V for Vendetta, a movie with an unnamed genre, was released in 2005, starring Hugo Weaving and Natalie Portman. I say the genre is unnamed because it isn't quite sci-fi, (all events are physically possible) mystery, (there is a past uncovering-esque theme, but it is hardly the main focus) or thriller (whose genre is somewhat indescribable, but is more horror like than this). I suppose Drama would sort of fit, but that is more romance based. This movie feels like being taken on a ride, and little snippets of other stories with their own genre are flying by, slowly becoming one plot, the outcome of which is as obvious as it is breathtakingly symbolic. Let me tell you it is my very good pleasure to describe this film, which I most certainly would rate as a 4/5 stars.
And so it was. Set in the dystopian cyberpunk future the sci-fi channel would have us believe, there is a british totalitarian state, well known for a lack of rights, and no one protesting a lack of them. And on a fateful night, a young Evey Hammond (who was later found to have been wronged by the government in nearly every way possible) meets a most curious fellow, who only goes by the letter "V". She soon finds just how far the oddities of this kind fellow go, and just what his intentions are for the injust regime currently ruling.
And now for V. What a drive that man(?) had! From an undisclosed background, he is a man seemingly without a body. Literally, he is supposed to actually be a figurative way to tell the story. V is not supposed to just be a man, but a movement, an idea. He represents the people at large, and more importantly, the sum of their discontent. V the terrorist is the spark that ignites the gunpowder of revolution, but V the idea is the gunpowder. The point is to show, not V's revolution, but the People's revolution. Even V understood this in the end. He left it up to Evey, because he knew that for all the work he put in for his revenge and justice, it was not to be his, and it never was. If V is the People's sense of revenge, Evey is their hope for a future after revenge is had.
And now, I bring this review to a close. I would also like to mention that an exception was not made in the rating of this film. Typically, I am against the film we watch if it contains a message that isn't just a slight slip you hardly notice. What I mean to say is, if a film is preachy, I dislike it. Now obviously, V for Vendetta was incredibly preachy about what is freedom and how government should behave. Since I agreed with the message, I rated it with 5 stars initially. But then I remembered why I had the rule in the first place. I don't like it when I watch a movie that paints me a bad guy because of my ethnicity, or social standing. So how is it fair to others who see movies I like the message of but they don't? The goal of the rule is to show whether or not it's bias free, not biased to me. And so, it remains at 4 stars, though I personally believe this is the second best movie I've seen in a long while.
Stay Savvy my Friends,
Erudito
Resources:
chelsea.theoffside.com
Excellent...stay savvy. Interesting...preachy comment.
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