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‏הצגת רשומות עם תוויות composer. הצג את כל הרשומות
‏הצגת רשומות עם תוויות composer. הצג את כל הרשומות

יום שלישי, 16 באוקטובר 2018

Apocalypto - IS IT THAT GOOD




YES IT IS!



Apocalypto, a Mel Gibson film from 2006 is absolutely, without a question, a masterpiece. It is an example of a film that does not require a big fancy movie star actor or actress to lead the movie. It as an example of how you take an historical idea, make a story out of it, take a brilliant visionary director which wrote it with Farhad Safinia, add a fabulous cinematographer (Dean Semler) spice it with one of the greatest movie composer there ever lived (James Horner) and you got a masterpiece.








Gibson, before his drunken period, anti-Semitic quotes, Jesus fanatic and other problems is a great actor and more than that one of the greatest director there is. Since Braveheart there hasn’t been a movie so epic with its details, costumes, makeup and authenticity such as Apocalypto. If you haven’t seen it, it is a must!

Like I said before, you won't find a movie star here. You will only find a movie that tells a story about the Mayan empire just before the white people invade and took their land. The movie doesn't use English at all, all the characters speak the Yucatec Maya language and it is beautiful.



 A small village with Mayan deweelrs try to leave their life peacefully, with our hero Jaguar Paw (Rudy Youngboold) along with his pregnant wife and his little kid among the rest of his brothers and sisters and friends. Their peace cut off when the Holcane tribe intruders came and sack their village, raped and murdered some of them and took them as prisoners. this is Jaguar Paw's journey. just before he was talen he managed to hide his wife amd son in a dried weel. his all journey is to stay alive and return to them.



The director, used the magnificent jungle footages to show us how vast and dangerous the land is. From rocks, to dense trees, rivers gone wild and more, just to make the trip to the city more exhausting. The city on the other hand is a beautiful repica from the historical point of view. The usage of Jade stones everywhere, starting with people teeth and through their jewelry and hair. The tattoos, the lwardrobes, the stylish hair the weaponry. Everything is meticulously done, and not a single detail missed. The set is like being taken from Cecil b. Demille movie. Everything was hand made. lots of extras all with full detailed makeup. No CGI in the process which gives you a genuine and authentic feeling while watching this monstrosity city.





Gibson, as you know, doesn’t afraid to show blood, or severed body part in his films. Braveheart, Passion of Christ, and his recently film Hacksaw Bridge all have their share fair of bloody images. In this case it fits perfectly. The city scenes with the religious sacrifices to end the drought or the falling city, the hearts that had been taken from the live bodies on the pedestal, the beheading and headed being thown down the stairs, and the bloody images all serve a great purpose. Showing you how they lived, how they prayed, how history portrayed the Mayan kingdom and their habits.





If your heart and stomach can bear gory images it is the right movie for you. It is not a horror flick that just poor buckets of blood without a thought behind it. It is not to gross you out. Every blood drop, every heart removing or every cut serve a purpose in this movie. Like I said, a masterpiece.




Mel Gibson, a smart guy, took again an Oscar winning composer to give his vision the music it deserves. James Horner (May he rest in peace) was the brilliant composer behind Braveheart, Titanic and much more great movies. He is one of my favorite movie scorers there are. The sensitive music he brings are just joy. For the score of Apocalypto, Horner has foregone the use of the 90-piece orchestras that he's used to working with, and in exchange has employed a small ensemble of musicians. The resulting work blends rhythmic tribal percussion, ethnic flutes, pipes and woodwinds, synth strings and brass, and vocalizations. It's an unconventional score, but there are moments that are distinctly that of Horner's style. There are a few themes, mainly heard on the ethnic flutes, representing the love that Jaguar Paw has for his wife and son, as well as the jungle itself, and the safety that Jaguar Paw seeks within its comforting green canopy. As the movie is a masterpiece, such as its soundtrack!




Even if you are not a Mel Gibson fan, you have to respect his vision, his details awareness and his director skills. 

