Release Date Samsara Aug 24, 2012 Limited
If You want streaming this movie Please Click Here Samsara Get this movie without downloading HERE
Actors For Samsara
Genres Samsara : Documentary
Visitor Ranting & Critics For Samsara
User Ranting Samsara : 4.1User Percentage For Samsara : 86 %
User Count Like for Samsara : 10,006
All Critics Ranting For Samsara : 7
All Critics Count For Samsara : 77
All Critics Percentage For Samsara : 77 %
If You want streaming this movie Please Click Here Samsara Get this movie without downloading HERE
Movie Overview For Samsara
A love story situated in the Himalayas. A Buddhist monk can't choose between life and the way of the Buddha.TagLine Samsara
Trailer For Samsara
Review For Samsara
One doesn't have to be a Buddhist to perceive themes of circularity and renewal in Samsara, but it takes that level of patience to suffer its frequent low points with silence and good humour.Adam Nayman-Globe and Mail
A continuous flow of images of the natural world and the human tide that dominates it.
Bruce Demara-Toronto Star
A Balinese dancer, an African tribesman, a disfigured marine, a Japanese stripper all stand composed, confident, and dignified, daring you to break the gaze.
Ken Marks-New Yorker
Achingly beautiful and visually transfixing, Samsara offers a transporting vacation from the usual multiplex fare. It's a movie to get lost in.
Rene Rodriguez-Miami Herald
"Samsara" finds the world a little less blessed than it was two decades ago, yet still beautiful, which seems to be the movie's primary message.
Mark Jenkins-Washington Post
Fricke and his crew capture such moments as a Hawaiian volcano erupting to life with a stunning, you-are-there clarity. But the film winds up being a collection of striking visuals without any emotional heft.
Randy Cordova-Arizona Republic
Once the meditative flow of phenomenal photography takes hold, the virtuosity of the film emerges.
Frances Morton-Flicks.co.nz
A truly individual, dedicated concept that pulls through by seamlessly flowing in perfect harmonic construction.
Ashley Norris-HeyUGuys
Meet your new go-to disc for showing off your home theater
Marty Mapes-Movie Habit
By journey's end, the film comes full circle, tying everything together with the notion that even the finest art in the world can dissipate in seconds...
S. James Wegg-JWR
Mesmerising, impressionistic movie in which time-lapse photography...is intended to ignite thoughts about the meaning of life, society, technology, God, ecology and robots.
Jim Schembri-3AW
Beauty and brutality in nature and in humanity are juxtaposed with visual artistry that is a result of both the images themselves and how they are edited together
Andrew L. Urban-Urban Cinefile
Magical, spiritual, meditative and calming, Samsara is everything we could ask for - a wondrous, informative and inquisitive work of art.
Louise Keller-Urban Cinefile
Fricke has made a panoramic film that captures the interconnected world, particularly in developing nations, in all its beauty and ugliness. We're meant to bear witness, to see and to become aware that what we do in America is being seen as well.
Rob Thomas-Capital Times (Madison, WI)
As a viewer, you are cast adrift in a sea of visual wonder, some of which looks like it was filmed on another planet.
Robert Roten-Laramie Movie Scope
This visually spectacular travelogue captures memorable images from every corner. The end result is not just a gorgeous picture show, but also a thought-provoking rumination on our complicated relationship with our home planet.
Michael Sauter-Film Journal International
It's filled with religious and worldly images that encourage us to reflect on them and interpret them according to our own experiences.
Dennis Schwartz-Ozus' World Movie Reviews
Fantasia, with dead chickens.
Rob Humanick-Projection Booth
Ron Fricke tops Baraka
Marty Mapes-Movie Habit
[The film] presents a stunning series of visuals showing the planet's cyclical journey from nature through civilization and back.
Sean Means-Salt Lake Tribune
Crams all of the supersized format's extra resolution into a standard image that's so pristine it often feels like 3-D.
Graham Killeen-Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
No comments:
Post a Comment