Movies... you like but others don't

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#1
Temujin 2 Februari 2004 jam 9:22am  

I love

Moulin Rouge!

and

Eyes Wide Shut

but most people I know don't like them.

#2
Jojon 3 Februari 2004 jam 12:17am  

I like.......stephen chow ! :aha:

*maksudnya suka nonton film2nya stephen chow, jangan berpikiran negatif dulu ya :x *

#3 avatar
andrea7974 5 Februari 2004 jam 10:34am  

English Patient
aku tahu film ini panjang dan kesannya boring banget. Tapi sebenernya film ini bagus deh...cara pengambilan gambarnya, settingnya, musiknya, semuanya keren. Emang sih bukan tipikal film Hollywood yang gimana gitu...kesannya film ini emang slow dan durasi film yg hampir 2.5 jam itu memang nyebelin.

Tapi....believe me....sekali kamu melihat film ini dan ngerti akan inti sebenernya dari cerita ini...kamu akan bisa mengapresiasi film ini :) :)

oh ya: kalau nonton film ini...bagusnya kalau lagi patah hati, atau kalau sedang jatuh cinta. Kalau perasaanmu lagi biasa-biasa...bakalan bete banget deh nonton film ini :D

#4
RDAK 6 Februari 2004 jam 1:35am  

I REALLY LOVE......

HERO
jelas dong yg maen jet li, tony leung, maggie cheung, zhang ziyi, ama chen dao ming...aku ampe nonton 3 kali, 1 bioskop and 2 vcd!! tapi menurut orang2 kebanyakan ceritanya aneh, alurnya mbingungin, adegan silatnya jelek bla...bla....bla....it's okey tiap orang punya pendapat sendiri2, tp menurutku itu film baguuussss banget!!!

INFERNAL AFFAIRS
banyak yg ga suka gara2 ceritanya, tapi aku malah suka banget tuh ama ceritanya and alurnya yg unik, hehe..... :p

#5
Temujin 6 Februari 2004 jam 1:38am  

andrea7974 menulis:
English Patient
aku tahu film ini panjang dan kesannya boring banget. Tapi sebenernya film ini bagus deh...cara pengambilan gambarnya, settingnya, musiknya, semuanya keren. Emang sih bukan tipikal film Hollywood yang gimana gitu...kesannya film ini emang slow dan durasi film yg hampir 2.5 jam itu memang nyebelin.

Tapi....believe me....sekali kamu melihat film ini dan ngerti akan inti sebenernya dari cerita ini...kamu akan bisa mengapresiasi film ini :) :)

oh ya: kalau nonton film ini...bagusnya kalau lagi patah hati, atau kalau sedang jatuh cinta. Kalau perasaanmu lagi biasa-biasa...bakalan bete banget deh nonton film ini :D

I'd always thought you'd love this type of movie. It's SOOOO.. YOU !

#6
Temujin 6 Februari 2004 jam 1:54am  

I love HERO (Ying Xiong) of China. One of the most beautiful movies I've ever watched. The movie is so phylosophically rooted in Chinese thoughts and teachings. It's very deep.

Most people thought the movie is boring and has no story. Some even thought it's shallow. I thought it was actually amazing how they were able to blend those many version of little stories into one unison to form a perfect story.

#7 avatar
andrea7974 6 Februari 2004 jam 10:17am  

Temujin menulis:
I'd always thought you'd love this type of movie. It's SOOOO.. YOU !
Aduh Temu....nggak segitunyalah :(
jujur aja aku malah nggak pernah tuh nonton film drama apalagi yg mendayu-dayu selain English Patient dan The End of an Affair.
At first aku nonton film ini karena Ralp Fiennes yang maen....aku suka dia!

