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#film: rebel moon.
zacksnydered · 4 months
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CHARLIE HUNNAM as KAI Rebel Moon: Part One - A Child of Fire Dir. Zack Snyder
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raventargaryenaep · 4 months
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Rebel Moon - Nemesis Gifs.
Reblog and share! DO NOT STEAL.
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freshmoviequotes · 4 months
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Rebel Moon: Part One - A Child of Fire (2023)
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mekaremadness · 6 months
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No offense to the other freshly released Rebel Moon arts, but these 2 are the wall worthy so fucking cool ones
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tygerland · 5 months
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facts-i-just-made-up · 4 months
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Oh ye of infinite wisdom. Can you tell a poor, unenlightened soul what the first horror movie ever made was?
The oldest known horror film, now lost media, is an 1896 short by Eugénie Génin titled "The True House of the Devil."
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With the birth of cinema came Georges Méliès, one of its first grand masters. Making dozens if not hundreds of science fiction and fantasy movies with his wife (Génin) he also made the first dark fantasy film, "The Devil's House," in 1896. However, this film is not what he and Génin originally conceived. She had originally written a far scarier movie, but Méliès considered it far too disturbing to make. He instead made his own version, similar to his more carnival exhibition style shorts of the time.
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But Génin was happy with her original story, and borrowed his camera each night to film her own version. What she made is a bit of a mystery. Her scripts were burned in the Great Paris Flambé Accident of 1901, and the original film was screened only once and was then immediately destroyed due to the audience's reaction.
Film historian Flynn Asterion explains, "Génin's film, according to the only survivor who saw it, depicted a house with a pit that lead to hell, or perhaps another dimension, where a demonic guide showed the true nature of God and the Devil and the universe in such specificity and accuracy that the audience went insane."
Most of the audience died instantly, became demented and ate their own eyeballs, or ran screaming into the sewer and never returned. The only remaining viewer, Jean-Regarde Quinapas Mangéses Propresyeux, is said to have survived by running naked from the screening, shouting about the end of existence, and filling his socks with horse manure. Arrested soon after for not using the proper Chaussettes d'Excréments for the act, he slowly declined in prison and was never heard from again.
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When Méliès learned of the disaster, he shut down all attempts at reproduction or preservation of Génin's film, and the film was lost.
Though this first horror movie was indeed so disturbing that it drove the audience mad, no movies in the 130 years since have matched its terrifying nature. There is good news however, as several viewers of Zack Snyder's upcoming "Rebel Moon" have had similar reactions, with some critics chewing off their own feet to escape the screening, despite their feet not having been restrained. Is a new master of disturbing cinema on the horizon? Only time will tell.
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jabberwocky1996 · 4 months
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Charlotte Maggi as Sam / Issa in Rebel Moon (2023, Dir. Zack Snyder)
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fygeneralzod · 8 months
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Anthony Hopkins as "Jimmy" in Zack Snyder's space opera Rebel Moon
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abnerkrill · 4 months
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the problem with sci-fi audiences today is that everything has to feel like star wars but if it feels like star wars in the wrong way it's bad because it's a bad knock-off :( but if we liked it we'll call it good sci-fi that does all the things we like :) and if it's too melodramatic in keeping with the grand traditions of space opera melodramas we'll call it cheesy and tropey :( most of all we promise we will hate on directors for daring to use their trademark iconographic visual innovations which they developed 20 years ago, because now we ignorantly associate them with all the mediocre mimicry that's come in the 20 years since instead of recognizing the visual style of the artists who originated it. we certainly won't let popular hatred for a director affect our reception of a work but we WILL hate watch new movies from that director just to post on tumblr. we love cinema btw
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soartfullydone · 3 months
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"rebel moon is just a bunch of disjointed character intros with no substance---"
[loud fart noise in your face]
Anyway, what connects all of the characters together is Honor, a major theme of the movie. It's the reason that These People In Particular are all chosen, beyond their reputations or even their skill sets (which are still important).
What does your personal honor look like? How do you uphold it? What do you do when you lose your honor? Can you ever truly regain it once it's lost? Can you find redemption, or is revenge the closest thing you can get? Can revenge and honor ever be the same?
After her indoctrination and service in the Imperium, Kora deserts, but it's for her survival, not the recovery of her honor. That's the journey she's currently on in the defense of her new home and the people there, triggered by the conflict of choosing her personal safety or rescuing Sam from further assault. She found the line of her honor and refused to ignore it any longer.
