movie
Best geek movies throughout history.
In this way, the "sins" of the Soviet era have been told for decades
The audience who often watches the films of the 1960s and 1970s will naturally find a characteristic, these films, in addition to the works of the European New Wave directors, the rest of the directors like to focus on the topic of politics and emotions above. Because these two aspects are the mainstream of the twentieth century, until the late eighties, because of the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Soviet East dramatic changes. Politics gradually moved from the film to a more obscure place. So much so that historical nihilism later dominated the creative stage of film and television. Before that, however, politics was a lingering element, and creators were full of love for this element.
By Bettye Lutz3 years ago in Geeks
Live long and see, this film reveals another side of the Marshall Plan
Anyone familiar with history knows that the United States implemented the Marshall Plan for Europe after the end of World War II. The essence of the Marshall Plan was to restore the economies of the European countries to restore the economic and industrial standards of these countries to the pre-war state. The Marshall Plan played a vital role in the formation of a European community after the war, and this gradually coalesced Europe to achieve the strategic objectives of the United States.
By Turnell Feliu3 years ago in Geeks
In search of a reason to kill his cheating wife, the musician and the repairman swap identities
Plot summary. This is considered to be one of the most confusing films David Lynch has ever made. A jazz musician (Bill Pullman) and his wife (Patricia Arquette) receive a videotape one morning, and they discover that its contents are a little bit of their daily life. From then on, they receive such tapes every morning. One day, the musician discovers that the tape shows him killing his wife! When he rushed into the bedroom, he found his wife dead in bed.
By Bettye Lutz3 years ago in Geeks
For those who hurt my daughter, I will punish them by turning them into "her".
Plot Summary. In a gorgeous villa in the suburbs, Robert Redgar (Antonio Banderas), a middle-aged plastic surgeon, lives with his faithful servant Marilia (Marisa Paredes). Over the past twelve years, he has lost his wife Gail, and daughter Norma (Ana Mena), a tragedy that has turned Robert's seemingly perfect life upside down and pushed his career and research into completely uncharted territory. In a mysterious room of the villa lives a beautiful and isolated woman named Vera (Elena Anaya), both Robert's patient and his experimental subject, with a tangled and confusing relationship. Her face, carefully shaped by Robert's hands, binds them to each other ......
By Turnell Feliu3 years ago in Geeks
Valak, your mother wants you to come home for dinner
Plot Summary. The film the global sweep of $ 320 million in "Saw" directed by Siren Wen, Wen Ziren in recent years more by directing "Fast and Furious 7" quickly become a hot Hollywood director. In the film "The Conjuring" the first part of the protagonist Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, and other powerful actors will also return to all. The film begins with a supernatural event in the northern suburb of Enfield and tells the story of a spirit invocation that took place in Enfield, England in the late 1970s.
By Bettye Lutz3 years ago in Geeks
Why cinemas will bounce back from the Coronavirus
Theatres are closing around the world. Jobs are being culled. No one knows when projectors will be fired up again. Cinema is far from unique in being an industry under threat in the time of Covid-19. But there is a particular irony in the fact that many of us have turned to streaming platforms to deliver entertainment to fill the long hours of isolation, often watching content originally made for the silver screen. Audiences have increasingly been consuming more films at home anyway, of course. But now that trend has become a fact of life, many are questioning whether the culture of cinemagoing will resume in the same way once the pandemic abates.
By Sue Torres3 years ago in Geeks
Why does cinema ignore climate change?
Whether you believe that art imitates life or life imitates art, it often seems as if the 21st Century is imitating a Hollywood blockbuster. At the moment, as many of us have observed, the current situation seems to be echoing Contagion and 28 Days Later. Before that, the climate crisis – with its news reports about hurricanes, tidal waves and wildfires – felt like every mega-budget movie about a world-shaking apocalypse.
By Cindy Dory3 years ago in Geeks
How the Marvel Cinematic Universe has helped me grieve
I’m going to explain to you why the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) is my happy place in a moment but first I need to tell you about something sad. My grandmother died from Covid-19 complications on Good Friday and it’s the first time I have really experienced the true pain of losing a loved one. Monica had been my only grandparent since I was five years old; she was a Grade A, god-tier grandma and here I was, in my flat in London, having to come to terms with her death alone, with the knowledge that I wouldn’t be able to leave lockdown to say goodbye at the funeral in two weeks’ time.
By Sue Torres3 years ago in Geeks
Withnail and I: The ultimate cult film?
Withnail and I wasn’t a box-office sensation when it came out in 1987. “I remember actor friends really liking it,” one of the film’s stars, Paul McGann, tells BBC Culture. “Reviewers not so much. It wasn’t given a big release. It played in a handful of London venues and then it was gone.”
By Cindy Dory3 years ago in Geeks











