
Finished Christopher Nolan's Dunkirk about two hours ago, after having sadly missed it last year in theaters (wow, that IMAX experience must've been special!) and I can't stop thinking about how claustrophobic and heavy some of the situations felt. I always thought of Christopher Nolan as a "monumental" filmmaker, creating epic scope, putting his characters into very unconventional situations and using some of his effective twisted storytelling. Yet the suspense and fear he transmitted in Dunkirk was something I had never seen him do before. The movie it self rarely has blood, some bloody faces but other than that there are no flying heads, or cut of legs, or rotting corpses etc. like in many other war movies.What do you think about Dunkirk? via /r/movies https://ift.tt/2LjYpCh
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