My vote would be for In the Mood for Love (2000), auteur filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai's moody and lushly romantic period drama.
Some others are 2046 (2004), Mullholland Drive (2001), Russian Ark (2002), Dogville (2003), Werckmeister Harmonies (2000) and Notre Musique (2004).
Ten points to the best-supported answer.
2006-08-16
15:00:08
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9 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Entertainment & Music
➔ Movies
Hmm...Crash seemed rather contrived to me. As the characters are more often symbolic types than fleshed-out individuals, they butt up against each other according to what will create maximum incendiary dialogue and the potential for explosive conflict. Also, while a number of scenes work well individually, their coincidental interconnectedness undermines them enough to seem gimmicky.
2006-08-16
15:09:21 ·
update #1
Ugh, no. While I can see how devout Christians would love it, The Passion of the Christ was not a well-made film; the endless brutality ultimately achieves a deadening numbness in viewers who are not given an opportunity to identify with the spiritual aspects of the story. This is essentially cinematic sadism.
2006-08-16
15:11:50 ·
update #2
Are you kidding? The acting in Episode III was incredibly stiff and wooden, the dialogue was laughably simplistic, and the film in general was horribly cliched.
2006-08-16
15:21:41 ·
update #3