Ryan Gosling has been in show business his whole life but it was not until 2011 with the critically acclaimed box office hits of ‘Crazy Stupid Love’, ‘Drive’ and ‘The Ides of March’ that Gosling became a star. Portrait of an actor more complicated than he may seem.
Imagine creating a critically acclaimed big budget #SciFi sequel to a beloved film that earns a quarter billion dollars and following it up with 2 more increasingly successful and acclaimed films.
Then imagine someone coming at you with this #ScreenRant take.
Just watched #bladerunner2049. The cinematography is amazing, but apart from that it was kind of meh? The pacing felt way of. Guy walks around five minutes, nothing happens, than there is a 0.78s cut of something important and if you don't get it the story doesn't make any sense. Also why should I care about any of the characters? Sure, one is Harrison Ford. But is that enough? (Silent voice: "It's Harrison Ford!")
In just 26 years (on July 6, 2049), blade runner and replicant K will walk a path of his own choosing a week after "retiring" another replicant, a Nexus-8 protein farmer named Sapper Morton.
The "not Spinner" from Blade Runner 2049. Scale model replica.
Matchbox/Hotwheels (1:64) scale.
Sculpted in epoxy putty, plus some convenient shapes of plastic.
Cotton wool hides the flight stand and calls back to the original Spinner of Blade Runner.
The orange of the windows is a reference to the film.
Been working my way through the works of one of the greatest film directors working today - #DenisVilleneuve. I’ve seen the major Hollywood works like #Dune, #BladeRunner2049, #Arrival, and #Sicario, as well as his smaller films like #Prisoners, and even his lesser known films like #Enemy and even #Polytechnique… but today I watched #Incendies… and… uhh… Jesus Christ. What a fucked-up yet powerful condemnation of the horrors that war creates not only directly, but so often just in its wake.