
HabibieHakim123
Joined Jul 2019
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Reviews858
HabibieHakim123's rating
At this point, the formula is getting repetitive, Final Destination 3 feels like a rehash of the same concept, only this time, it's way less effective, it's less of a horror movie and more of a themed ride you've already been on, just with different passengers, the death scenes are the only mildly entertaining aspect, which, let's be honest, have basically become the franchise personality at this point, story? Same but lazier, character depth? Nonexistent, chemistry between characters? Might as well be dead too, by the time the third act rolled in, i had already accepted my fate, much like the characters, only i wasn't lucky enough to get a dramatic exit via tanning bed or roller coaster, no suspense, no intensity, just the usual "here comes the next over-the-top demise" moment, and... that's it, cool, i guess, it's bad, really bad.
We have to appreciate and acknowledge that Timothée Chalamet is slowly evolving into the next Daniel Day-Lewis, and like many of the great veteran actors before him, he's proving his versatility, stepping seamlessly into roles as varied as the noble Paul Atreides, the whimsical Willy Wonka, and now, the legendary Bob Dylan himself.
In A Complete Unknown, Chalamet doesn't just play Dylan, he becomes him, there's no trace of Chalamet on screen, it's all Dylan, likewise, Edward Norton vanishes into Pete Seeger, and the entire cast delivers extraordinary performances that breathe life into these iconic figures.
Initially, i feared this might be another formulaic biopic that i would probably still always enjoy, but considering Dylan enigmatic, mythic presence, captured so unconventionally in I'm Not There, i was worried that this film might lose that elusive magic, but to my surprise, A Complete Unknown retains that spirit, while grounding it in something more human and intimate.
Chalamet captures the restless energy of Dylan, the voice of a generation, the poet who once said, "I was born very far from where I'm supposed to be", and gives us a portrait that's both reverent and raw, whether he's channeling Dylan early folk days or the electric revolution that left fans stunned at Newport, Chalamet is magnetic.
A Complete Unknown is far from ordinary, it's a powerful, poignant tribute to an artist who never stopped reinventing himself, and to the actors who channel that same fearless transformation.
In A Complete Unknown, Chalamet doesn't just play Dylan, he becomes him, there's no trace of Chalamet on screen, it's all Dylan, likewise, Edward Norton vanishes into Pete Seeger, and the entire cast delivers extraordinary performances that breathe life into these iconic figures.
Initially, i feared this might be another formulaic biopic that i would probably still always enjoy, but considering Dylan enigmatic, mythic presence, captured so unconventionally in I'm Not There, i was worried that this film might lose that elusive magic, but to my surprise, A Complete Unknown retains that spirit, while grounding it in something more human and intimate.
Chalamet captures the restless energy of Dylan, the voice of a generation, the poet who once said, "I was born very far from where I'm supposed to be", and gives us a portrait that's both reverent and raw, whether he's channeling Dylan early folk days or the electric revolution that left fans stunned at Newport, Chalamet is magnetic.
A Complete Unknown is far from ordinary, it's a powerful, poignant tribute to an artist who never stopped reinventing himself, and to the actors who channel that same fearless transformation.
Yeah, just stop it, i already knew what my opinions are gonna be since that first trailer dropped, A Minecraft Movie is yet another disappointing video game adaptation, just like FNAF, it's another beloved video game turned into a generic, uninspired film where they added uninteresting characters and bad story that at the end has nothing to do with the game itself besides the forced cringe reference and easter egg that they throw, i gave props to both Jason Momoa and Emma Myers for their absolute effort for this movie, but the rest was not even trying, and yes, Jack Black included, what he does in this movie was just shouting and yelling Minecraft reference that will make Minecraft fanatic also shouting, pointing, and losing their mind in the most cringe way, clearly designed to get cheap reactions rather than actually add anything to the film, it's either that or having a terrible musical sequence, it barely qualifies as acting, the story was some of the most template, basic, and uninspired one that they could possibly wrote, it just happened somehow in the Minecraft world full of Minecraft characters, i just don't care, i really didn't, everything in this movie is just full of reference and easter egg throwaway garbage, it's stupid, cringe worthy, and not fun at all, by the time the credits roll, it's clear this was nothing more than a lazy attempt to cash in on a popular franchise, it's a complete waste of time and easily the worst movie of the year so far.