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TV show review: CONTINUUM season 4
PHOTOGRAPHY

CLOUD ATLAS

Movie review by David Blackwell

 

172 minutes, rated R

ASPECT RATIO:  2.35:1

STUDIO:  Warner Bros Pictures/ Cloud Atlas Production/ X-Filme Creative Pool/ Anarchos Production

Theatrical RELEASE DATE:  10-26-2012

 

STARRING Tom Hanks, Halle Berry, James Sturgess, James D’Arcy, Susan Sarandon, Hugh Grant, Hugo Weaving, Doona Bae, Zhou Xun

WRITTEN and DIRECTED by Lana Wachowski, Larry Wachowski, Tom Twyker

Based on the novel CLOUD ATLAS by David Mitchell

CLOUD ATLAS has many different story threads spread out over centuries from the past to the present to the future.  Somehow it makes everything working even though it jumps back and forth during the almost three hour length of this film about interconnectedness and how our actions shape our future across several lifetimes.  The main actors in the movie play several different characters and those characters are even of different age, race, or even sex, and they can be good or bad guys.   Most of the stories take place between 1800 and 2200 AD with one part of the story taking place 100 years after some great apocalyptic event that is known as The Fall.   The writers and directors aren’t afraid to tackle different sexual orientations with one couple being gay and even some of the characters being reincarnated as the opposite sex.   One of the story threads in 2012 is repeated as a movie version in the future in the Neo Seoul storyline.   CLOUD ATLAS has so much going on and themes of love, hate, and interconnectedness, but still I could follow it all.  

 

I don’t want to give away much about the film because I feel it could help dampen the experience of watching CLOUD ATLAS.   The story does require your attention through the whole experience which runs almost three hours long.   You get to witness various time periods and even the future through the eyes of the characters with the exception of one of the stories being reimagined as a movie one of the characters watches in another story.   It is an ambitious sci-fi art film that more people should go see and I hope word of mouth does spread about this $100 million independently financed film.   CLOUD ATLAS is a bold exploration of love, hate, life, death, and sacrifice.   I look forward to seeing it again and exploring all of its extras on Bluray.   Now I must track down the book due to the differences between the novel and the film.   Still CLOUD ATLAS deserves to be watched.

 

This review is (c)10-28-2012 David Blackwell and cannot be reprinted without permission.  Send all comments to feedback@enterline-media.com