The fact he won the Oscar for best director just proves all of this. He balances the dialogue with the thrills perfectly so that it never becomes boring. The man is a genius when it comes to controlling the camera, so many great one take shots which just shows the confidence he has in order to pull them off.
I mean the first shot of the film is all one take and goes on for 10 minutes. This overall however is Bullock's film, she has the most screen time and has to convey the emotions of what she is going through by herself.and also inform the viewers what is happening etc.Īlfonso Cuarón, who also directed the underrated Children of Men, takes directing duties for Gravity and is absolutely outstanding. The chemistry between Bullock and Clooney was brilliant, given the circumstance of what happens during the film. George Clooney was witty, comedic and re-assuring as the most experienced astronaut in the group. Sandra Bullock was nominated for the Best Actress Oscar for her role but it was tough year and unfortunately did not win, but the nomination alone just shows how incredible she was. From that moment, I knew this was the greatest thing I ever watched.įor a film that consists of essentially 4 actors (3 of them on screen and 1 voice actor), I was completely engaged and convinced that I was with those characters. After the film finished, I was on the edge of my seat.sweating with my eyes widened at what I just saw. The behemoth that took the cinema by storm came out.Gravity. I remember being so excited going to the cinema to watch this, I went on release day with my family. "Nothing could ever beat Avatar, visually" they all said, including myself.but i was wrong.
GRAVITY 2013 MOVIE THUMBNAIL WIDESCREEN FULL
Then came 2013, a year that seemed to be full of standard summer blockbusters and a few indie films.just like any other year. In fact many masterpieces have been set in space: Stanley Kubrick's ground breaking 2001: A Space Odyssey, Ridley Scott's terrifying Alien and Pixar's animated feature Wall-E. It's been the setting for hundreds of movies through the years. Space, the endless emptiness that holds many wonders and anomalies.