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"Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - Printable Version +- Scivillage.com Casual Discussion Science Forum (https://www.scivillage.com) +-- Forum: Culture (https://www.scivillage.com/forum-49.html) +--- Forum: Do-It-Yourself (https://www.scivillage.com/forum-131.html) +--- Thread: "Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) (/thread-18985.html) |
"Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - C C - Oct 15, 2025 Yep, I truly had never watched a single one of the 4 films that Taylor Sheridan wrote before he started making television shows for Paramount. But I discovered that I unknowingly slash accidentally did see one of the minor ones (63%) in the afterward time frame: "Those Who Wish Me Dead" (2021). I was surprised by one critic comparing the ambience of "Sicario" to "Apocalypse Now" -- because that's exactly what that crossed my mind (along with the realism of 1970s cinema in general, albeit "AN" had that heavy surreal tinge, too). Denis Villeneuve, who directed it, was presumedly responsible for that. The sequel to "Sicario" isn't supposed to be as good, but I'll probably view it anyway, along with high-ranked "Hell or High Water" and "Wind River". https://youtu.be/G8tlEcnrGnU RE: "Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - Syne - Oct 15, 2025 Sicario was good, but it's one of those movies that I got everything I could from it in one viewing. Not much rewatchability, IMO. RE: "Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - Magical Realist - Oct 15, 2025 I have been putting off seeing this for no good reason. I will watch it in the next few days. RE: "Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - Yazata - Oct 15, 2025 Denis Villenueve is probably my favorite director. (He directed Arrival too. Sicario is better.) And Sicario is one of my all-time favorite movies. (Unlike Syne, I can watch it over and over.) One word for this movie - Intense. Brutal. Great cast, especially Benicio Del Toro. Lots of realism in this movie. Big-time moral ambiguity. About the only people who aren't hiding hidden motives are the cartel (we know who they are, the movie makes that brutally clear), the protagonist (Emily Blunt) and the Benicio Del Toro character (who is a man on a very personal mission). As for the rest, Emily's FBI superiors, the CIA, the Mexican police... RE: "Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - Syne - Oct 15, 2025 Arrival is much more rewatchable for me. RE: "Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - Zinjanthropos - Oct 15, 2025 Easily rewatchable. Death of crime boss and his family was one hell of a scene. “Time to meet God” ….yikes… he meant it. Made me wonder if he did meet him/her/it. RE: "Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - C C - Oct 15, 2025 (Oct 15, 2025 07:49 PM)Zinjanthropos Wrote: Easily rewatchable. Death of crime boss and his family was one hell of a scene. “Time to meet God” ….yikes… he meant it. Made me wonder if he did meet him/her/it. And there was that misdirection event as to who the "sicario" would eventually turn out to be. RE: "Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - Yazata - Oct 15, 2025 First ten minutes of the movie, how Kate gets involved and I just noticed that this clip sorta gives away the movie's big secret, in the movie's first few minutes. Except that nobody who hasn't watched the whole movie would pick up on it. Kate certainly didn't. I'd say more but it would be a huge spoiler. RE: "Sicario" - 2015 (DIY belated catch-up with TS movies) - C C - Oct 18, 2025 "Sicario: Day of the Soldado" ... Same writer but different director (known for Italian crime drama), and consequently different film. No Blunt to be alarmed at the moral ambiguity, and crowded with much more violence. Doesn't end the way you almost start expecting it to, especially after Gillick survives and Graves goes against orders. But there's no way it could have finished in that predictable Disney manner after Graves' team whisked _X_ off via helicopter. And there is a "grasshoppers coincidence", since I usually only encounter that particular Mexican state being mentioned once every fifteen years. GILLICK: "From now on your name is Corina. You come from Oaxaca." https://youtu.be/sIMChzE_aCo |