Country Spain. actor Ivan Massagué. Genre Thriller. review Goreng wakes up in part of The Hole, a place where food is sent down with The Platform. As people above become selfish and eat whatever they want, people below get less. Goreng learns from the other cellmates that the people below can fall into madness and sanity loss turning into bloody cannibalism, so he starts to get into a plan for The Hole's people. 1 h, 34 M.
✺✺ ⟱♠⎈♧✰⬇✦⇓§♥♡☆
✺✺ https://zdf-de-mediathek.com/watch/1110
✺✺ ✯✵⇧❃⇑✧❋✭☼∞☼✱
The Platform (El Hoyo) Reviews Movie Reviews By Reviewer Type All Critics Top Critics All Audience Page 1 of 4 April 28, 2020 The Plattform is that kind of movie that gets an interesting enough idea going... up until the point when time starts running out and we realize clousure on this one is going to be impossible (and underwhelming). April 21, 2020 Its political symbolism and economic commentary may be blunt (to put it mildly), but 'The Platform' is delightfully grim and intense. April 14, 2020 No doubt an intriguing premise, with first-time feature director Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia clearly draws notable inspirations from like-minded high-concept sci-fi movies such as "Cube" (1997) and "Snowpiercer" (2013). Narratively, nothing the protagonist ends up doing makes sense... Character development is not meant to be thrown away, but it is not resolved effectively. [Full Review in Spanish] April 13, 2020 The film requires several viewings to fully appreciate all the details provided to us. [Full review in Spanish] April 9, 2020 Instead of building on its ideas it simply hits the same ones over and over again, splattering plenty of blood but leaving little that stains your mind. April 7, 2020 Gaztelu-Urrutia is ignorant of the fact that, even with the best-intentioned socialist systems, there will always be a hierarchy. Rarely in Spain has a film been so cruel and sadistic and, at the same time, its message seems so universal. [Full review in Spanish] April 6, 2020 With its dystopian bearing and intricate world-building, it's not hard to see why the film has caught on during a pandemic (The National Interest) Perverse entertainment. [Full review in Spanish] April 5, 2020 The Platform on Netflix is the latter, a brutal, blunt and effective sledgehammer. April 4, 2020 If you can stomach it, "The Platform" is a funny and fierce farce with its eyes on race, class and the ways people can rise up for the betterment of all by working together. If it makes you nauseous, so be it. Impressively produced on what must have been a low budget and with strong work from Massagué... April 3, 2020 In some ways the release of The Platform could not be better timed. Makes [no] sense as anything other than a heavy-handed metaphor. What a wild premise to be both intrigued and grossed out by. April 2, 2020 A dash of Camus, a sprinkle of Kafka and helpings of Lovecraft, The Platform will leave you both sick and satisfied. It's blunt, and I admire it. March 31, 2020 It works better as a sardonic allegory, than a solid dystopia. [Full review in Spanish] Page 1 of 4.
Tubeplus genre family full cinema ÐлÐÑÑоÑdvd bonus
Tubeplus genre family full cinema ÐлÐÑÑоÑdvd coffret. Tubeplus genre family full cinema ÐлÐÑÑоÑdvd video. Tubeplus genre family full cinema ÐлÐÑÑоÑdvd film.
Tubeplus genre family full cinema ÐлÐÑÑоÑdvd zone 1
Photo: Netflix Warning: This article contains The Platform spoilers. I’m guessing you knew that already, but just to be safe. If you want to watch a deeply, deeply disturbing movie about isolation, starvation, and the scarcity of food in the middle of a real-life pandemic that has people panic-shopping at the grocery store, then, by all means, check out The Platform, a new Spanish movie that released on Netflix today. Called El Hoyo in Spanish, this science fiction thriller come from director Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia, and originally premiered at Toronto Film Festival in 2019 before being acquired by Netflix for worldwide distribution. Echoing Vincenzo Natali’s disturbing 1997 sci-film Cube, The Platform is not for the faint of heart. There is blood, there is gore, there is cannibalism, there is feces… Basically, anything you might think would be hard to view with your eyeballs is in this movie. If you’re here because you had to turn the movie off for your sanity, but you still want to know what The Platform ending was, I am happy to help. If you’re here because you finished the movie and need somewhere to process what the $#@% you just watched, I am also here to help. Let’s get into The Platform ending, explained. What is The Platform plot, explained? Our protagonist is a young man named Goreng (Iván Massagué) who wakes up in a cement cell with a rectangular hole in the center. His roommate, Trimagasi (Zorion Eguileor), explains that he is in a vertical prison and every day, “the platform” descends through the floors of the prison, carrying the leftovers from an extravagant meal from the rich on the outside. It pauses for just a few seconds, and the prisoners must eat as much as they possibly can while its there. Try to take any food to go, and you’ll be punished—the room will become either unbearably hot or unbearably cold. By the time the platform reaches Goreng and Trimagasi level, 48, the food has already been picked over—everything has bites out of it, and only scraps remain. But Trimagsi promises Goreng it’s a good level. The floors beneath them (lower in space, and higher in number) get nothing. We learn that Goreng came to the hole voluntarily for six months, in exchange for an accredited diploma, but it’s clear he had no idea how horrific the prison