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Requiem for a Dream
Anyone seen it?
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Re: Requiem for a Dream
I haven't not seen it.
Are you familiar with the theme? Its one of those classic tunes that stands out. |
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I bought it awhile back...
The old woman made me cwy :< |
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Scared me off drugs for a good year.
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Yeah, excellently directed and filmed and depressing as hell.
My favorite scene is definetly Marlon Wayans (forgot the characters name) running with the camera shaking at a low angle towards him. Very prettyful |
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My brother watched it and tells me to watch it as well.
I did see Trainspotting a while ago. Another depressing movie about drugs. |
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Without a doubt the most depressing film I've seen to date. Great movie, but not something to watch when you're already blue.
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This was one of my favorite movies for a while, but I'll have to watch it again. I like movies that aren't too uplifting every once in a while because hey, life isn't always fun and games. Other depressing movies I'd recommend are The Bicycle Thief and Scarlet Street. Depressing, but great films.
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The Butterfly Effect is also terribly depressing. They managed to put 90% of the worlds miseries into that movie. For me it was a great first watch, terrible second watch.
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Saw it and will never see it again. Excellent movie, but it affected me to the point I had to go for a walk to shake it off.
SPOILER The saddest and most disturbing part was that nobody dies... they all have to live with what they've become... |
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One of my favorite movies. Jared Leto is the man! Pi, by same director and similar style, is also pretty good.
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And Requiem was sad... but I enjoyed it a lot. The "getting high" scenes were great. The mother's scenario was terrifying. |
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I just finished watching it...its very depressing, for some reason it makes me think of people from school who were buddies of mine in elementary and middle school and started smoking pot and now are just ****ed up...very realistic...
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Because there's quite a difference... Quite... Or so I've been told to say... |
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To be a tad more specific, I'm willing to bet that there have been very few cases attributed to pot usage that result in removal of various body parts (or the infections that caused it, for that matter), complete mental breakdowns, and the selling of one's body out of desperation for a joint... Just a hunch... Also I personally know of only 2 adults (that is to say, a generation before me, not "adults" as I, a 21 year old, am an "adult") who were into pot bigtime when they were younger, and both have survived and are able to make it on their own (with their families) in the mind-bogglingly expensive Arlington/DC area... One even owns his own (non-drug-dealing) business... And, I suppose, that I tried it 5 or 6 times before deciding it wasn't doing anything for me (other than making me extremely dizzy when combined with alcohol) and walking away unscathed... I doubt I'd have been so 'lucky' if I was trying, say, heroin... 5 or 6 times... But I was moreso just curious if MrCoffee's friends had indeed graduated to harder drugs than I was interested in sparking some form of debate... The "and now are just ****ed up...very realistic..." seems to imply that they did, but depending on one's upbringing and whether or not they had actually heard anything beyond the simple "Drugs are bad" and "You'll run over little girls on bicycles" rhetoric, the definition of "****ed up" can vary... Although I probably feel that way because when I was around 16 and I found out a friend of mine smoked pot (and later than a number of other acquaintances did), I (the isolated little boy brought up by a nice, drug-free, bad-word-free, realism-free family) was rather shocked and dissapointed, and probably would have labeled the whole situation as "****ed up" before, as you can tell, I eased up a bit on that whole stance... *shrug* |
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I have yet to see the movie but I want to.
I have had friends go down that road. One of them has been kicked out of his house, no job, $20 a week if he is lucky which he spends on drugs, alcohol or smokes. And he is pretty much brain dead. |
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I've heard some people discussing about how the movie's message isn't just about drug addiction (though it's obviously it's most prevalant theme/message), but addiction in general... Citing the old lady's severe addiction to TV... However, from what I've heard and witnessed, pot is less addictive than, say, cigarettes... And less harmful to boot (although that might have been attributed to the fact that most people who DO smoke pot generally do so much less frequently than those addicted to cigarettes)... Unless they're laced with something (which I've heard some shady dealers do in an attempt to get their buyers hooked on something else, and is partially responsible for pot being called a "gateway drug"... Rumors, perhaps)... Which wouldn't be a risk if it were legalized and regulated like tobacco/alcohol... I believe that's a part of the whole "legalize pot" arguement... Along with the "It's less addictive than cigarettes, and less harmful than alcohol with similar levels of impairment"... And, as an incentive for the government, "It would be taxed"... I think deep down, America (and I guess the world) as a whole is still afraid that marihuana will cause people to laugh uncontrollably for no reason, commit rape and murder, and star in terrible comedies... |
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