Gunnar placed personal gain over maintaining a united front about the grain surplus. His dishonorable actions lead to Sindri getting killed and their village placed under the Imperium's thumb. Noble's culpability aside, Gunnar feels responsible for his role in all this and seeks to make amends. It's why he's the only one who jumps in to protect the child from potential collateral damage in Nemesis' fight with Harmada. He is transitioning from being a selfish character to being more selfless, defining what he wants his personal honor to be.
Speaking of Nemesis, she is the most samurai-coded character here, complete with their version of honor. Her failure at being able to protect her children drives her to defend others, and shoulder the burden of killing once a peaceful resolution cannot be reached. It's why she has an entire conversation with Harmada, to understand what drives her, to attempt to find common ground and shared empathy. It's why she fights first with naked steel, to try to convince Harmada to back off, to value her own life, and it's for the lives of others that she finally ignites her blades when she cannot. Nemesis is not an emotionless cyborg who assassinates in cold blood, but one who is deeply attuned to her pain and that of others.
Tarak is a prince, and yet we learn he's nowhere near his home or his people. Whether he's failed them or abandoned them (or feels like he has) is still a mystery, but we still know that he is an honorable man, regarding his servitude to Hickman with utter seriousness. Tarak will honor his word and any agreements once given, including a life debt, and his connection with nature both demonstrates and resonates his nobility. He even has the whole "honor them" speech to Millius, revealing that he knows the guilt of surviving when all the friends you swore to fight beside are now gone.
General Titus fought proudly for the Imperium until his honor wouldn't allow him to stomach their methods. The price for that included his men's lives, his station, and his dignity. Unable to protect any of it including his ideals, he turns to drink and hopes fighting as a gladiator to the death does the rest. And yet, he cannot bring himself to just lay down and die. He dwells on his mistakes but does not succumb to them. The kernel of honor was still within him, and it's no wonder Kora and the other idealists at her back were able to ignite it again.
Jimmy is from an order of robotic knights, who all laid down their arms in dishonor and disgrace when the Imperium's royal family was murdered. He embodies old and forgotten chivalry, and in case you missed that, they got Anthony Hopkins to voice him. These knights haven't fought back since, even when they are attacked---and yet Jimmy retaliates to protect Sam before himself, finding something honorable to fight for again.
Darrian Bloodaxe has his honor as a rebellion leader tested and rightly concludes that the revolution is meaningless if they will not come to the aid of the most defenseless among them. (But he and his men die anyway!) Indeed, that is the point. Hedging your bets and picking your battles might be the smartest option, but it's not the most noble or honorable. Honor, in case you haven't noticed, often demands a choice and a price.
And yes, even our villains share in this theme in their own twisted ways. Kai is a mirror to Gunnar, but where Gunnar is growing into being a less opportunistic person, Kai is deliberately shrouding his true intentions from the get-go. At Kai's betrayal, Kora demands after his honor, to which Kai dryly replies, "What did happen to it." It isn't a question. Kai long ago saw honor as a death sentence and chose survival over everything, and in an ironic twist, is killed once he tries to tempt Gunnar into choosing his own survival over Kora's. Like Kora before him, Gunnar finds his line that he will not cross as well as what he fights for.
Finally, there's Atticus Noble, who wields the honorable memory of the Slain King and his dishonorable death as a blunt weapon against all that isn't the Imperium, much like his cane. The one time the Imperium was gracious, and they were betrayed for it. Never again, and everyone will suffer for this humiliation until the Imperium's honor is restored---and it never will be. Because honor is not the point; conquest and control is. Revenge is the point.
Literally all of this is in the film btw. But then, I wasn't fast-forwarding or looking down at my phone the whole time or playing Paint By Numbers: Star Wars Edition. I was actually watching the goddamn movie and letting it tell me its story. And then I reflected on it afterward. Whooooaaa!
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entrehormigones · 3 months
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zacksnydered · 4 months
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"If not redemption, what about revenge? " REBEL MOON ‧ 2023
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wine4thewin · 4 months
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Just casually watching Rebel Moon on Netflix, seeing Admiral Noble willingly allow some tentacle creature to fondle his naked body, in front of a subordinate no less.
Me, tossing up hands on my couch:
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nellarw95 · 17 days
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Happy Birthday Charlie 🥳🎂🎈🎁🎉
April 10,1980
Buon Compleanno 🥳🎂🎈🎁🎉
10 Aprile 1980
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Rebel Moon (2022)
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picspammer · 4 months
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Rebel Moon - Part One: A Child of Fire Directed by Zack Snyder
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