Anonymous wrote:Loved the Favorite.
Lobster was a little wierd and Poor Things had a lot of great elements but just didn’t work for me. Too long and drawn out. I liked the sort of “steampunk “ vibe and the costumes and sets were very cool! Maybe the book might be more interesting and entertaining. I liked the overall message at the end. But thought the film tried to hard to be shocking. And I agree that Mark Ruffolo’s British accent was annoying.
Anonymous wrote: There’s one other aspect that confused me that no one mentioned - the anachronisms in the movie. The coach had a horses head but no horse. The movie design and costuming seems to allude to Victorian times but there were flying cars. Was this done just to contribute to the weirdness, or is there an explanation for it in the book that wasn’t present in the movie? She also leaves the hotel in her underwear and no one on the streets seems to acknowledge or care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This film is weirdly absurd and dumb.
Yeah I just don’t get the idea that this movie had a strong message. Or was feminist. She ran away with a strange man while her brain was a tween at best. That’s not about wanting to be free it’s adolescence. Then for freedom she decides to become a sex worker but it is shown as if the other sex workers chose to be there in the same manner she did. Why not just let her sleep around but with men on her own terms? Then she turned the dude into a goat and we are supposed to see they as a humane choice instead of letting him die or saving him?
Emma Stone was pretty good in the role- I don’t think she should have won the Oscar, her childlike movements and phase were really weird to me. I really liked Mark Ruffalo’s performance for some reason but I get why others didn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Are we talking full on nudity or what? Haven’t seen it and am kind of afraid to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought it was very clearly written by a man with a fetish. Who else would create a story about a woman’s brain being replaced by a toddler and their first cognitive experiences being sexual awakenings?
I had a similar reaction. A male director who got Emma Stone to go an along with a lot of gratuitous scenes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought it was very clearly written by a man with a fetish. Who else would create a story about a woman’s brain being replaced by a toddler and their first cognitive experiences being sexual awakenings?
I'm curious about the book which I understand is clearly a satire of Frankenstein, and also is told from both the doctor's point of view, and then Ella's.
I didn't feel this came through in the movie really and found it kind of stupid. I am really surprised Emma Stone (who I generally like) won an Oscar for this. It felt approximately on the level of a protracted Family Guy episode.
Anonymous wrote:This film is weirdly absurd and dumb.
Anonymous wrote: There’s one other aspect that confused me that no one mentioned - the anachronisms in the movie. The coach had a horses head but no horse. The movie design and costuming seems to allude to Victorian times but there were flying cars. Was this done just to contribute to the weirdness, or is there an explanation for it in the book that wasn’t present in the movie? She also leaves the hotel in her underwear and no one on the streets seems to acknowledge or care.
Anonymous wrote:I thought it was very clearly written by a man with a fetish. Who else would create a story about a woman’s brain being replaced by a toddler and their first cognitive experiences being sexual awakenings?
Anonymous wrote:I read somewhere that it’s now the second movie where Mark Ruffalos character falls in love with a child trapped in a woman’s body. (13 going on 30) and can’t unsee that. Creepy pedo vibes from Hollywood.
Anonymous wrote:I thought it was very clearly written by a man with a fetish. Who else would create a story about a woman’s brain being replaced by a toddler and their first cognitive experiences being sexual awakenings?