A Silent Voice (2016) by Naoko Yamada
This is an incredibly fascinating film, solely due to the massive work and careful planning done on the animation department. I fail to think of any anime film I've ever seen, that surpasses "A Silent Voice" in art, style, look and cinematography. Granted, I haven’t watched as many anime as I would like, but it would be quite a struggle for me to imagine an even greater film in aesthetics than this one.
On the other hand, to say that the story is lacking would be an understatement. I'm not the biggest fan of melodrama, but I still crave for a certain amount of it here and there, and wouldn't mind it in a film if it isn't too excessive. Unfortunately, the following movie has way more of it than I bargained for, and my eyes weren't ready for it, so they kept rolling throughout the entirety of the film’s duration. If you’re not as sensitive to this kind of stuff than I am, then please check this film out, it deserves your attention.
⭐⭐1/2
On the other hand, to say that the story is lacking would be an understatement. I'm not the biggest fan of melodrama, but I still crave for a certain amount of it here and there, and wouldn't mind it in a film if it isn't too excessive. Unfortunately, the following movie has way more of it than I bargained for, and my eyes weren't ready for it, so they kept rolling throughout the entirety of the film’s duration. If you’re not as sensitive to this kind of stuff than I am, then please check this film out, it deserves your attention.
⭐⭐1/2
Coco (2017) by Lee Unkrich & Adrian Molina
The last impressive film by Pixar I've seen is "Up", and that was released almost 10 years ago (crazy, right...), so ever since that, I kinda lost interest in the company's products overall. Now that I've seen "Coco", and liked it quite a bit, my hope is starting to restore itself, until I'm slapped back into reality and realise that the company's upcoming films are another bunch of sequels. I mean really..."Toy Story 4", I guess they haven't gotten enough of the billions of dollars in merchandising from that franchise.
Anyway, "Coco" is legitimately a great movie, and I wouldn't mind ranking it among my favourite films of this past year. The animation is great as usual. The story, while having a few holes in it, still managed to effect me emotionally. Surprisingly, quite a few of the jokes were actually funny and made me chuckle. Not to mention, the land of the dead is a captivating place to explore, due to all of the thoughts put into the practicalities of this bizarre universe. Sure, not everything makes total sense, but nothing in the film is completely broken either, which is enough to not make my experience sour.
⭐⭐⭐
Anyway, "Coco" is legitimately a great movie, and I wouldn't mind ranking it among my favourite films of this past year. The animation is great as usual. The story, while having a few holes in it, still managed to effect me emotionally. Surprisingly, quite a few of the jokes were actually funny and made me chuckle. Not to mention, the land of the dead is a captivating place to explore, due to all of the thoughts put into the practicalities of this bizarre universe. Sure, not everything makes total sense, but nothing in the film is completely broken either, which is enough to not make my experience sour.
⭐⭐⭐
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"A film has to be a dialogue, not a monologue — a dialogue to provoke in the viewer his own thoughts, his own feelings. And if a film is a dialogue, then it’s a good film; if it’s not a dialogue, it’s a bad film."
"A film has to be a dialogue, not a monologue — a dialogue to provoke in the viewer his own thoughts, his own feelings. And if a film is a dialogue, then it’s a good film; if it’s not a dialogue, it’s a bad film."
- Michael "Gloomy Old Fart" Haneke
Last edited by Okay; 03-19-18 at 04:29 PM.