Poor Things, 10/10
Incredibly weird and unique, and just plain incredible. I can well see what all the fuss is about. This is one hell of a movie, a rare gem. A completely uncompromised vision dancing to its own tune, eschewing any and all conventions, genre and expectations. Going into it I had no idea what it was about or what it was like, and that was a good thing, because it let me fully immerse myself into the fairytale-like atmosphere and style. From the very first frame it looks absolutely stunning, and then just keeps firing. The deliberately artificial set and visual design, and the experimental cinematography that makes most wide shots look like a miniature diorama creates a film that looks unlike anything I've ever seen. This is what people talk about with the phrase "every frame a painting". It's just amazing.
The performances on display are all stellar, but this is like 75% Emma Stone's show, 15% Mark Ruffalo, and 10% everyone else. She delivers a career defining performance that's simultaneously fearlessly unique, and will also have all the "best acting ever" video creators drooling. This is genuinely Willem Dafoe in The Lighthouse. or Robert Downey Jr. as Iron Man tier, unironically iconic. I simply cannot overstate how outstanding her acting is in this. I was already mesmerized by her mere physical acting at the start, but that grows into an incredibly nuanced and deep character study the likes of which we see like once every 10 years, if even that. Ruffalo gets to flex his acting and comedic chops for once, and he's glorious as well.
The story is full of twists, turns and mood changes, and pulls them all off with flying colours. It's funny, cerebral, disturbing, incredibly sexually graphic and just bursting with all sorts of interesting and thoughtful ideas without ever one treading on another. I had no idea where the story was heading next, and the 2 h 20 min runtime just flew by. I honestly can't name one thing I'd criticize. I initially rated this a 9/10, but in cases like this I have to admit defeat: it's a 10, and proper Oscar sweep material.
Incredibly weird and unique, and just plain incredible. I can well see what all the fuss is about. This is one hell of a movie, a rare gem. A completely uncompromised vision dancing to its own tune, eschewing any and all conventions, genre and expectations. Going into it I had no idea what it was about or what it was like, and that was a good thing, because it let me fully immerse myself into the fairytale-like atmosphere and style. From the very first frame it looks absolutely stunning, and then just keeps firing. The deliberately artificial set and visual design, and the experimental cinematography that makes most wide shots look like a miniature diorama creates a film that looks unlike anything I've ever seen. This is what people talk about with the phrase "every frame a painting". It's just amazing.
The performances on display are all stellar, but this is like 75% Emma Stone's show, 15% Mark Ruffalo, and 10% everyone else. She delivers a career defining performance that's simultaneously fearlessly unique, and will also have all the "best acting ever" video creators drooling. This is genuinely Willem Dafoe in The Lighthouse. or Robert Downey Jr. as Iron Man tier, unironically iconic. I simply cannot overstate how outstanding her acting is in this. I was already mesmerized by her mere physical acting at the start, but that grows into an incredibly nuanced and deep character study the likes of which we see like once every 10 years, if even that. Ruffalo gets to flex his acting and comedic chops for once, and he's glorious as well.
The story is full of twists, turns and mood changes, and pulls them all off with flying colours. It's funny, cerebral, disturbing, incredibly sexually graphic and just bursting with all sorts of interesting and thoughtful ideas without ever one treading on another. I had no idea where the story was heading next, and the 2 h 20 min runtime just flew by. I honestly can't name one thing I'd criticize. I initially rated this a 9/10, but in cases like this I have to admit defeat: it's a 10, and proper Oscar sweep material.
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