lebble30

lebble30 t1_j23ve4i wrote

People can have conflicts. They can argue and beat each other and burn houses with all your ownings and tell you the shittiest truth you'll never hear even from the cruelest enemy of yours, but people should never betray their blood, Irishmen say.

I've never seen (and even more expected) to see Colin Farrell to be that melodramaticly agressive. I mean...

It was very easy to read the message of the characters played by Brendan Gleeson - it was a testament to the new generation. But Collin's character told me something more egregious that still I can't fanthom clearly. But it was not a message of revenge, no. I think..

Watching him playing was like watching a fire burnng, a woman singing and a violin playing. He was a living Irish spirit of the island at the end - the imagery land that he would never leave with all wars combined, and hate can never change the man. It's like Hulk who hold his ragein his bones and watching it you don't want to wake it up, you know? Very cruel force.

And I liked all the confessions and the pries's scenes. Dialogues, landscapes/views, actors, this film is a masterpiece.

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