Worthy but dull


Just seen the film and I really wanted it to be an emotional experience but although it had its moments (for instance the father by the railway timetable), overall it went on far too long and scenes that should've had me in tears, simply didn't.
The biggest barrier to my immersion in the story was that they couldn't decide what season it was. The film opens to them swimming in a small lake which is supposed to be on the North York Moors then they walk home through the bluebells which must've made it only May. Bloody hell, that would've been cold. Then they're wandering around in summer flanels and dresses and there's thick fog and not a leaf on a tree. And it keeps changing like that.

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Couldn't agree more. I couldn't emotionally connect with any of the characters. Not sure if it was the actors, the slow pace of it all or the script. I sat there wondering when it would come to an end. I usually love war movies and people's experiences but this one just lacked something. Very dull. And personally I was getting sick of the main actress' face. Her expression was always the same: A mixture of shock, sadness and utter grief. Even before the war.

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I was going to say the same about the lead actress's acting that utterly stopped me from caring about everything in the movie. Didn't hate her but also didn't like her either.

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Very dull. And personally I was getting sick of the main actress' face. Her expression was always the same: A mixture of shock, sadness and utter grief. Even before the war.
this! i kept thinking why does she have the same set of expressions throughout the movie! she seemed one note with a stick up her arse.

hayley atwell as the nurse was a much needed levity.

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She is from Buxton in Derbyshire so I am guessing it was the Derbyshire Dales

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I actually enjoyed it but I do see some of the other comments having valid points.


I think that the characters should have a stronger development instead of focusing on Vera being "distracted" so frequently. A moment alone with the parents after both their children had left. A moment where we see Victor being or about to injured (why was he even injured if he wasn't suitable for war?). A moment where Edward thought of Vera or his friend Geoffrey while being in the trenches.




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A moment alone with the parents after both their children had left. A moment where we see Victor being or about to injured (why was he even injured if he wasn't suitable for war?). A moment where Edward thought of Vera or his friend Geoffrey while being in the trenches.
agreed. this would've prevented me from getting tired of seeing vera's constant dour face.

the cinematography and music's good, but the pacing's slow and uneven, lacked character development, slightly poor editing and direction, and mostly dull characters.

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This title applies very much to alicias english accent.

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The film struck the right notes with me, but perhaps I stand alone.

As far as stepping outside of Vera's POV to see more of the characters, it was her biography. Hers is the only POV that really matters for this story. Everyone else only has merit in how they effect her.

I actually get easily bored these days if films aren't tight, but for some reason this one held my attention. Perhaps it was my mood or the time of day... I have no idea. But I really loved it.




Movies are IQ tests; the IMDB boards are how people broadcast their score.

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I agree that the focus was rightly on Vera as it was her story.

The other criticism that I find annoying is people suggesting that things in the movie are rip-offs of other movies. For example, there has been some criticism of the "obligatory train station goodbye" but that really happened to her (twice with RAL) and each time was a pivotal moment in their relationship; so not only did it have to be in the film but her memoir preceded all those movies with train station goodbyes so the scene isn't ripping off anything.

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Just watched it on DVD and my opinion of it was so-so until I watched it again while listening to the Commentary. Made a difference. Try it, folks!

🎇🆖♉

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What a relief to find some of these comments. I thought the film was worthy almost in spite of itself - it carried a strong message but the execution seemed somewhat adolescent. I, too, was annoyed by Alicia Vikander, who seemed right for Ex Machina but not strong enough for this. Her trembling emotionalism is starting to grate. I did learn in the commentary (if you think the movie was dull, wait till you hear the commentary) that they had bad luck with the weather throughout the shoot - but I don't know what else the director expected when they were shooting summer scenes (including swimming in the lake) in mid-March in England. Listening to the commentary, the director seemed overly impressed with Vikander and mostly dismissive of the incredibly great talent he had (and mostly wasted) in the rest of the cast, including two of the greatest living British actresses, Miranda Richardson and Emily Watson. All he had to say about them was that they had done a lot of films and he was annoyed with Miranda Richardson's choice in wigs. You could almost surmise that he had a clash or two with Richardson and/or Watson, but I could be completely wrong about that. Other than gushing about Alicia Vikander, most of his comments had to do with weather, sets, and costumes.

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It was a mixed bag for me. It was a bit long and slow going. But I guess that was needed, since it was Vera's story and how the War changed and shaped her (among other themes of course). And I think that they didn't do a good job at showing us how much time had passed. You could surmise that from the progresion of the war, but it did feel like it was taking place in the span of a few months, not years.

I didn't really like Vikander in this either. But I thought everyone else was good.

But having said all that, I did connect emotionally to the film. The scope of the tragedy that resulted from WW1 is too great for me not to have. And I liked that the focus was on the people left home, rather than the front. I haven't seen many war films that focus on that side of war.

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its a good film but like others have said it could and should have been much better.

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I generally like period films, and there are two period films of Ms. Vikander that I have really liked in the past, but this was 50/50.

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