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Atonement

发表于 08-01-11 11:34 只看楼主
there r too many spotlight in this movie, the story is based on the best selling novel by Ian Mcewan.
Keira Knightley(Pride & Prejudice), James Mcavoy(Becoming Jane), these 2 gorgeous guys made the outstanding role in the book of Jane Austin, and this time finally won the perfect couple of the screen. of course, u can’t forget Joe Wright, who is also the director of Pride & Prejudice. used his always painting like pic to catch ur eyes and be a gd story teller to capture ur heart and mind. plus Dario Marianelli, the Italian Musician contribute his wonderful working in it.
somehow i was addicted to this heavy English accent, quick, short, but hide some words that never said out. u can tell many conflicts suffered and much love that not expressed fm James’ eyes and his every posture, amazingly. Keira fully showed her helpless and lost.
Love was buried in the bottom of both hearts, controlled, but separated by fear, redeemed by hope.
cruel war scene is everywhere. it is shocking and moved to c tear-stained by James, he was only 1 step late to arrive a village piled of young women’s bodies. the last time he cried was in dreams before  died, hold the pic of the sea house tightly, wish one day they could get there, mumbled ‘find you, love you, marry you, and live without shame.’
sadly, the fact is they never met again after war, one died of sick, the other is flooded  in a shelter during the war. no one can get the chance to make things clear or the truth out. Briony Tallis, the story teller, in her old age, finally had the courage to clarify the whole thing, for atonement, she made the happy ending of the book.
sigh, happy ending always exist in the book but the reality~


2008-01-11 11:45:38 被作者重新编辑

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发表于 08-01-11 11:36 只看楼主







发表于 08-01-11 12:00 只看该作者

style="font-family: arial; font-size: 12px;" id="0">u saw that already?

发表于 08-01-11 12:07 只看楼主

yes, last nite, till 1am, hehe, sooooooooooooooooooooooo great, i just love it~~~

发表于 08-01-11 12:12 只看楼主

it's my heartful review, hope it will make u have the idea to c this movie, 2 hrs is really really worthwhile~~~

发表于 08-01-11 12:16 只看该作者

女的太瘦
瘦死了

发表于 08-01-11 13:24 只看楼主

是呀,皮包骨,我昨天晚上看完心里也是这么想来着,呵呵~~

发表于 08-01-11 16:31 只看该作者

style="font-family: arial; font-size: 12px;" id="0">

from new york times review, seems not worthy to watch!

Lies, Guilt, Stiff Upper Lips

Two characters make significant use of a typewriter — one is an aspiring playwright, the other a yearning rural swain — but the sound of the machine is co-opted by Dario Marianelli, who wrote the movie’s score and who conjoins the clack-clacking of mechanical composition with the steady plink of a repeated piano note. At a climactic moment Brenda Blethyn, who can be as subtle an actress as Mr. Marianelli is a composer, leaps screaming from the darkness and begins beating on the hood of a car with an umbrella, a tocsin that joins the plink and the clack in a small symphony of literal-minded irrelevance.
That pretty much describes the rest of “Atonement,” piously rendered by the screenwriter Christopher Hampton from Ian McEwan’s novel. This is not a bad literary adaptation; it is too handsomely shot and Britishly acted to warrant such strong condemnation. “Atonement” is, instead, an almost classical example of how pointless, how diminishing, the transmutation of literature into film can be. The respect that Mr. Wright and Mr. Hampton show to Mr. McEwan is no doubt gratifying to him, but it is fatal to their own project.
Unlike Mr. Wright’s brisk, romantic film version of Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice,” “Atonement” fails to be anything more than a decorous, heavily decorated and ultimately superficial reading of the book on which it is based. Mr. McEwan’s prose pulls you in immediately and drags you through an intricate, unsettling story, releasing you in a shaken, wrung-out state. The film, after a tantalizing start, sputters to a halt in a welter of grandiose imagery and hurtling montage.
Keira Knightley, who also starred in “Pride and Prejudice,” plays Cecilia Tallis, a rich girl who discovers she is loved by and in love with Robbie (James McAvoy), the son of one of her family’s servants. Their furtive, ardent courtship is observed by Cecilia’s younger sister, Briony (played at 13 by the remarkably poised Saoirse Ronan — pronounced SEER-Sha), whose combination of precocity and confusion precipitates a household catastrophe.
A bigger one arrives in the form of World War II, and it is here, in the transition from hothouse psychodrama to historical pseudo-epic, that “Atonement” runs aground, losing dramatic coherence and intellectual focus. Romola Garai has taken over the role of Briony (in a coda, she will age gracefully into Vanessa Redgrave), who works as a nurse in London. Cecilia, now estranged from the family, does similar duty, and Robbie stumbles toward the beach at Dunkirk.
There are some powerful images — of scared and tired soldiers in France, of bloody wounds and shattered limbs in London — but the film’s treatment of the war has a detached, secondhand feeling. And even the most impressive sequences have an empty, arty virtuosity. The impression left by a long, complicated battlefield tracking shot is pretty much “Wow, that’s quite a tracking shot,” when it should be “My God, what a horrible experience that must have been.”
The main casualty of the film’s long, murky middle and end sections is the big moral theme — and also the ingenious formal gimmick — that provides the book with some of its intensity and much of its cachet. As the title suggests, “Atonement” is fundamentally about guilt and the attempt to overcome it, and about the tricky, tragically imperfect power of art to compensate for real-life crimes and misdemeanors.
Without giving too much away, I will say that the power of the story depends on its believability, on the audience’s ability to perceive Robbie and Cecilia in wartime as suffering, flesh-and-blood creatures. Mr. McAvoy and Ms. Knightley sigh and swoon credibly enough, but they are stymied by the inertia of the filmmaking, and by the film’s failure to find a strong connection between the fates of the characters and the ideas and historical events that swirl around them.
“Atonement” is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). It has sexual situations and graphic combat violence.

2008-01-11 16:33:52 被作者重新编辑

发表于 08-01-11 17:04 只看楼主

‘and by the film’s failure to find a strong connection between the fates of the characters and the ideas and historical events that swirl around them.’?
i doubt it~
obviously, this guy has different style fm me,

发表于 08-01-11 21:06 只看该作者

dear, where can i download this movie?

发表于 08-01-11 21:36 只看楼主

verycd, but i bought a dvd 9, think i should collect it~

发表于 08-01-11 21:54 只看该作者

这里只能说英语么

发表于 08-01-11 23:09 只看该作者

style="font-family: arial; font-size: 12px;" id="0">look c look c

发表于 08-01-15 13:27 只看楼主

Best motion picture drama, Atonement
Bravo!
the pity is no glitz, no glamour for this time's Golden Globe Award..............

发表于 08-01-15 14:49 只看该作者

style="font-family: arial; font-size: 12px;" id="0">great! i will c this...

发表于 08-01-15 15:55 只看楼主

发表于 08-01-20 07:26 只看该作者

i happen to watch this movie just a couple days ago
good movie... you said all and better than i can... kudos
just want to agree to your point about the actress
女的太瘦
瘦死了
the first time i saw her was in the movie "love actually" or something like that, also a good movie

发表于 08-01-20 12:01 只看楼主

great minds think alike, kakakaka
o, gd, 'love actually', i will c it when i got time, thx~~~

发表于 08-02-04 11:07 只看该作者

haha, looks like you found it, and u liked it.
thanks me, right?

发表于 08-02-04 13:21 只看楼主

haha, yeah, yeah, many many thx~~~
Happy Spring Festival~~~
Click on the link, put your cursor to open the door.  The fishes will swim following your mouse.
 
 Enjoy!