Runtime: 101 min Audio: AC3 Language: Eng Subtitles: German Frame Rate: 24 fps Video Bitrate: 5228 Kb/sec Audio Bitrate: 440 kbps |
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Review: Machinist Session 9 shows that it was the only creepy thriller that Brad Anderson can do. While M. Night Shyamalan and commercial tariff as The Grudge get attention and lots of money, Anderson quietly disturbing shockers grasp psychologically scary. While the previous film took advantage of our imagination jumps around spooky environment, The Machinist makes discomfort Our visual palpable painful to look at Christian Bale in the body, as his character is destroyed by insomnia and loss of appetite; by the end of the film his shocking to see her usually pretty face. But all the attention on her loss best weight takes away from other elements of the film almost in black and white to make fright fest. The film sets the mood immediately Twilight Zone with the soundtrack, which includes the generous use of the theremin, as it did in Psycho Hitchcock of. The production design is excellent support for mood.The builds suspense and keeps up to a satisfactory conclusion as you genuinely involved in efforts to resolve the bullets increasingly mysterious happenings around him. Even if you are confident enough that it could be a hallucination, you intrigued to figure out the trigger. Despite looking like a caricature of a victim of the Holocaust, Bale creates a full character, plays the male camaraderie of the factory where it all seems to prepare to respond to the heat beat the two women in his life, a waitress and prostitute with open heart of gold (played as usual by Jennifer Jason Leigh, languid but effective).
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