about his mundane life as he feeds the cat, goes to work, eats, and sleeps. When the plumber knocks on his door due to a water leakage in the apartment complex it is about to little by little change his daily life style. The plumber creates a small hole that leads to the apartment downstairs where a young woman lives. The young woman is first very annoyed by the hole in her ceiling, but as time goes by she begins to communicate with the young man upstairs. Hole is not an ordinary cinematic experience as it uses shots that seem to go on forever, which instill a feeling of boredom and lifelessness. These long shots are enhanced by the rain that keeps falling non-stop in the background creating an illusion of a invisible wall that no one can escape. Simultaneously the radio and TV are spitting out threatening information in regards to the rare disease in the area, which is terrorizing the minds of the audience. The director Tsai creates an artificial imprisonment where the audience can fall into the same trap as the characters as they struggle with their coexistence through the hole, which is occasionally interrupted by colorful hallucination like scenes of song and dance. This leaves the audience with a remarkable cinematic experience as they view the development of the hole.
|