If you have ever loved Leonard Cohen or Gabriel Byrne (Cher to god for having me loving both), then you have no choice but to love the film!
I don't think I can ever be objective or professionally cold when I'm watching it, judging it, thinking about it, or now typing on my phone for the sake of it. But then, why the objectivity? Why the professionalism? Life has always been a darkening yet brightening, miserable yet hopeful, exciting and daunting, splendid and bleak mess. Yes, I am using that many adjectives to describe it, but here's the richness of living for you. Rich, complicated, and completely incomprehensible.
Anyway, atheist and toxicologically clean, I'm simply grateful to have a “velvet-tongued god” licking me all over, loving me through a film, instead of through heroin.
I know that the last sentence may sound gibberish, but if it sounds gibberish to you, you are not watching the film carefully and you are not getting my puns properly. Getting the puns and feeling belonged alongside all the laughs and cries, that was a huge part, too. It's like Spielberg's Ready Player One, but instead of the “virtual keys + pop culture references” bundle, you get the forever verses by the forever poet.
*Spoiler alert*, the last section of the film contains some top-class lip-syncing that is tear-inducing, heart-breaking, ambiguous-smile-that-even-oneself-don't-understand triggering.
Yes, lip-syncing. I don't know how or why they came up with the sequence, but I loved it. Speaking of it, the film must've been an exciting and creative project to work on: how many times as an actor, can one pay tribute to Leonard Cohen, whilst filming in one's own homeland, AND getting divorced, drunk, cancer-diagnosed, hallucinated, heroin-styled high, snowed, magically-cured and shot in the back of the head? Doing all that, in one single film, WITH the company of a ghost dad, a Frankenstein's monster, a tiger-headed Miss Olympia, a dementor-looking Reaper, AND Leonard Cohen songs as background music. That, dear, is having fun at work.
Gabriel Byrne isn't just having fun either, he's so brilliant and great in it. As a cohen fan, I can be really judgy when it comes to the great poet, but Gabriel simply nailed it. As always, his acting is accurate, precise, truthful, and moving. His portrayal of the character is so extremely detailed, so concept-rich, yet at the same time, seems so effortlessly done. All the hard work is behind the curtain, all the complexity is hidden within. By palpating the thinking and the logic entwined in the emotions, the audience may perhaps “feel” the actor in the character, but that's as far as it gets, you can never actually “see” him. Gabriel Byrne, like many talented actors, has the craft of a diamond: a diamond, with the help of different lights and angles, refracts different radiances and casts different shadows. It is thus able of constructing a complex and rich world around it, a circle of seemingly real yet inaccessible halo that encompasses all the sorrows and joys of drama within. But don’t forget, in the center of this illusory world is an indestructible diamond, by reflecting the illusion (of characters or plays), it retains itself and retains the truth.
Man, it's no L.C. biography, but the film feels L.C., so heavy, deep, complex, and poetic, yet somehow managed to keep being simple, funny, honest, and essentially, kind. It's down to earth in the “mortal coil” that one can't easily shuffle off, and it's up there soaring higher than the sky, further than the stars or universe ever get.
Life is short, very short.
Life is beautiful, so beautiful.
Life is shouting at you "WATCH THE BLOODY FILM!", and life is right, at least on that one.
*I do wonder how similar do landscapes of Ireland and New Zealand look to each other. Proudly dwelled three years of my youth in the greenness of the “emerald isle” down southwards of the world, I must say that the Atlantic waves rushing itself against Mweenish Beach, Ireland reminded me of the pacific blue in my dreams. Yes, not only did Leonard or Gabriel make me cry, NZ-looking Ireland did that, too.
*Don't you dare start blaming me for writing up the review in English, one latch on to the only useful foreign language one's left with when there's fran?ais québécois (oui, je l'ai dit et je le pensais, la langue fran?aise est déjà difficile sans l'aide des erreurs de prononciation de style canadien!) AND Gaeilge (which is no Chinese to me, if you pardon the pun) involved, AND you are watching it at 4 o'clock in the morning through a virtual film festival between your med school dues and classes.
亮點是Cohen歌曲的使用,全片就是個人之將死其言也善吧,最后的死法實在有點搞得主題不明。歌舞段落說實話有點尷尬……
無趣,看不進去。。
還不錯,想著如果真是哪位新導(dǎo)演呈現(xiàn)出這樣的片子那后期一定會勤關(guān)注,不過更有可能只是預(yù)算不夠
浪漫主義者幻滅過程,後而因為父愛從復(fù)活過來。我超愛天馬行空的鬼魂們!很喜歡!
虛虛實實,還算是有些意思。Gabriel Byrne很迷人呀。
生命的話題,但沒有意想的有深度,最后的死于非命反而有點戲謔的惡趣味
死亡面前大家都一樣
挺好的
Why do I care? 我對中年男人的態(tài)度已經(jīng)冷漠到了極點。結(jié)局很好,終于補償了,可算清凈了。
Leonard is always with us??
科恩的歌兒用的太多,都影響尷尬的劇情了。和死去的老父親對話最精彩!
結(jié)局挺諷刺
一點迷幻,一點真實。
觀影時間:2021.4.13 該片講述了一個狂喜的大學(xué)教授的生活經(jīng)歷了一系列難以想象的轉(zhuǎn)折,所有的舊故事都被賦予了新的轉(zhuǎn)折點,當(dāng)他開始產(chǎn)生超現(xiàn)實的幻覺,并得知他對這個世界可能不會太久。故事圍繞一個放蕩的愛爾蘭詩歌教授薩繆爾·奧謝(加布里埃爾·伯恩飾)展開,當(dāng)他被確診為患有腦瘤后,他的婚姻,他的生活將發(fā)生翻天覆地的變化。 一個將死之人在亦真亦幻的真真假假之中完成了自我救贖,還行吧。
電影分成三個部分開展,簡駭而言套戲講述了一個被診斷出腦瘤嘅大齡Sexy Professor Samuel O'Shea在人生最後階段嘅體驗與感悟。我估Gabriel B會接呢套戲嘅原因,除咗系Leonard Cohen嘅fans之外,更多嘅系套戲嘅角色同真實生活中嘅Gabriel多少有嚸相似。早期出道時,Gabriel有過很嚴重嘅酗酒問題,最後都系向經(jīng)理人Hayden求救先戒甩。之後Gabriel與Ellen Barkin那段短暫、不快嘅婚姻,仲有兩個唔算省心嘅兒女?;旧蠎蛑心兄鱏amuel O'Shea一角多多少少帶有Gabriel嘅影子。講真我唔多中意戲中天馬行空想像裹part,太離地啦。不過導(dǎo)演Matt Bissonnette將愛爾蘭真系拍攝得如此純天然、風(fēng)景宜人,太美了,有機會點都要去一趟 Gabriel嘅鄉(xiāng)下望望,BTW Gabriel戲中造型好評。
沒意思
總的來說和我最近看的一兩部電影一樣,意境和寓意貼近生活:平民百姓的生老病死。三部分,給人的感覺不緊不慢。
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