Martin Scorsese films are long -- 138 minutes on average -- and they keep getting longer from decade to decade. But he is one of the premier American film directors, so he has earned the right. This one was 151 minutes, and I had to watch it in two parts. In fact, it was so long, I ended up watching four other films before watching the second part. Not that I wasn't into the story. It's just one of those films with a slow build, and I didn't feel any need to rush through it. I think that's a characteristic of a good film -- the feeling that you can just sit with it for a while in silence. You don't feel the need to finish quickly or check the time left over and over again. The story itself is classic: What's good? What's evil? Who can you trust? And why do you think and act as you do? All great questions. For the most part, I assume that everyone is out for themselves in this film. Maybe they're working for a greater cause, maybe they're not, a...
Flow looks unlike any other animated film I've ever seen. That's what ultimately pushes the rating up to 5/5 for me. I think it is subtle storytelling, and for a while, I was holding back a bit in my praise. The ending itself it pretty quiet, too, but I appreciated how it ended... This might be odd to say, but I felt like the animation of the background and everything OTHER THAN the animals was amazing. I'm not sure what I think about the animals themselves. They looked "weird" and somehow a little off. Not the Cat itself, but maybe just the dogs. I don't know. I don't want to make a big deal about it. What's maybe surprising is that this is a world where people obviously existed, but I thought for sure the animals would need to run across some people eventually... maybe by the end, say. But nope. No people. They are all gone. Just some cat statues, a drawing, some boats, and whatever nick-nacks lemurs collect. But what happened to all of the people? W...