Sunday, March 6, 2011

Receiver With Upconvert

127 Hours, Danny Boyle

Danny Boyle gives us, in 127 hours (2010), a story of survival and struggle theme of virtually all his movies. And when I write "one more of Boyle," I mean "another masterpiece" of this important director in recent years.

vibrant as ever, and touching as few times, Boyle delight in their creativity by telling a story through flashbacks, split screens and subjective shots, also helped by another extraordinary and impressive soundtrack by AR Rahman in his second collaboration straight after Slumdog Millionaire (2008).

For his part, James Franco looks at what may be his greatest work to date, which could bring it to the masses as never before, but has long proven to be extremely talented. But besides that, Franco does a spectacular job as Aron Ralston, an adventurer in real life faced one of the biggest challenges you can imagine. Interpreting

Ralston, Frank goes through the euphoria, despair, struggle, loss of sanity, resignation, regret and determination. All in 95 intense minutes which may be difficult to bear for some.

And this tape is one of the most uncomfortable I've seen in a long time, and say that, rather than a movie, 127 Hours is an experience comparable to riding a roller coaster, to explain it crudely.

The film's success lies in the ease with which the audience can get in the places of our protagonist and ask "what would I do instead, could do what he did, I resign or die in the middle of nowhere ?. " It is a new celebration of life style Boyle, an eclectic director changing genres and methods undeterred, taking us back to the end to redeem at the end. In addition, 127 Hours represents everything that cinema should be: exciting, thoughtful, emotional, entertaining and sometimes instructive.



EXTRA: An interview with Aron Ralston true where he describes his journey, in this special report for NBC held in 2004. I put the first part and follow the links to continue viewing.

0 comments:

Post a Comment