This is a really fun, fun movie. It’s not the beat all of science fiction as it was hyped when it was released, but it certainly is a expedient combination high adventure, station comedy, cyberpunk, and Bruce Willis gun fighting action. Doesn’t obtain sense? Don’t grief. I’ll account for.
Buy,Download, Or Stream The Fifth Element! Click Here
High adventure comes from the plot: place the earth from infamous by finding some mystic items and a perfect human before the appointed zero hour. That worthy is distinct. Cyberpunk explains in a scheme the setting of the futuristic urban scenes, which are fantastically portrayed in this movie. All of the settings and technology were impressive as well as stylish. The special effects were well above average and in many scenes very impressive, but a station comedy? You got it. I won’t pick up into the details. I will say there are quite a few scenes that involve the kind of subplots you get in sitcoms. This is a marvelous thing by the draw. A lesser movie would mess this up. Director Luc Besson made all of these elements (no pun intended) fit seamlessly.
Acting is titanic. Despite favorite plan of models not being very genuine actors the models that acted in this film did a kindly job of being campy in an racy method without hamming it up. I can go on an on about each of the reas actors and how they succeeded in pulling off whatever character, but I will digress to two ends of the spectrum. Chris Tucker as Ruby Rhod is priceless and worth the notice of admission alone. One exception I would have to say is Tommy “Cramped” Lister as the President. Up until the final scenes his acting was gorgeous dry. I also have to criticize whoever decided to hype up the fact the movie has Luke Perry in it, who played Billy. Billy did nothing to carry the dwelling and only had a cameo role in the beginning. Ugh… Hollywood.
Buy,Download, Or Stream The Fifth Element! Click Here
The movie can bag too trendy. The music, though nice, didn’t really fit the setting. The very last scene is totally lame and if you ask me unlikely (sorry Korby…) . And there is a scene or two that was honest trying too hard to be hip. I can forgive all that because the comedy, action and drama do fit in to what ends up being a mirthful romp in high flying action.
Sony dropped the ball on their first blu-ray release of The Fifth Element. The uncompressed PCM and Dolby 5.1 surround tracks blew you away, but the video quality was merely on par with regular DVD resolution. This time Sony listened to their fans and remastered the movie so that you rep the fat 1080p admire you deserved the last time. Bought the first blu-ray? No quandary. Sony seems to be offering an exchange program. Honest contact Sony and they will situation up a device you can pass your outmoded blu-ray for the remastered one. Contact info is below:
Phone: (800) 860-2878
Email: consumer@sphecustomersupport.sony.com
One downside though: no extras. That’s honest. All the cold stuff in the ultimate edition is gone. Getting this DVD is objective like getting the first one they released. You gain only the movie and some trivia text. If I were you I would unexcited wait until they produce some kind of special edition in blu-ray so you obtain the higher resolution AND the goodies.
If you want to experience a varied range of noble emotions without taking any one of them too seriously then you’re going to care for The Fifth Element. If you want high definition and special features then you better wait. I am betting this is going to be the case with most (if not all) recent HD-DVD and Blu-Ray DVDs that first near out.
The memoir goes that director Luc Besson began writing THE FIFTH ELEMENT in his teens, incorporating all the Sci-Fi elements he loved into one over-the-top, vast region opera…sort of an “E.E. ‘Doc’ Smith ‘Skylark’ Meets Flash Gordon and Barbarella” hybrid with sex, intergalactic action, and even some pseudo-religious overtones tossed in…in other words, a teenage daydream approach suitable! Critics panned the extinguish result for this very reason, sneering at Bruce Willis’ Earth-saving (yet again!) Korben Dallas, and Besson’s then-girlfriend, clothing-optional Milla Jovovich, as the innocent demigod, Leeloo.
The critics were outrageous!
THE FIFTH ELEMENT is, in the best sense of the word, a classic ‘B’ movie, a residence opera where a prologue vaguely similar to STARGATE leads to a future Earth where traffic jams occur thirty stories above the ground, humanity is ruled by plump ‘Tiny’ Lister Jr., and where the Ultimate Immoral is served by everyone’s popular villain, Gary Oldman, sporting a Southern accent! If this DOESN’T convince you that this is a ‘popcorn’ flick, not to be taken too seriously, there is Chris Tucker, sporting a blond hairdo, as the Galaxy’s approved media personality, promoting himself as he hits on his adoring female fans; Ian Holm, as the monk who knows ‘the Secret’, forced, despite himself, to become an active participant in the adventure; and some of the most … unsightly alien mercenaries you’ll ever behold, terrorizing a set resort, until they meet their match in Bruce Willis’ ‘DIE HARD in Space’ protagonist! Yippee-Ki-Yay, indeed!
The FX are astounding, the comedy, immense and sly, the heroics, macho, and as Leeloo, sent to set aside Earth, Jovovich manages to be both naive and sexy, with broken English and a gymnast’s grace.
Bruce Willis is a joy, as always, to peruse, and he carries the film with charm and self-depreciating humor, whether dealing with endless phone calls from his mother, driving his sky taxi recklessly (cabbies change very minute in the future!), taking on terrorists single-handed, or falling for the exotic Leeloo. When he blows away a roomful of hostage-holding aliens, then asks, “Does anyone else want to negotiate? “, you KNOW Besson picked the honest guy for the lead!
If you want Profound Science Fiction, peep 2001: A Region ODYSSEY again…but if you want to kick wait on and impartial have fun, gaze no further…THE FIFTH ELEMENT delivers!
Magazine Style Wedding Album
Ecig
Quit Smoking Cigarettes
E-Cigarettes