Friday, April 25, 2014

Enemy

Well, if David Lynch is frustratingly not going to make films anymore, I suppose other directors may as well work within his domain, expanding its carnal lethally chipper metamorphosis to absolve instinctive claims, encouraging their characters to experimentally confront themselves as curative acts of regenerative p/haze, immersively diversifying degenerative converse sights, for the love of a beautiful woman, for the transience of a femme fatale.

Denis Villeneuve prospers.

Enemy is too stark for direct comparisons with Lynch's work, but penetrating transverse inveteracies still construct its obsessed will, a trembling fearful confrontation with an other, forsaken withdrawal, fey iron amplitudes.

Isabella Rossellini (Mother) inhabits.

Sarah Gadon (Helen) resembles Patricia Arquette.

A clandestine group internally promotes coveted exclusive performances.

Identity crises clarify.

Challenging co-existence.

The reality the protagonist cohorts ambiguously disdains its materialistic shell, swapping seductions for synergies, intimately, with standing.

A web based conjugal convection rallies Adam (Jake Gyllenhaal) to the next internment, the closing credits befouling his rise, follow the sentient bread crumbs, to unlock a foresighted rendez-vous.

In plume.

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