Customer reviews for (Unknown)

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(Unknown)

Overall rating:
4 / 5
4
 / 
5
(3 reviews) 3
Open Ratings Snapshot
Rating breakdown 3 reviews
5 Stars
2
4 Stars
0
3 Stars
0
2 Stars
1
1 Star
0
1 out of 1(100%)reviewers recommend this movie.
Customer reviews for (Unknown)
Review 1 for (Unknown)
Overall rating 
5 / 5
5 / 5

A Visual and emotional treat

PostedSeptember 23, 2012
Customer avatar
popcorn69
from Miami, FL, USA
Age:55 to 64
Gender:Male
Goes to the movies:weekly
Special Effects 
5 / 5
5 / 5
Art Direction 
5 / 5
5 / 5
Story 
5 / 5
5 / 5
Camerawork 
5 / 5
5 / 5
Great movie with stunning images. A trip around the world that few ever get to experience.
Pros great story
Yes, I recommend this movie.
0points
0of 0voted this as helpful.
Review 2 for (Unknown)
Overall rating 
2 / 5
2 / 5

Ponderous

PostedSeptember 23, 2012
Customer avatar
sluggobeast
from Miami, FL, USA
Age:55 to 64
Gender:Male
Goes to the movies:monthly
Magnificent photography but ponderous and oblique in terms of "message." My reference point for a film like this was "Koyaanisqatsi," which I thought was way better. But that was 30 years ago, so who knows?
0points
0of 0voted this as helpful.
Review 3 for (Unknown)
Overall rating 
5 / 5
5 / 5

remarkable, visually engrossing, with a range of spiritual resonances

PostedSeptember 22, 2012
Customer avatar
artsfbb
from indianapolis
Age:55 to 64
Gender:Male
Goes to the movies:monthly
Some reviews elsewhere have been highly negative, while others have been enthusiastic without having a clue, it seems, of the deeper hues (metaphorically) of this wide-ranging exploration of global people, places, and times. This is a remarkable and often beautiful film, with its share of quirks as well. It would be ever so good if more viewers and reviewers of this movie would set aside their entrenched biases and fierce egos just a bit, using their minds flexibly, as well as their eyes carefully. One might even give some thought to the concept of samsara (which is not only Hindu, as some professional critics have mistakenly said, but is also a key concept in Buddhism--which in its Tibetan form is a point of beginning and ending in the movie). At times, it's as though Planet Earth is meeting Terrence Malick here--but that can be good. Although wordless, this is a film one thinks about and remembers for a long time--and, in my case, dreams about.
+1point
1of 1voted this as helpful.