Stressqueen
A rejoint oct. 1999
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Commentaires6
Évaluation de Stressqueen
This certainly isn't a critics movie. OK, so Big Nothing isn't the most original film in the world. Blackmail attempt goes horribly wrong, etc. etc. I can also see how some people have problems with seeing Simon Pegg as an American.
HOWEVER, in it's defence, 'Big Nothing' is a lot of fun, is snappy, stylish, well paced and all in all a very enjoyable piece of film making. I found it really funny (I loved Mimi Rogers' quip about Pink Floyd), and the film got a good reaction from the rest of audience too. If you're after a good old slice of entertainment then Big Nothing is worth seeing. Definitely a 'Friday night' with popcorn type of viewing.
HOWEVER, in it's defence, 'Big Nothing' is a lot of fun, is snappy, stylish, well paced and all in all a very enjoyable piece of film making. I found it really funny (I loved Mimi Rogers' quip about Pink Floyd), and the film got a good reaction from the rest of audience too. If you're after a good old slice of entertainment then Big Nothing is worth seeing. Definitely a 'Friday night' with popcorn type of viewing.
Being a fan of Loach's work, I was expecting to be gripped and blown away by this film. Sadly I was not. I was actually rather bored.
The chief problem with this film for me was the script - it felt like one long political and ideological lecture rather than the telling of an incredible story in the history of Ireland. It vacillates between a howling rage or an earnest debate, with no dramatic tension to make it work as a piece of cinema. The narrative flow and pace is absolutely all over the place, with a stop start momentum that makes the film incredibly hard to settle into.
Loach's trademark gallows humour is sadly lacking, and there is next to no character development, so it was very hard to care for the protagonists. The British soldiers were one dimensional cardboard cut outs and more pantomime villains than vicious oppressors.
Cillian Murphy is excellent, but I felt that Orlagh Fitzgerald's performance was all 'one- note', and Padraic Delaney as Teddy lacked the charisma and gravitas for someone who is supposed to be an inspirational leader.
Despite my criticism of the film I want to point out that I don't subscribe to the notion that this film is anti-British. The atrocities committed by the British government are well documented. We can't pretend that it didn't happen. This is just a very flawed depiction.
The chief problem with this film for me was the script - it felt like one long political and ideological lecture rather than the telling of an incredible story in the history of Ireland. It vacillates between a howling rage or an earnest debate, with no dramatic tension to make it work as a piece of cinema. The narrative flow and pace is absolutely all over the place, with a stop start momentum that makes the film incredibly hard to settle into.
Loach's trademark gallows humour is sadly lacking, and there is next to no character development, so it was very hard to care for the protagonists. The British soldiers were one dimensional cardboard cut outs and more pantomime villains than vicious oppressors.
Cillian Murphy is excellent, but I felt that Orlagh Fitzgerald's performance was all 'one- note', and Padraic Delaney as Teddy lacked the charisma and gravitas for someone who is supposed to be an inspirational leader.
Despite my criticism of the film I want to point out that I don't subscribe to the notion that this film is anti-British. The atrocities committed by the British government are well documented. We can't pretend that it didn't happen. This is just a very flawed depiction.