Does 127 Hours then proceed to get dark? Indeed it does. Tonally, the film swings wild, but Franco's strangulating hold on the material keeps you locked in. His battle is our battle, his little defeats attaining the vital significance of war clashes. It's here where Boyle shows off his mastery of the medium: like an anesthesiologist, he keeps pulling you back toward the light right when he's just about to lose you.
There are very few films that highlight the contradictory nature of humanity, that fierce independence that's only permitted because of the overall benevolence of the structure as a whole. We're able to attempt art because our primary needs are taken care of, we're able to challenge ourselves physically because of the improvements in tools, techniques, and communications. Early man migrated to find better resources and shelter, extreme sports and "pushing yourself to the limit" are a thoroughly modern concept. As such, Boyle's 127 Hours comes off as a dynamic rendering of the concept of "now" -- it's a veritable treatise for the times we find ourselves in.
I rarely find myself this effusive about a film -- perhaps a half dozen times a year -- because so many are made with a template and niche marketing firmly in mind. Perhaps that's overly cynical, and maybe that's why I need Danny Boyle and James Franco in my life. To guide me back, show off the better parts of people and community, the bravery, the soul, the heart, those little things that make us human, that slight chemical difference that makes us help and hurt, drives us to danger, and lights the way home, long after darkness has fallen.
This is a film that arguably extraordinary, clear through if you do not watch this movie, the story exciting and cool, you just try to read a synopsis of the film is sure you are curious,
curious can download the movie ........... in FILM.com
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