A brilliant young billionaire, having maintained his fortune by
grammatically applying the mathematical rhythms of nature to the
metaphorical constructs of his social interactions, something like that,
philosophically travels throughout New York in his cork-lined limo,
calmly discussing various subjects with his astute personnel,
occasionally stopping to chat with his literary wife, protests pulsating
outside, historical echoes allusively gyrating, definitive risks
annihilating his wealth, the pursuit of pleasure conjugally detected,
security forces requiring guidance, meaning, substantially, trying to
break its way through.
On his way to have his hair cut.
Operating
within a conscious surrealistic intellectual structure spatially
adorned with sudden startlingly ephemeral enactments (momentary
dreamlike logical displacements), wherein questions of tangibility
become remarkably fluid before alternatively reverting to their previous
states, David Cronenberg's Cosmopolis examines an individual's
steady response to a shockingly increasing barrage of multilayered
financial, cultural, and, derivatively, psychological derailments, whose
consequent disruptions cannot be experientially sublimated.
Mr. Packer's (Robert Pattinson) unaffected emancipated solution attaches a horrific qualification to the concept of freedom.
Even when Cronenberg zeroes in on the cerebral, he can still find other ways of exemplifying his roots.
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