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Reviews
Hitman's Wife's Bodyguard (2021)
awfull dont waste your time watching this
Stop watching half way through. Story line very poor. Moment saw women take on 20 people by herself run away on small moped using nothing but F word from beginning of movie until end should be alarming. Cast wasted. Interpol asking help from criminals doesnt make sense so does people in club having information regarding European network etc.
Napoleon: Life of an Outlaw (2019)
Great movie for those knows the history
May God bless you and those involved making it incredible movie. Love everything about it
The Water Diviner (2014)
well written well played
Crowe, making his debut as a director, clearly learned much at the elbow of Ridley Scott, on "Gladiator." There, similarly, Maximus was impelled, and made threatening, by the purity of his motive—to avenge the murder of his wife and child. There are touches of Spielberg, too, as Connor learns that one of his sons may have survived; as a result, the latter stages of the new film turn into "Saving Private Connor," as the father, like the hero of a parable, traverses the land in search of his lost sheep. He is aided by Major Hasan (Yilmaz Erdogan), who commanded Turkish forces at Lone Pine, where the Connor boys were killed, and who himself has many dead to lament; the timbre of the movie owes much to Erdogan, an actor of gravity and charm, whom audiences here will have seen in "Once Upon a Time in Anatolia" (2011). He and Crowe make a strong, unexcitable team, each as wry as the other, and Hasan doesn't even look surprised when Connor saves his life, in mid-fight, with judicious whacks of a cricket bat.
American Sniper (2014)
Clint Eastwood embraces Chris Kyle's toxic ideas
Three weeks into American Sniper's record-breaking release, you likely already have an opinion on the film, even if you haven't seen it. In a tweet, comedian Seth Rogen famously compared it to "the movie that's showing in the third act ofInglourious Basterds," whereas documentarian Michael Moore called it a "mess of a film." The debate has largely focused on the portrayal of Chris Kyle, American Sniper's protagonist. Eastwood and screenwriter Jason Hall depict him as an "anguished soul" (in the words of author Max Blumenthal), torn between saving his country and the weight of deciding who deserves to die.
But the real-life Kyle was anything but tortured and morally conflicted. The Guardian's Lindy West (also a contributor at the Daily Dot) reminds us that Kyle was "a racist who took pleasure in dehumanizing and killing brown people." Kyle's only regret was that he didn't kill more.