Tp setelah nonton, ternyata filmnya ini cukup eksotis, ditinjau dari sudut sinematografi, script, dll. Kan kalau menilai film aku tidak hanya menilai film tersebut 'enak' bagiku untuk ditonton atau tidak.
Seperti misalnya waktu si Ralph Fiennes sama itu cewek pas affair pertama kalinya, mereka itu selingkuh di waktu perayaan Natal, dan adegan percintaan mereka digambarkan dengan kontras pada saat choir Natal dinyanyikan, dan suami itu cewek lagi (aku sedikit lupa) kebaktian Natal atau lagi sibuk gitu deh! Jadi sutradara itu menggambarkan ironisme yang terjadi saat itu..pas Natal..suasana semuanya begitu syahdu...tp ada dua mahluk yang lagi melampiaskan nafsu yang nggak bener. Juga waktu si Ralph nya di gurun pasir...dia digambarkan berjuang berhari-hari ke kota untuk mencari pertolongan.....gurun pasirnya, musiknya, ekspresi wajahnya si Ralp...semuanya digambarkan dengan sangat amat eksotis.

asli aku juga jadi sedih dan bete waktu nonton film ini.... tp again...film ini eksotis...lihat deh..pengambilan gambar, pemilihan musik, dll.

oh ya film ini ---> The English Patient
Best Picture 1996 utk Oscar thn 1996

:doh: kenapa juga kamu harus bilang ini film it's SOOOO.. ME?
care to explain, please?!

==
bagi yang tidak pernah nonton film ini bisa lihat reviewnya di:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0116209/

Synopsis: Set in North Africa and Italy during the late 1930's and early '40's, "The English Patient" is an epic drama of two haunting love stories that unfolds against a background of international upheaval. Through the prism of war, and of love and friendship, various themes -- of fidelity, adultery, nationality and betrayals -- are dramatized and explored. The story, based on Michael Ondaatje's Booker Prize-winning novel, is told elliptically, through the histories of four characters who find themselves in a ruined monastery in Italy at the end of World War II. Slowly they reveal themselves and, in the process, the true identity of the English patient -- the unknown survivor of a plane shot down over the Sahara who lies dying in the monastery -- is made clear. Passion fires these stories, whether it is the raw passion between lovers, or the compulsive passion which drives men to explore remote and inhospitable regions, or to pursue across time and countries those they think have wronged them.

User Comments: An Old Time Epic Made in the Present (more)

User Rating: 7.0/10 (20,989 votes)

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/TheEnglishPatient-1074395/

http://movie-reviews.colossus.net/mov...glish.html

another review: http://www.deep-focus.com/flicker/englishp.html

The English Patient opens with one of the film's many touchstone images -- somebody is touching brush to paper, drawing seemingly inscrutable lines with some precision. We wonder whether this is some unfamiliar language, but as the credits progress, the image takes on the shape of a human figure, swimming. The image, we will later learn, has been copied from the ancient paintings on the wall of a desert cave.

The cave of swimmers, as it is known, is discovered by a geographic expedition engaged in mapping out the Sahara Desert for the British government. The next day, those explorers will be taking refuge against a huge windstorm that fills the air with sand. Two lovers-to-be are holed up in a truck that strains against the ferocious clamor outside. One of them, inspired by the danger, begins to tell the other stories about the wind -- the Aajej, the Ghibli, and the Simoon, a wind so terrible that a nation declared war on it. The winds are harbingers for these characters, like the waters that sweep a swimming man downstream no matter how he struggles against the current. Nations at war conjure up a ferocious storm, tearing lovers apart and bringing others caroming together at odd angles. The English Patient is the kind of movie that makes you want to interpret everything you see, that makes you keenly aware that everything can have meaning.

Director Anthony Minghella (Truly, Madly, Deeply) has freely adapted Michael Ondaatje's Booker Prize-winning novel into a flavorful melange, weaving through time from 1944 Italy to late 1930s Egypt and back again before tracing careful steps tying the two stories together. In the one tale, French-Canadian nurse Hana (Juliette Binoche, radiant as ever) deserts her Red Cross convoy to care for a badly burned man identified only as "English patient" -- he was rescued by Bedouin tribesmen after Nazi gunners shot his plane out of the air over the Sahara. This patient is essentially a corpse waiting to lose consciousness, but he retains some shred of good humor; under interrogation over his nationality, he cracks, "I'm a bit of toast, my friend -- butter me and slip a poached egg on top."

