After twenty-five years Silva rides a horse across the desert to visit his friend Sheriff Jake. They celebrate the meeting, but the next morning Jake tells him that reason for his trip is no... Read allAfter twenty-five years Silva rides a horse across the desert to visit his friend Sheriff Jake. They celebrate the meeting, but the next morning Jake tells him that reason for his trip is not to go down the memory lane of their friendship.After twenty-five years Silva rides a horse across the desert to visit his friend Sheriff Jake. They celebrate the meeting, but the next morning Jake tells him that reason for his trip is not to go down the memory lane of their friendship.
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It's literally a short film. Only half an hour and the ending leaves you perplexed and wondering what is it the director wanted to say or is it just a window into the hidden love and lust of cowboys for each other in times past. The acting leaves alot to be desired and the plot I found to be overly simplistic. There are some scenes of passion especially the younger actors who in flashbacks of both the sheriff and this ex lover share their love and passion for each other in a wine drinking splashing rolling moment in the movie. Plus a very short sequence of the older ones in bed together after they have dinner. This short film reminded me of back mountain and thinking why this one too wasn't made into something on par in depth and sophistication with that. In one word it was disappointing.
I am reviewing because there are so many negative reviews. Thought this was a beautiful glimpse into the universe of some beautifully portrayed characters. Both Ethan and Pedro did a great job. I loved their chemistry. Pedro especially was very moving in his role. This short film packed a heavy emotional punch for me and I would love to see it as a feature film. (as for the negative reviews, if you have to say you're not homophobic in your review, you probably are). As for the complaints about the use of the green jacket. I loved it, loved all the costuming. It made Pedro's character stand out, which I assume was the point.
With its bold colours, heightened melodrama and clunky dialogue, 'Strange Way Of Life (2023)' often feels like a parody of... itself, I guess. Those already accustomed to Pedro Almodóvar's work will recognise these elements, as well as the sincere camp aesthetic they contribute to. However, here it doesn't cohere as well as it typically does in the director's other movies. Perhaps his dialogue has always been this dodgy but, not being a native Spanish speaker, I haven't picked up on it; either way, even actors as good as Ethan Hawke and Pedro Pascal struggle to sell the dialogue here. Still, the piece operates on a kind of down-to-Earth unreality that just about works. A bigger issue is that the story just... ends. Like, almost in the middle of a sentence. It feels as though the screenplay was still being written when Yves Saint Laurent's production company called and offered a green light on the condition that filming started almost then and there, so Almodóvar put down his pen and picked up his viewfinder and shot what he had. There's a lot more that could have been done with this tale of long-burning, societally repressed romance; the ending feels like the midpoint of a much more affecting feature-length affair. Another smaller issue with the flick is that it's nowhere near as erotically charged as you may expect. Hawke and Pascal do a good job at conveying their barely hidden attraction for one another, and there's a sense of tragedy that underlines their once-flourishing relationship, but they display no real physical connection and the only time they get hot and heavy is in a flashback (when their characters are portrayed by younger actors). Their connection is believable, but not as fleshed out as it could have been. It's also remarkably tame if you're familiar with Almodóvar's earlier efforts. Ultimately, though, the piece is entertaining enough for what it is. It has a solid central story that's underexplored but interesting, and two strong lead performances that lend authenticity to the generally clumsy screenplay. It's not a bad effort, by any means. It's just not as moving, or fun, as I'd like it to be.
Oh so very gay and well acted. I can absolutely see how this was Pedro Almodóvar seemingly long overdue version of Brokeback Mountain in a way, as referred to by both him and the fact that he wanted to direct Brokeback Mountain to begin with. Sadly I have still not yet watched that movie despite hearing nothing but fantastic things about it, and after watching this one I really don't think that Almodóvar would have had it in him to make something that widely well received.
I think this works best a short film, although at the same time I can't help but feel like it's far too short to really get much from it at all. What is there however is at the very least incredibly decent and has some really major highs, such as the spectacular acting from both leads (Pedro Pascal and Ethan Hawke), and what I consider to be a very good solid score that really elevated what was an otherwise mediocre time.
A story of two men who were lovers at one point 25 years ago in the past, meeting each other again after one of their sons commits a heinous crime in the others town. They immediately hit it off after not seeing each other for over two decades, and the little chemistry that is shown between the two with the very limited time we get with them is palpable and honestly very cute at times to say the least. But that doesn't really matter much when we barely get to spend any time with the two of them, so we barely get to explore their seemingly very detailed and interesting lives - which is what I think drags this down a great deal.
