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andrewquick-13916
Reviews
Mr. Robot (2015)
The best role by Rami Malek, By far!
Mr. Robot Staring Rami Malek, Christian Slater, and Portia Doubleday is a work of art.
While telling the story of a hard working, slightly struggling cyber engineer with a hard drug addiction; it also depicts a realistic representation of how "our democracy has been hacked." It is also a very realistic life story with quotes like, "I should just tell her what she wants to hear," and, "We're all living in each other's paranoia." A must watch for all.
There is no better role of Rami Malek than of Mr. Robot's Elliot Alderson.
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre: Nineteen Eighty-Four (1954)
By far the closest movie to a Novel I have ever seen...
The BBC Sunday Night Theatre production of 1984, starring: Peter Cushing, André Morell, and Yvonne Mitchell; is a fantastic film. Its opening scene is about all I could say was not like the book but then seconds later it resumed its actions. From his neighbor's abusive daughter to the 2-minute hate speech and Winston's thoughts, this movie highlights all the key points of 1984 and ties it all together as one. I could not recommend a better movie if you want a movie like a book.
Orwell would be proud.
Star Wars (1977)
Possibly the greatest Sci-Fi of All-Time
In 1977, a movie came out of one man's mind. From loans to rejection, George Lucas went in debt to get Star Wars on the Market, and a hit it was. Featuring: Mark Hammel, Harrison Ford, and Carrie Fisher. This movie, is a strong tale with heartwarming moments despite it being a war with the only endings being the death of the rebellion or the destruction of the Death Star.
The Secret Life of Bees (2008)
Ok Movie with almost no bad acting
Queen Latifah, Dakota Fanning, and Jennifer Hudson had hit the big screens in 2008 in the serious yet heartwarming film, "The Secret Life of Bees." Young Lily Owens (Dakota Fanning) is a motherless and abused daughter with 2 main problems. She killed her mother and she has to leave her abusive dad.
This movie's main theme is: family is not who you are born to but who you can rely one. In the film it veers off the road from author Kidd's novel but still pulls it all together to make a fairly good movie. The only real big problem with the actors is during the grieving scene after May's death, Lily cries of her mother's death to August Boatwright (Queen Latifah) During this scene it is very bad crying and during a point it appears that she is laughing during her grief; but, Queen Latifah really makes the scene work with her serious yet graceful tone. This movie is a medium quality film with a great purpose and theme. I would recommend it for adults and mid adolescent children(12+).