A bit preachy/patronising?


I like this movie - it's a good movie overall.

I can't help but getting this feeling though, that the artistic quality is a bit compromised for the sake of getting the moral across. I guess a movie named after a school subject is bound to be didactic and one cannot expect otherwise (duh). But I would like to have seen it all in a more subtle way: some of the dialogues, events, characters etc were a bit too obvious and one-dimentional or, in some cases, forced. I can't help but feeling that the same material and the same actors would have made an even better movie if the script and the set-up of some scenes were different and more subtle.

Example: the two bros go back home after their heart-to-heart about Derek's time in prison and take down all the Nazi memorabilia. It's not very realistic that the little brother immediately changed his mind about everything he believed in for the last 3 years and immediately realised his mistake despite all the brainwashing he's received by the gang and the cult-leader-weirdo whom he sees as a father figure. I mean, it took *me* a while to take down the Backstreet Boys posters in my room when I eventually grew out of that pre-teen boy-band phase and I wasn't even into the Backstreet Boys that much :p I just think this scene was there for the sake of its symbolism and at the expense of the film's overall realism.

~*~

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I mean, it took *me* a while to take down the Backstreet Boys posters in my room when I eventually grew out of that pre-teen boy-band phase and I wasn't even into the Backstreet Boys that much


 Perfect comparison. It's infuriating that none of the boy bands were ever punished for the crimes they committed. A Nuremberg-like event was in order, yet over a decade later, Justin Timberlake continues to make garbage with impunity.






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I disagree I think Daniel just woke up to his wrong ways and it took his brother Derek to put him straight

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I watched the movie for the first time in about 10 years last night, its far more heavy handed and as you say preachy than I remembered it being. I can actually see why Tony Jaye disowned the film if he had a far more subtle film in mind.

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Agreed it's very heavy handed. Lots of good acting but almost every scene goes a little too far. If the director reigned it in just a little it would be more effective. It got so sappy sometimes that it just lost me. FFS they even ended it with footage of a sunset by the ocean. Yuck. Also that musical score needs to be scrapped; fewer close ups.

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