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yoavshafir
My name is Yoav, But I was actually born by the name of:
Baron What's-his-face Middle Runsalot.
Middle is my middle name.
I write short stories.
I love movies.
I don't ride a camel.
The list is endless:
David Lynch
Roman Palansky
Terry Gilliam
Jim Jarmush
Tim Berton
Woody Alan
Stenly Kubrick
(some more)
German expressionists
The old Soviet Cinematographers
It's all good.
When was 1969?
Reviews
The Time We Killed (2004)
What could have been a genuine piece of cinema, becomes a long, self-absorbed movie.
When "The Time We Killed" started, I thought: Finely. A good filmmaker trying to do something different. The photography and editing are both unique, and go very well alongside the mellow, touching story. The voice over is made out of honest thoughts, which build a full believable character, rather than telling the story. Director Jennifer Todd Reeves chooses true intimate moments for her subtle heroine, which make the viewer feel close to her.
This is all true for the first 40 minuets or so. The sad thing is, what could have been a genuine piece of cinema, becomes a much-too-long, self-absorbed fringe movie. It is divided to chapters, which makes you very much aware of the time passing by. The character goes on and on talking about her life, and becomes uninteresting and incoherent. I've got the feeling that the shots I see are left-overs, and that Reeves really wants me to be bored, for some reason. Indeed, my time was killed. This hour and a half long movie, feels twice as long.
Further more, the dealing with the subjects of 9/11 and the Bush administration are superficial and in anyway not innovative. That's a shame, because NY after the terror attack has everything to do with the situation of the main character, and what made this movie significant in the first place.