In the sixth week of 2020 for Wandering Through the Shelves' Thursday Movie Picks. We venture into the first of the Seven Deadly Sins for the series in the subject of lust. Defined in many ways such as intense longing and a desire for something or someone. It is one of the seven cardinal sins that play into temptation and chaos. Here are my three picks: 1. The Center of the World
From Wayne Wang is an obscure erotic drama of sorts that was shot during the early days of digital cinema as it revolves around a dot-com millionaire who meets a stripper and pays her $10,000 to spend three days with her in Las Vegas. Starring Peter Sarsgaard and Molly Parker, it’s an exploration of desire and identity as this millionaire copes with his own loneliness and uncertainty while he plays to her rules of four hours of erotic play and no penetration. Yet, things get complicated as well as feelings for one another as it is also told in a non-linear narrative as it’s a gem of a film. 2. Lust, Caution
Ang Lee’s adaptation of Eileen Chang’s story set in late 1930s/early 1940s Shanghai during Japan’s occupation of China where a Chinese student joins the Chinese resistance to spy and later assassinate a top official working for a traitor to the Chinese. It’s a film that takes place during two different moments in time with the first half set in the late 1930s and the second half in the early 1940s with Tang Wei as this Chinese spy trying to meet this official in Tony Leung Chiu-wai who is the target yet there is a conflict between both of them as he’s married and she’s hired to target him as they both get into this intense affair with some nearly-graphic sex scenes. 3. Room in Rome
0 Yorumlar