UPDATE: I saw a movie so beautiful I started crying™
Stop rating movies before you even know they are in production!!!
Probably the first four-hour movie that I watched in one sitting. Not a perfect one, but the first fiction that caused me emotions since "Endgame". The plot is interesting. The characters are developed. The soundtrack is incredible. It could have been a beginning of something, but, you know what happened. Such a pity that a franchise with this potential has been lost.
The bright colours, the haunting and melodic soundtrack and the excellent acting, direction and writing! This one is a work of art!
Just finished watching a couple of episodes. Firstly the cast is solid and the show has done a great job capturing the magic/realistic nature of the wild west. Plus there are some darker sides of the lawless of the times. I especially enjoyed the monologue coming from the young lead female lead. I hope this show will be part shocking (Brutality), informative, sad, exhilarating and picturesque. I just hope they don't mix too much romance into the storyline!
Holy hell I can't believe I never heard of this show before now. Absolutely amazing. Everything about this show oozes greatness. Can't get enough, need more! God I hope HBO's is this good
I think they found this episode on the cutting room floor.
This episode really did nothing for me. It was very predictable, timeframes were crazy messed up from what could understand. At the beginning of the episode they talk about 3yrs since but on the grave stone it has 2021. Are we ahead of the show now, just very confusing and frankly lame.
Directed by Bryan Singer, Rami's performance of Freddie Mercury is not to be overlooked. Grab yourself a good set of speakers, turn up your music and piss off your roommates. Immerse yourself in the life story of Queen and Freddie Mercury. Rami diversifies his traditional role as an actor (best known as being Elliot in Mr. Robot), and pushes himself to his outer limits: making the film stand out in sexuality, music and theme.
In sets of two, the film artfully thrusts the viewer into the love, the joy that Freddie immersed himself in every day he lived. This documentary, marked up by the most inspiring moments in Mercury's career is highly polished.
There is little structure or time periods labeled clearly for the viewer, making it a guessing game as to how many years it has skipped. Nonetheless, this film is inspiring and is a great tribute to Freddie and his Career.
TL;DR: Rami does good performance, get out the old tube amp and watch it for yourself.