was. Each prisoner gets to bring one object with them, and Goreng brought a book: Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes. Trimagasi brought a knife. Every month, the prisoners are gassed and brought to a new level. The first time this happens, Goreng wakes up tied down on level 171. Trimagasi calmly explains to him that it is inevitable that they would turn on each other at this level, and while he doesn’t want to hurt Goreng, he will strip off pieces of his flesh to eat him to stay alive. Goreng, of course, is horrified, but he’s saved by Miharu (Alexandra Masangkay), a woman who has lost her mind and rides the platform to lower levels, looking for her lost child that may or may not exist and murdering people. (Earlier, on level 48, Goreng stood up for Miharu when men were attacking her. ) Miharu cuts Goreng free, Goreng murders Trimagasi, and survives the month by eating his rotting flesh. The next month, Goreng wakes up on level 33 with a new roommate named Imoguiri (Antonia San Juan), who has brought her dog as her one object. Imoguiri is an official of some sort, who initially screened Goreng to join the prison. She swears to Goreng she had no idea what the prison was really like, but that it is intended as an experiment in “spontaneous solidarity. ” She claims that there are 200 levels, and if every person took their fair share of rationed food, everyone in the prison would be fed. Every day, she pleads with prisoners below on level 34 to only eat their allotted ration and to pass along the message to level 35. They refuse to listen—until Goreng threatens to shit in their food, and they obey. Imoguiri says the next thing to do is convince the people on the nicer levels to ration as well, but Goreng says it will never work because “I can’t shit upwards. ” The next month, Goreng wakes up on the worst level yet: 202. Imoguiri hangs herself, Goreng eats her body, and the month passes in a fever dream. A month later, Goreng wakes up on level 6 with a new roommate Baharat (Emilio Buale Coka). Baharat is gleeful to be on such a good level because he believes it means he’ll be able to escape with his object: a rope. But the prisoners on level 5 refuse to help and instead defecate on his face. Goreng convinces Baharat to help him with a plan to ride down on the platform and distribute the food fairly by forcing the prisoners to ration. He and Baharat make makeshift weapons out of their bedframes and ride down on the platform. They decide not to give rations to the first 50 levels, who have already been eating well. The prisoners don’t like that. “A messiah would hand out loaves of bread, not take from our mouths, ” shouts one of them. Goreng and Baharat violently threaten people away from the food, until Baharat runs into a wise old man who tells him he must first trying being polite before resorting to violence. He also tells them that they need a symbol for their movement—something to send a message. He tells them they need to send a luxury dish that gets back Level 0 untouched. That dish is the panna cotta, an Italian dessert, which they must preserve at all costs. They resolve to try and continue to descend. Goreng initially estimated there were about 250 levels in the prison, a number he came to by counting the number of seconds it took for the platform to come back up while he was on level 202. However, they soon discover that if no one is alive on the level, then the platform doesn’t stop. That means there are more levels than Goreng anticipated. How does The Platform end? What is The Platform ending, explained? The platform finally stops for good at Level 333, the last level, where there is a child hiding under the bed. Goreng and Baharat get off the platform to help her, panna cotta in hand, and the platform leaves without them. Normally the fact that they have the panna cotta still means that the room would grow unbearably hot or cold, but it doesn’t. Stuck on Level 333, they give the child the panna cotta to eat. After a few moments, the platform shoots to the top of the prison without them on it. Baharat decides that the child is the new message—or maybe Goreng dreamed that. They are weak and injured from fighting the prisoners. When Goreng wakes up, he finds Baharat passed out in a pool of blood, seemingly dead. The next day, when the platform comes, Goreng gets on it with the child. The platform descends into a void, and stops, where Goreng has an imaginary conversation with Trimagasi. Trimagasi tells Goreng that his journey is over, because he is not the message, and the message requires no bearer. Goreng agrees, and gets off the platform to join Trimagasi in death. The child stays on the platform and shoots toward the top of the hole on the platform, and the movie ends. What does The Platform ending mean? What is The Platform ending meaning? While I don’t know director Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia and screenwriters David Desola and Pedro Rivero, it’s clear that the prison and the platform are a metaphor for capitalism. If only the prisoners would agree to work together and ration their resources—like, say, in a democratic socialist society—everyone would be fed. Instead, it’s a winner-takes-all capitalist society that leaves the people on the bottom dying and eating each other. And while Goreng does eventually succeed in convincing the people at the bottom that change is possible, it’s much harder to convince the people at the top to care. The ending leaves it open-ended as to whether the message will be enough to convince the people at the top to change their ways. Goreng did all he could. It’s all in their hands now. Watch The Platform on Netflix.
