Glad you liked it, though I will mention for others that it does involve self-harm, as that may be relevant information, but it is necessary to the story, and it did win an Academy Award for what it's worth, which I think was probably deserved, though I didn't see any of the other also-rans.
Thanks for having the courage to post under your real name, also, as you mentioned in another thread of yours I was reading. It's been a growth experience for me as well.
> The main issues that I have with foreign (to me) films, is the cultural frame can be odd. That also happens with British and Australian stuff.
For me, that is the magic of film, but I wonder if reality recedes as we approach, via biases, oversights, and the key design 'flaw as feature' of the camera, that it only captures what has already been framed.
Glad you liked it, though I will mention for others that it does involve self-harm, as that may be relevant information, but it is necessary to the story, and it did win an Academy Award for what it's worth, which I think was probably deserved, though I didn't see any of the other also-rans.
Thanks for having the courage to post under your real name, also, as you mentioned in another thread of yours I was reading. It's been a growth experience for me as well.
It probably didn't trend, because it's in Dutch.
For myself, I have no issue with subtitled films, but a lot of my countrymen are not comfortable with it.
The main issues that I have with foreign (to me) films, is the cultural frame can be odd. That also happens with British and Australian stuff.
> The main issues that I have with foreign (to me) films, is the cultural frame can be odd. That also happens with British and Australian stuff.
For me, that is the magic of film, but I wonder if reality recedes as we approach, via biases, oversights, and the key design 'flaw as feature' of the camera, that it only captures what has already been framed.