[SkyShowtime] The closing film of the Venice Film Festival was an icy (not only because of the Norwegian landscapes) version of a Jo Nesbø novel that, despite an interesting cast, fails to decipher the characters, wrapped in a kind of fatality tragic that is described with little emotion. There's excellent cinematography by Nicolai Brüel and a suitably dramatic soundtrack by Andrea Ferri, but the film is shrouded in an emotional haze, an inability to convey pain and trauma, which ends up disappointing for a story that offered more possibilities for develop really complex characters.
Shout by Miguel A. ReinaBlockedParent2022-12-19T12:22:57Z
[SkyShowtime] The closing film of the Venice Film Festival was an icy (not only because of the Norwegian landscapes) version of a Jo Nesbø novel that, despite an interesting cast, fails to decipher the characters, wrapped in a kind of fatality tragic that is described with little emotion. There's excellent cinematography by Nicolai Brüel and a suitably dramatic soundtrack by Andrea Ferri, but the film is shrouded in an emotional haze, an inability to convey pain and trauma, which ends up disappointing for a story that offered more possibilities for develop really complex characters.