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carrot_bIue_blood
I also have three cats and play the piano. I love drama's and musicals. Futurewise i would like to become a hairdresser (already schooling for this) and maybe play as an extra in some cool series.
Ratings
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Reviews
Tom à la ferme (2013)
One for the ages
This film succeeds on all levels. The darkness draws you in and intrigues you, and the characters are brilliantly acted and engaging.
Some scenes might be a bit hard to follow and there is this certain order in which they are played that might raise a few eyebrows, but that's really the only slightly comment i could possibly give about this movie.
This is one of the few "gay" films I've seen that had hardly anything superficial and stereotypical about it, and wasn't depressing to watch as a gay man.
Hats off to the guy who played the crazy brother: dark and scary, but the homosexual tones and suppressed desires sound through his silence, creating a fascinating bad guy, again, something which other bigger budget movies completely failed to do, managing only to be faintly embarrassing and ridiculous. This one however is a keeper.
Milk (2008)
Possibility to be an all-time classic
Gus Van Sant's talent and humility allows Harvey Milk to be a the center of this remarkable story without putting himself in front of the camera. Sean Penn shines like never before as Harvey Milk. His humanity is overwhelming at times. That permanent smile defining his face talks volumes about his faith in people, no matter how they may feel towards him. He is truthfull and childlike innocent, he worries he's about to be 40 and hasn't hit the bigtime. Little did he know. The film is constructed brilliantly in a series of vignettes that builds up into a whole fluid narrative. Josh Brolin, as the disturbed Dan White is another standout in a complex and remarkable performance. No cheap shots here. Diego Luna, Joseph Cross and Emile Hirsch are also terrific as the boys around Harvey but it is James Franco who truly gets your undivided attention. His romantic turn is one of the most erotic gay love stories I've ever seen (and I've seen Brokeback Mountain at least a dozen times). See this masterpiece, you won't regret it.
Brokeback Mountain (2005)
An ode to love.
It feels funny to say that Brokeback Mountain is my favorite film of all time, because I think it almost too good to be just called a film at all, or to critique its incredible technical sophistication. Somehow Brokeback Mountain is way beyond that. I could hear a thousand speeches celebrating gay marriage and equal rights or read a hundred love stories and not be absolutely broken in just two hours as I was after this film. I've never felt waves of excitement come over me as I did sitting in that theater, my face blushing as I watched truth and honesty spill from the screen and onto an unsuspecting audience. You may only see it once, but you'll never forget it.