Modérateur: Alegas
Scalp a écrit:Si on arrive à 3 avis positifs (celui de Alegas compte pas) je m'inflige la filmo de Haneke.
Scalp a écrit:Faut que ce soit crédible. Genre Logan et Oso jamais de la vie je vais les croire si ils disent que c'est bien.
An endearing family adventure, a bitter ecological plea and a rousing action film all rolled into one, Okja proves once more that Bong Joon Ho is a master of twisting something new out of the familiar. While Netflix's gamble screams to be seen on the big screen, this colorful fantasy should be warmly received by global subscribers when it goes live on June 28th.
Much talk will follow about Netflix and the fact that only some people will have a chance to see this in theaters, but it's hard to imagine any other studio giving Director Bong the leeway to craft something that is so ambitious and veers in so many directions at once. What's more it does with seemingly no regard for age ratings, as expletives are gingerly tossed into scenes of goofy family fun. You may never eat meat again, but Bong Joon Ho and his beautiful Okja have made a grand feast that you'll be able to go back to again and again.
But the first Netflix movie ever In Competition finds its natural habitat on the big screen, right down to including that least “convenient” of film conventions, a post-credits sequence (stay through the end, everyone!) In emotional reach, spectacle and form it seems designed, from the fine-grain detail of bristles and hide, to the massive, expansive overheads, to lollop and loll all over the biggest screen you can see it on. This is the funny, moving “Okja” — a perfectly cinematic and extraordinarily persuasive manifesto for anti-capitalist activism, civil resistance, traditional farming methods and, finally, full-bore vegetarianism.
You may never eat meat again
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