Netflix uses cookies for personalization, to customize its online advertisements, and for other purposes. Learn more or change your cookie preferences. Netflix supports the Digital Advertising Alliance principles. By interacting with this site, you agree to our use of cookies. We use cookies ( why? ). You can change cookie preferences; continued site use signifies consent. UNLIMITED TV SHOWS & MOVIES SIGN IN A slab of food descends floor by floor in a prison. The inmates above eat heartily, leaving those below starving and desperate. A rebellion is imminent. Starring: Iván Massagué, Antonia San Juan, Zorion Eguileor Watch all you want for free. Watch Now on Netflix Winner of TIFF's People's Choice Award. Nominated for three Goyas, including Best New Director (Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia) and Best Original Screenplay. Videos The Platform More Details Watch offline Available to download This movie is... Violent, Dark Audio English, English, European Spanish - Audio Description, European Spanish [Original], European Spanish - Audio Description, European Spanish [Original] Subtitles English, European Spanish, Finnish, Russian Cast Iván Massagué Antonia San Juan Zorion Eguileor Emilio Buale Alexandra Masangkay Coming Soon.
Tubeplus genre family full cinema ÐлÐÑÑоÑdvd zone. Sinopsis A pit with hundreds of levels, a platform that comes down full of food, two people per level. Are you one of those who jump when they are up or one of those who are gutless when they are down below? Cast Ivan Massagué Goreng Antonia San Juan Imoguiri Zorion Egileor Trimagasi Emilio Buale Baharat Alexandra Masangkay Miharu Crew Director Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia Producer Carlos Juárez Written by David Desola, Pedro Rivero Based upon an idea by David Desola Co-Producers David Matamoros, Ángeles Hernández Executive producers Raquel Perea, Carlos Juárez Director of photography Jon D. Domínguez Production and costume designer Azegiñe Urigoitia Music Aranzazu Calleja Film Edition Haritz Zubillaga, Elena Ruiz Production supervisor Raquel Perea Post production supervisor Raúl Campos Visual effects Iñaki Madariaga Sound editor Iñaki Alonso Production sound mixer Joshua Durán Makeup and Hairstyling Amaia Zaballa.
Tubeplus genre family full cinema ÐлÐÑÑоÑdvd vierges. Critics Consensus While it may feel muddled at times, The Platform is an inventive and captivating dystopian thriller. 82% TOMATOMETER Total Count: 78 71% Audience Score User Ratings: 959 The Platform (El Hoyo) Ratings & Reviews Explanation The Platform (El Hoyo) Videos Photos Movie Info One day Goreng wakes up with his future colleague Trimagasi in the 33rd level of a prison style place, crossed by a hole where a platform descends with meal remains left from the tenants from higher levels. Trimagasi knows the rules that govern this mysterious place: two people per level and an unknown number of them. If you go upwards you survive... but think too much and you will descend again. If you are in the bottom where the food barely arrives, you cannot trust anyone except your guts. Rating: NR Genre: Horror, Mystery & Suspense, Science Fiction & Fantasy Directed By: Written By: On Disc/Streaming: Mar 20, 2020 Runtime: 90 minutes Studio: Netflix Cast News & Interviews for The Platform (El Hoyo) Critic Reviews for The Platform (El Hoyo) Audience Reviews for The Platform (El Hoyo) The Platform (El Hoyo) Quotes Movie & TV guides.
dminwithdtholre.parsiblog.com/Posts/4/
Hopster+TV+Watch+Full+Django+Unchainedhttps://seesaawiki.jp/baraii/d/MyOutdoorTV%20Max%20Winslow%20and%20the%20House%20of%20Secrets%20Watch%20Movie
https://www.change.org/o/usa_network_back_to_the_future_movie_watch
https://jikasuihe.shopinfo.jp/posts/8458896
https://plaza.rakuten.co.jp/njirikaku/diary/202006130001/
patakeboshi.theblog.me/posts/
8451938
nikitejira.amebaownd.com/posts/
8455212https://www.ulule.com/smithsonian-channel-watch-st
https://www.giantbomb.com/profile/chinozoku/blog/free-full-maleficent-mistress-of-evil-joachim-ronn/167979/
https://seesaawiki.jp/makurasu/d/Download%20Full%20Thor%20Ragnarok%20Stan%20Lee%20Free%20with%20actor%20Tom%20Hiddleston
0コメント