P.S (and a spoiler alert)
Whenever I see the pregnant wife deliver her baby in a flooded well with her oldest son on her shoulders I remember my own wife screaming while given birth of my son and daughter or how I feel when my stomach or head hurts, I think wow, we became so spoiled.  J


יום שני, 8 באוקטובר 2018

Christopher Nolan – The work and the Director

Christopher Nolan – The work and the Director

"We try to achieve it all using camera, there are no green screens" Nolan, BBC newsnight, 2016



Mr. Christopher Nolan is one of the great directors of our time. He easily stepped into the hall – of – fame of icons such as Spielberg, Scorsese, Scott and Kubrick. He have made 10 films and since Memento (which blows my mind every time I see it) till the fabulous Dunkirk, each movie has its own Nolan uniqueness and it is hard to think about any other director that could have made a better job. 

He usually work with his Brother, Jonathan Nolan on the writing before entering the director seat. Thus, he gives a special angle to the movie. First he dream, then he make it happen. There aren't many directors that can pull it off. Tarantino is the master on filming his texts and thoughts. He does that to the letter and doesn’t leave much for the actor's improvisation's techniques, but, if Tarantino writes it, you can be sure it's great. 

I love that Nolan always quest the Time issue in his movies. Memento is going backwards and forward in a matter of minutes which is brilliant. Its character loses time because of a short term memory impairment and finds all kind of ways to overcompensate this problem. You can see in Inception (one of the great movies of this decade, best performance of DiCaprio in a long time) that time is the main theme of this picture. The whole idea of a dream within a dream effect time differently and when you add another layer of a dream to it you can count the years. 
Seconds, minutes, hours, years. What a brilliant idea! 



Interstellar, wow! What a spectacle. When I first saw this movie I wept like a school girl whose been left on the sidewalk after dark. In Mathew McConaughey scene, when he watched his grown daughter (Jessica Chastain)  video after he realized he just lost 20 years over a few hours in space and just wept like any father would. No one can stay indifferent to that scene. This means that Nolan can direct actors as well and not just brilliant ideas and spectacles cinematographer's shots. Don’t forget he directed the best actor there is, Mr. Al Pacino in Insomnia. Another great movie that deals with time and what it does to you. 

Nolan loves the notion of ambiguity in his films. Every ending scene must leave you thinking. He wants to give you a gut punch while you are watching his movies but he also need you to keep on thinking about what you just saw. In one of his interviews he said that today's movies are being watched more than once. On the big screen and afterward on cable TV, hotels, plane etc. Thus he wants to make movies that you can watch for the 2nd or even a 3rd time and still find new ideas and details that you have missed in your previous screening. 



This man took Batman and reboot the story into a trilogy saga that can be posted on a mantel everywhere, proudly. He made a dark Knight movies which was dark indeed. He tackled the questions of time, good vs evil, fear and how people address it. He made it so realistic that even when you see a fight scene on the Dark Knight Rises between Batman and Bane on the footsteps with all the people around fighting as well, your mind is oblivious to the costumes. You do not pay attention that there is a man in a dark mask and a cape of a bat fighting a man with a breathing mask. It seems real. That for me is great directing. On Marvel's film you can see the green screen, you can see the CGI in all its glory. They make it fun but it is definitely not Nolan's world.  



The music in his films is breath taking. From David Julyan (the prestige, Insomnia) through James Newton Howard (Batman trilogy) and the master Hans Zimmer (inception, Batman trilogy, interstellar). Each composer gave him exactly what he needs for his movies. The scenes intertwined with the music perfectly and made itunforgettable. 

"I don’t use temp music. I sit with my composer, talk to him about my though of the film, giving him the script and he start to send me bits of music. If we like it we use it." Nolan interview 2017 

When I hear the soundtracks of his films, even at the office, it gives me the urge to stop it all and go see his film. Even though I saw them a couple of times before. 

To conclude our discussion, if you haven’t seen a Christopher Nolan movie yet, you are both lacking in knowledge but blesses as well, because I, for once, would give a great amount of money to have the experience of seeing them for the first time again. 


Following , 1998 
Memento , 2000
Insomnia, 2002
Batman Begins, 2005
Prestige, 2006
The Dark Knight, 2008 
Inception, 2010
The Dark Knight Rises, 2012
Interstaller, 2014
Dunkirk, 2017

pic from
https://batman-news.com/2018/10/07/gotham-trailer-batman-bane-season-5/
https://indiefilmhustle.com/christopher-nolan-screenplays-download/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqRZ2_w56U0
https://indianexpress.com/article/entertainment/hollywood/happy-birthday-christopher-nolan-heres-what-makes-the-ace-director-a-great-visionary-4773906/