12 Oct 2017

FARAWAY, SO CLOSE TO PERFECTION


Christopher Nolan is one of those movie people that has been close to the laureates from the very beginning of his stellar career, but somehow always failed to materialize his enormous talent.

One of the most inspiring wartime stories of all time, English evacuation of expeditionary forces from the coast of Dunkirk in 1940, was one of those scripts waiting for a diversely capable man behind the camera to take it to the stars.

And Nolan did it, creating one of the most tense war movies ever filmed, using everything he has to recreate the unique claustrophobic atmosphere through three overlapping stories (beach, air, water). He also didn’t abandon his trademark storylines intertwining masterfully leading them to the major problem of this movie.

Its ENDING.

If it weren’t for the bottom quarter of the script, we would be now talking about „Dunkirk” as the best directed war movie of this century. If it weren’t for the surreal heroism, pathetic patriotism and sudden lack of brutality, „Dunkirk” would’ve been known as a total triumph of Nolan’s supreme cinematography. Unfortunately, loss of the control over the script managed to severely diminish perfect sound, sound mixing, wide angle, handheld camera and realistic sea and sky battles, as well as some solid acting (Murphy, Whitehead, Rylance) and that is a real shame.

„Dunkirk” is one masterfully directed war story that will awe you in the first three quarters of its course.






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