After 30 years, George Miller has finally gone beyond Thunderdome. (Sorry, had to.)
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I’m really, really late, but did you know that, among the people George Miller thanked in the end credits, there are poet Shane Koyczan (whose work is focused on emotions and bullying) and feminist activist, writer and playwright Eve Ensler, who is mostly famous for “The Vagina Monologues” and “I am an Emotional Creature” (which is about growing up as a teenage girl, the power of emotons and the discovery of injustice)? From my understanding, Ensler’s work is mostly reflected in the culture and way of living of the Vuvalini, their nurturing and caring of both nature and others, and while I’m not as familiar with Koyczan’s work, I’d say it’s reflected in the way love leads Nux to understand a different world than the one he grew up in.
This movie does an amazing job at showing the characters’ emotions and feelings with very little dialogue – the characters themselves also have very little time to dwell on them, but they’re conveyed in such a powerful way.
[If you feel like this late comment is pointless, just delete it – it’s fine ^^]
I’m really, really late, but did you know that, among the people George Miller thanked in the end credits, there are poet Shane Koyczan (whose work is focused on emotions and bullying) and feminist activist, writer and playwright Eve Ensler, who is mostly famous for “The Vagina Monologues” and “I am an Emotional Creature” (which is about growing up as a teenage girl, the power of emotons and the discovery of injustice)? From my understanding, Ensler’s work is mostly reflected in the culture and way of living of the Vuvalini, their nurturing and caring of both nature and others, and while I’m not as familiar with Koyczan’s work, I’d say it’s reflected in the way love leads Nux to understand a different world than the one he grew up in.
This movie does an amazing job at showing the characters’ emotions and feelings with very little dialogue – the characters themselves also have very little time to dwell on them, but they’re conveyed in such a powerful way.
[If you feel like this late comment is pointless, just delete it – it’s fine ^^]