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Alumnus
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quote: Speaking of which - Lost in Translation wins my prize for the best opening shot of a movie...ever.
Haha, when i first saw it, for the first five seconds, i thought it was Bill Murray, before i realized it was the chick, and somehow after that distirbance it never did as much for me as i guess it does for u
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Owner and Founder of Studentfilms.com

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quote: Originally posted by Hill Dawson Kane: Haha, when i first saw it, for the first five seconds, i thought it was Bill Murray, before i realized it was the chick, and somehow after that distirbance it never did as much for me as i guess it does for u
WOW - you must think the Bill Murray has a REALLY nice arse if you got that confused.  -Chris Studentfilms.com
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| Posts: 2506 | Location: Los Angeles, CA U.S.A | Registered: October 30, 2002 |  
IP
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Alumnus
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yes its rare for me to mistake hack for talent
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Alumnus

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quote: Originally posted by Studentfilms.com: What are the other best opening shots of films? (non bum related)
Fight Club is up there (the shot of Ed Norton with the gun in his mouth).
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Alumnus
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Just saw The Prestige before it blinked out of the theater near me--what an amazingly well-done movie. Entertains me still. Worth every penny. Strangely I'm taking to this film a lot more than others like the Departed or the Fountain. This was just so well thought-out and well-shot, well-acted...I saw a lot of it coming but it still managed to grip me till the end. Magnifique.
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Alumnus
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quote: The only think I'm wondering, were the two Christian Bale's twin brothers, or were they a product of the machine that Hugh Jackman was using?
...Twins. The machine was created after Jackman's character saw them do the reappearing trick.
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Alumnus
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quote: Originally posted by Nervous Larry: Good movie, but a little muddled and convoluted. And the ending with the clone machine was a bit insane...didn't fit the context of the movie.
You know it's based on the book by Christopher Priest right?
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Alumnus
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Well, I thought Michael Caine's character's last line "he said it was agony" summed it up pretty well...but yes, the introduction of the supernatural might have seemed abrupt to a few people. That styling is called fabulism, also known as magical realism, where supernatural or magical elements are introduced into the world and the characters simply accept them. I don't think they understated it, but perhaps it came across that way as I'm sure they went to great lengths to avoid overstating it and thus really ruining it.
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