mother!
A couple's relationship is tested when uninvited guests arrive at their home, disrupting their tranquil existence.
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- Cast:
- Jennifer Lawrence , Javier Bardem , Ed Harris , Michelle Pfeiffer , Brian Gleeson , Domhnall Gleeson , Jovan Adepo
Similar titles
Reviews
Undescribable Perfection
Too much of everything
Memorable, crazy movie
Awesome Movie
This is not for everyone. I once read a book called Dante's Inferno. That trip through hell did not come close to this trip through hell. If you want two hours of laughing, crying, and wondering what in the hell you just saw, then this is your movie. Jennifer Lawrence played the part of mother with éclat! Her husband played his part perfectly, and let's not forget all the guests. What more could a host ask for than those kinds of guests! I recommend the movie. It is not for small children, or people who view the world too literally.
Why does everyone feel compelled to review something as the best or worst thing ever. Really? How is that even remotely useful to the reader? It's not a review -that's a rant. For those of you who don't get it, there's a little something called experimental filmmaking. It's been around for about a century, and not designed with mainstream Hollywood consumers in mind. They're art house films, and if you walk blindly into an art house theater, please don't whine because you didn't get a watered down derivative literal narrative. Artists like Darren Aronofsky and David Lynch have been at this craft for quite some time, and they know literal narrative is not hard to pull off. Symbolism, surrealism, multiple layers of perspective, that's a considerable challenge. If it's not for you, it's not for you, but it's tiring to see a convenient dismissal when someone doesn't connect with a piece. Having said that, I don't think this was Aronofsky's best effort. I thought the main concepts and core storyline were fantastic, but felt would have been best realized as a short film and condensed to 40-50 minutes. The themes were repeated to the point of being redundant, and though the point was made, it could have been made more efficiently. I don't see Aronofsky ever eclipsing "Requiem," but this was a solid effort.
What a waste of talent. The story, if it can be called one, is a series of uncoordinated and unconnected events which have been poorly put together.
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