MovieElephant's Replies


It's a reference to the song Keep Passing the Open Windows. In this movie we'll explore Bond's spiral towards madness and embracing of chavs. Experience the pain or some shit, don't know lol, didn't feel anything inside Because military organization back then was a shitshow. The point of a long take in this movie is to get the same personal experience as the main guy. And after that he goes behind the tree to masturbate. Granted, the camera continued from that same location, it's not like the next scene was from a completely different location. Also they didn't let Americans try to do a British accent! How rude! I stopped watching Dunkirk because it was boring, and I watched all of 1917, but it was also boring. Funny you should say that because I also wondered about it, but unlike you, I got all my answers from Wikipedia. You can even see it in the trailer: https://youtu.be/xi-1NchUqMA?t=23 He's hitting in the area where there are 3 black keys. So it's either a G or a A. Most likely a G. It cannot possibly be C# because he's hitting a white key. For people who watched Dora as a kid. "The two actors also speak in period-accurate accents and dialect—Pattinson’s accent is specifically from a rural farming area of Maine, while Dafoe captures the old atlantic sailor’s speech. " https://www.themarysue.com/review-the-lighthouse-eggers/ From Deadline Hollywood: It was surprisingly difficult for me. Normally I've got quite an ear for accents but this was … [sic] … there's no real reference for it," Pattinson. "It's kind of a combination of three or four different accents, and if you just make one vowel mistake then you suddenly are doing a different accent, and you can't really control it that much." "These old time-y, Downeast New England accents, don't have rhotic Rs, which, in that hard R, is a signpost for a Brit like [Pattinson]," Eggers told Deadline. "It's super fascinating. It's weirdly close, so that made it tricky." imdb trivia: Robert Pattinson's accent is based on a very specific area of Maine farming dialect, while Willem Dafoe's is the jargon of Atlantic fishermen and sailors of the time. Director/writer Robert Eggers was very precise about the actor's accents and line delivery. He would, for example, give instructions to "say the second sentence of your third line 75% faster." It's some kind of a historical accent, that doesn't exist today anymore. Dafoe is a supporting actor in this one? To me he was a lead and carrying the whole movie. Do seagulls really eat living Maybe because the idea of a person going mad because of being isolated and the corresponding uncertainty as to what is real and what is not isn't so original. This is a psychological horror movie, same as Shutter Island, I don't know why people call it an art film. Could it be because it's bright daylight? The mother returned home on the scooter.