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Reviews
Hello, It's Me (2015)
OMG he is rich!!!!!
From the synopsis: "Annie can't imagine falling in love again, until she meets a wealthy bachelor ..."
That is all you need to know about this movie.
I noticed this trend about a decade ago, where the guy has to be rich, handsome, hopefully a celebrity or powerful CEO with high social status as well, even if the woman is only average in every regard she DESERVES this!!!
She is extremely off-putting and handles a minor fender bender with the rich guy in this particular film with ZERO class, but catering to the female audience it hopes to please it furthers the idea that men are attracted to and intrigued when treated this way by a woman.
I couldn't finish past halfway.
Zero Dark Thirty (2012)
I found it to be a gripping and entertaining movie.
I see people fall into one of two camps when watching this film.
Having been at the Pentagon on 9/11 and the days and weeks that followed. Having seen what was left of fellow human beings as their remains were carried out in chunks and pieces.
I fell into the first camp - I am glad there are brave men and women doing the hard and messy jobs to keep us safe, and eliminate those who have no problem committing the most evil atrocities imaginable against their fellow humans.
I felt sorry not for the terrorists being water boarded, but for the innocent people murdered on 9/11 and in the various bombings committed. People who in one moment were a waiter, working to provide for their families, a human being with hopes and dreams, and the next instant were dead or gravely wounded by a terrorists bomb.
Then there is the second camp - who shrug their shoulders in apathy at all of that, but gnash their teeth at water boarding, or the US military.
The rattle their keyboards in virtue signaling as if they are more moral than the rest of us for not caring about terrorist victims, but only caring about the poor terrorists that are captured.
If Ms. Bigelow truly wanted this to be a propaganda piece she would have come down a lot harder on the bombing scenes. Letting the camera linger on the carnage, allowing us to see the dying as real people and not just extras in her film.
I thought she did a good job all in all, and found it to be a good, but slightly flawed film. I am impressed she didn't cave to the SJW culture that in Hollywood demands forever allegiance, and perhaps that is why her career has faded since this film.