
"...constant, if unrelenting, sense of dread that permeates every sequence..."
Using constant OR unrelenting OR permeates etc. would have been sufficient.

I never understood why people gush over Halle Berry- she was awful in DIE ANOTHER DAY and I find her acting to be unwatchable. How she got an Oscar still baffles me to this day. Was that really the best performance of that year?JSWalsh wrote:I think all the evidence you need to prove your point is the tidal wave of sentiment BEFORE anyone had even seen the movie.AndyDursin wrote:I'm of the opinion -- and admittedly it's the minority one -- that if Ledger didn't die, there wouldn't be any Oscar talk.
I never thought of him as more than an adequate actor whose looks explained his popularlity with many. Precisely the kind of actor who gets kudos for this kind of role, meaning one in which his good looks are covered up. Another example of the same is the Best Actress wins for MONSTER and MONSTER'S BALL--I'm not saying they weren't good, but if the actresses were not so famous for their looks they wouldn't have been SO acclaimed for the "risk" of not looking glamorous in one movie. (The funny thing about MB, to me, was that it's impossible to make Berry look drab.)
She's beautiful, that's really all there is to it, for me. She's often very plain in her acting. The role of Storm in X-MEN should have gone to Angela Bassett, who could have really let loose with the POWER of the character, at least as she was written when I was reading comics in the late 70s/early 80s. Vanessa Williams would have been good in that role, too. Berry was a huge disappointment in that part, for me.I never understood why people gush over Halle Berry
Just to further your point (in a way I hope you don't take as offensive), *I* wouldn't put SCHINDLER'S LIST or L.A. CONFIDENTIAL on the same level as RULES OF THE GAME or CHINATOWN. (And as much as I enjoyed LOTR, I prefer the original KONG or GUNGA DIN.)Jedbu wrote:
I know my earlier post on THE DARK KNIGHT was very enthusiastic, and I still do love the movie, but would I put it on the same level as SCHINDLER'S LIST, L. A. CONFIDENTIAL or even THE LORD OF THE RINGS?
Nope.
That's exactly how I felt about THE DARK KNIGHT. There wasn't any exploration of those stated themes, and because Batman was basically a back seat passenger in the story, how could there have been?So many movies people praise because of the themes or issues they "explore" do no such thing--the themes are STATED, and then the movie just goes on pushing buttons. Very few movies really have anything original to say (or at least, an interesting way of saying SOMEthing).