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gabrizzio555
I am Gabrizzio, i am a super hero of the cosmos, the following is George Benard Shaw
A revolutionist is one who desires to discard the existing social order and try another.
The constitution of England is revolutionary. To a Russian or Anglo-Indian bureaucrat, a general election is as much a revolution as a referendum or plebiscite in which the people fight instead of voting. The French Revolution overthrew one set of rulers and substituted another with different interests and different views. That is what a general election enables the people to do in England every seven years if they choose. Revolution is therefore a national institution in England; and its advocacy by an Englishman needs no apology.
Every man is a revolutionist concerning the thing he understands. For example, every person who has mastered a profession is a sceptic concerning it, and consequently a revolutionist.
Every genuine religious person is a heretic and therefore a revolutionist.
All who achieve real distinction in life begin as revolutionists. The most distinguished persons become more revolutionary as they grow older, though they are commonly supposed to become more conservative owing to their loss of faith in conventional methods of reform.
Any person under the age of thirty, who, having any knowledge of the existing social order, is not a revolutionist, is an inferior.
AND YET
Revolutions have never lightened the burden of tyranny: they have only shifted it to another shoulder.
Reviews
Le jour se lève (1939)
the day rises
the main setting of "le Jour Se Leve" is the top floor of a french apartment. the film opens with Jean Gabin character Francois - a factory worker- killing a dog trainer named Valentin who we find out (as the story unravels itself) was "involved" with his girl. Francois then barricades himself from the police, and the reason for the death of Valentin is told in simple sets of flashbacks that Gabin remembers between cigarettes as he decides what his next move will be. the story is simple and delicate in manner and substance but nonetheless the director/writer team Marcel Carne and Jacques Prevert succeed in turning the realistic (and sometimes edgy) conversations, movements and places into poetry. and in response to an earlier review, the simplicity of the flashbacks, is what makes the movie so intriguing. instead of relying on a heavy plot that might challenge audience, Prevert and Carne decide to put great detail into a simple tale about a sentimental man who is torn to ruin by a contemptuous and Machiavellian man.
Blade Runner (1982)
watch this or die
amazing movie here folks. its one of those few films that sticks with you the mood, the characters, the sets the direction the theme, its all amzing. this 2001,Metropolis and Brazil are the best sci-fi movies ever made so if you have not seen go see this or die.
the importance of seeing this film is for a few reasons. Number one; if there are any kids out there who have not yet met a film noir, this is great to start. it has the atmosphere it has the character and it catches it like a match to gas. the plot is; three (or four) robots trying to make it to a pyramaid were there god is while a bounty hunter wants to kill them. the second reason to see it is for this plot that ultimately goes into the look for meaning, the robots are faced with a golden calf and are supposed to fill out there four year life span with meaningless activities but on the verge of death one of the humanoids finds meaning... At the same time this bounty hunter falls in love with one of the robots, it sounds cliched but she is something more than the one sheet hollywood heroine she raises the second theme of the movie what is real? not like the fake Matrix "i like to explain everything in english third person' but this is a beatiful woman finding she is not real... the plot amazes the sets and the ending, when you see this film you'll either howl with amazement of the adventures taken place to sit in one place as though six knives have been thrown at your head and you will be thinking "that...was art"