Nationality matters a great deal as World War II winds down, and being revealed as a German would be the worst fate to befall a patient in an Italian hospital circa 1944, even one so badly scarred as this. We soon learn that he's not English at all; he's the Hungarian Count Laszlo de Almasy (Ralph Fiennes), and he was a cartographer in the employ of the British government. It's the tale leading up to that beautifully rendered but ill-fated flight over the Sahara which constitutes the second, arguably more compelling, story of The English Patient.

It's an absolute pleasure to follow these characters through the film's 160-minute length. Minghella is a confident director surrounded by expert performers, and he's created a swooning, full-tilt epic of desire, betrayal, war-tattered lives, and landscapes shaped like a woman's body. Navigating a world littered with bombs and mines, these characters nurture passions that will reverberate across borders and echo through time. Chief among these is the wickedly intellectual affair between Almasy and Katherine Clifton (Kristin Scott Thomas), the wife of another member of his expedition.

Meanwhile (at least in terms of screen time), Hana is falling in love, not with her patient, but with Kip (Naveen Andrews) a Sikh bomb disposal expert who enters her life by shooing her away from the monastery's piano -- he fears the Germans have mined it, and he's right. Kip sets up camp nearby, and helps Hana care for her patient. He tries to read Rudyard Kipling aloud to the patient, and the two of them get into an argument over the prose. "Your eye is too impatient," the patient scolds him. "Think about the speed of his pen." Later, Kip will lure Hana to his bedroom with a trail of snail-shell lamps, and will send her on a rope-and-pulleys tour of a frescoed church. Such shamelessly romantic conceits are the stuff that makes this film go, and mostly it just goes beautifully.

Scott Thomas's performance has been singled out for special praise, but in truth they are all remarkable, from Fiennes' handsomely tormented lead to Willem Dafoe's mysterious, thumbless Caravaggio. John Seale's cinematography is mostly stunning, although the sameness of the orange tones gets to be a little much in such a lengthy outing. Film editor Walter Murch (instrumental in the editing and sound design of Apocalypse Now) doubtless deserves special praise for his world-class technique -- Minghella acknowledges that the film's mostly seamless feat of flitting over and over again from setting to setting was largely conceived and achieved in the cutting room. Murch's instinctive cutting style is a big part of what makes The English Patient so convincing. In the final scenes, as Binoche hitches a ride to Florence on the back of a truck, we cross-cut from a shot of that biplane, once again in the sky over the Sahara, to a shot of Binoche's face, reaching some kind of resolution at last, to a shot of trees on the roadside, filtering and flickering the sunlight as we ride past, and finally to the sun itself, blazing pure white on the cinema screen (the credits roll over this in black). I can't explain exactly what such a sequence means -- but if I could, it wouldn't be pure cinema. It is.

The big-screen tricks Minghella brings to bear on this story aren't exactly high-concept, but they work like a charm -- the biplane flight that opens and closes the film is impossibly romantic and surreal (to ironic effect), Fred Astaire sings "Cheek to Cheek" on the soundtrack (to devastating effect), and a crucial plane crash in the latter reels is almost frighteningly effective -- you feel like the audience at one of the first demonstrations of moving pictures, who reportedly leapt out of their seats with fear as a locomotive apparently bore down upon them. If anything, The English Patient has too many ideas and too much portentous symbology for its own good -- a common affliction of movies that try to pack too many signs and metaphors from source novels into their own text. For its flaws, and despite a patch during the third act where it seems to lose its way, The English Patient is one bold melodrama. From beginning to end, it's gasping for air and striving for greatness. It never quite reaches that summit, but it's an intoxicating view all the same.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Written and Directed by Anthony Minghella

Jadi apapun komentar orang ttg film ini... aku TETAP SUKA!!!
Ini adalah masalah selera!
Aku lebih suka film yang eksotis (dr segi artistik) dari film yang populer. Ini adalah masalah selera!!! :x :x