The weird thing is I don't believe this should be any longer either, I don't think it particularly works as well as it could've as a short film but at the same time I don't think even another thirty minutes of this would be all that appealing to me. It's a very conflicting thing as it clearly has some really good parts and is executed well by the actors themselves, but I cannot tell if it's the writing or the directing that makes it all feel just a tad lackluster.
Overall I liked it enough to consider it worth checking out, especially due to the fact it is only at a brisk thirty minute runtime. It's filled with two immensely talented actors being gay as hell and looking good doing it, which is at least enough of a reason for me to watch it. Nothing special if we're being honest, but it could for sure resonate with other people far more than it did with me. I slightly enjoyed what it was going for and I liked the execution of the majority of it, but it didn't really make a lasting impact on me. A perfectly serviceable short film that I think you should check out if you have Netflix as it just dropped on there.
I think this works best a short film, although at the same time I can't help but feel like it's far too short to really get much from it at all. What is there however is at the very least incredibly decent and has some really major highs, such as the spectacular acting from both leads (Pedro Pascal and Ethan Hawke), and what I consider to be a very good solid score that really elevated what was an otherwise mediocre time.
A story of two men who were lovers at one point 25 years ago in the past, meeting each other again after one of their sons commits a heinous crime in the others town. They immediately hit it off after not seeing each other for over two decades, and the little chemistry that is shown between the two with the very limited time we get with them is palpable and honestly very cute at times to say the least. But that doesn't really matter much when we barely get to spend any time with the two of them, so we barely get to explore their seemingly very detailed and interesting lives - which is what I think drags this down a great deal.
The weird thing is I don't believe this should be any longer either, I don't think it particularly works as well as it could've as a short film but at the same time I don't think even another thirty minutes of this would be all that appealing to me. It's a very conflicting thing as it clearly has some really good parts and is executed well by the actors themselves, but I cannot tell if it's the writing or the directing that makes it all feel just a tad lackluster.
Overall I liked it enough to consider it worth checking out, especially due to the fact it is only at a brisk thirty minute runtime. It's filled with two immensely talented actors being gay as hell and looking good doing it, which is at least enough of a reason for me to watch it. Nothing special if we're being honest, but it could for sure resonate with other people far more than it did with me. I slightly enjoyed what it was going for and I liked the execution of the majority of it, but it didn't really make a lasting impact on me. A perfectly serviceable short film that I think you should check out if you have Netflix as it just dropped on there.
'Strange way of life' is an English-speaking short film directed by one of the most prominent Spanish directors ever... who does not speak English. How (and why) this amateur piece of work with such bad writing, astoundingly dumb dialogues and even mediocre cinematography got produced and released theatrically is beyond me.
The story it's, most of the time, the same nonsensical exposition over and over. It hopes to trick the audience into believing there's a deep conflict, a sad story of tormented lovers and forbidden love, but there's none. The chemistry is just not there. The clumsy flashback scene is utterly ludicrous.
This film is something I would expect from a pretentious student at film school, a self-proclaimed artist who tries to write something deep just to show how smart they are, but fails because they don't know anything about it. However, it's not. It's a film by Pedro Almodóvar. Not worth the time, much less the cost of a full-length movie ticket.
The story it's, most of the time, the same nonsensical exposition over and over. It hopes to trick the audience into believing there's a deep conflict, a sad story of tormented lovers and forbidden love, but there's none. The chemistry is just not there. The clumsy flashback scene is utterly ludicrous.
This film is something I would expect from a pretentious student at film school, a self-proclaimed artist who tries to write something deep just to show how smart they are, but fails because they don't know anything about it. However, it's not. It's a film by Pedro Almodóvar. Not worth the time, much less the cost of a full-length movie ticket.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe title is inspired by the Portuguese poem song by Amália Rodrigues called "Estranha forma de vida" (Strange Way of Life), released in 1959 and sung by Brazilian singer Caetano Veloso and lip-synced by actor Manu Ríos at the beginning of this short film. At other times you can hear the melody of the song as well as references to it in the dialogue of the characters.
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $503,992
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $182,216
- Oct 8, 2023
- Gross worldwide
- $1,064,830
- Runtime31 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.40 : 1
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