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Cinema Only Free Tickets Discussion thread

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  • pingu
    pingu Posts: 1,467 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture Combo Breaker
    this is 40 son wanted to watch it so he went and i watched movie43 now that is pile of crap and cost £9.45!!!
    Honesty is the best policy doesn't matter which web site
    you are on!

    if i had known then what i know now!

    a bargain is only a bargain if you really need it!
  • wattc
    wattc Posts: 108 Forumite
    Code 794986 for Cloud Atlas has been post FOUR TIMES on the codes thread!!

    Can the admin please tell people once is enough and delete the duplicates?
  • geordie_ben
    geordie_ben Posts: 3,118 Forumite
    Tenth Anniversary
    Sarah can you delete Poochs last post off the codes board since it's not free tickets - should be on low spend
  • quoia
    quoia Posts: 14,497 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    CLOUD ATLAS

    It appears that due to the complexity of this film ..... (2hrs 52minutes)

    "Cloud Atlas" begins in 1849...and in 1936...1973...2012...2144...and 2346.

    ... it has been suggested ...

    its really helpful to know a bit about the stories in Cloud Atlas before watching the film.

    So here's an outline:


    Possible SPOILER ALERT





    AVOID if you don't want to know ANYTHING !!!!!







    This is your last warning :D



    By introducing all its narrative threads at once and then rhythmically shifting focus from one to another throughout, the film propels audiences simultaneously down six parallel tracks that are experienced as one. Causes and effects immediately reveal their synchronicity and links between characters and times are vividly realized as each piece builds toward a common end.

    1849, The South Pacific
    Jim Sturgess portrays idealistic young San Francisco attorney Adam Ewing, who has traveled to the Pacific Islands to conduct business with sanctimonious plantation owner Rev. Horrox, played by Hugh Grant. While there, Ewing witnesses the savage flogging of one of Horrox’s slaves, Autua, played by David Gyasi, who locks eyes with him in the moment as if embracing a kindred spirit. Later, when Autua stows away in the lawyer’s cabin on his voyage home, Ewing is forced to choose between his professional obligations and his growing moral convictions—a decision that will reverberate through the centuries in ways he cannot imagine.

    "There’s a moment when Autua asks Ewing to either save him or to take his life, so the stakes are quite high," Gyasi recounts.

    "It’s the first time Ewing has seen the horror of the slave trade," adds Sturgess, marking the scene that sets off a series of recurring examples of how people strive through the ages to overcome oppression of one form or another. "It was a time when it was easy for a man like him to get caught up in the mentality of people like Horrox, who believed they were at the top of the ladder of civilization, but he has the innate feeling that something is very wrong with this. And then, suddenly there’s a chance for him to do something about it."

    At the same time, Ewing’s other shipmate, the malignant opportunist Dr. Goose, played by Tom Hanks, is pursuing a very different course.

    Filling out the ever-shifting ensemble, Jim Broadbent appears in this timeframe as the ultimately pragmatic ship captain Molyneux; Susan Sarandon as Horrox’s suppressed, but seething wife; Keith David as the Maori slave Kupaka, who silently endures; Halle Berry as another Maori working the plantation; Hugo Weaving as Ewing’s entitled father-in-law, Haskell Moore; and Doona Bae, in western guise, as Ewing’s beloved wife, Tilda.

    1936, Scotland
    Ben Whishaw is the roguishly charming, brash, and immensely gifted young composer Robert Frobisher. Disinherited by his father and finding all doors closed to him in England, Frobisher takes leave of his lover, Rufus Sixsmith, played by James D’Arcy, and sets out to make a name for himself on his own terms. Apprenticing himself to Vyvyan Ayrs, a renowned composer past his creative prime—played by Jim Broadbent as a man in his 70s—Frobisher plans to write his masterpiece: a symphony he will call The Cloud Atlas Sextet. All the while he keeps in touch with his beloved Sixsmith through letters, imagining a triumphant return. But Frobisher underestimates Ayrs’ power until his situation takes a desperate turn.

    "Because Frobisher is young and full of creative energy and ideas he thinks he’s manipulating Ayrs, but maybe Ayrs is manipulating him," Whishaw hints. "It becomes a struggle over the music—Frobisher to gain recognition, and Ayrs to retain his reputation."

    Supporting the main characters in Frobisher’s saga are Halle Berry as Ayrs’ trophy wife, the stoic Jocasta, and Hugo Weaving as Ayrs’ friend, Tadeusz Kesselring, who harbors an ugly secret. Hugh Grant appears as a posh hotel staffer refusing to allow Frobisher and Sixsmith a peaceful parting, and Tom Hanks is the greedy manager of another, far seedier inn.

    1973, San Francisco
    Halle Berry takes the lead in 1973 as journalist Luisa Rey, who uncovers corporate corruption at a nuclear power plant that could affect thousands of lives and puts her at odds with duplicitous plant president Lloyd Hooks, played by Hugh Grant. She is aided in her investigation by the same Rufus Sixsmith of the Frobisher piece, now an elderly physicist, and by plant employee Isaac Sachs, Tom Hanks again, who is inexplicably struck by how familiar Luisa looks and how strong his impulse is to help her.

    "Luisa is at a crossroads," says Berry. "As a journalist, she feels she hasn’t quite lived up to her expectations of what that means, and then this gift falls in her lap, a major opportunity to take a risk and so something potentially significant. She really doesn’t know how tough she is or whether or not she can actually accomplish it, but once she makes that decision she will have to do things she never thought possible."

    Targeted by Hooks’ hitman Bill Smoke, played by Hugo Weaving, Luisa’s only chance to survive is to put her faith into the hands of Keith David’s character, Napier, a man officially in Hook’s employ, but who has clearly had enough of taking his orders.

    David sees him, in period, as "a kind of Shaft character, so that was a frame of reference. What was exciting about it was reaching this part of the journey, where this soul you first saw as the Maori Kupaka now has more opportunities as Napier and he takes advantage of that to grow. Maybe further down the line he might be something even greater."

    Also seen on this part of the timeline are Chinese actress Xun Zhou as a male hotel worker; Korean-born Doona Bae as a Hispanic woman—a role for which Bae, already polishing English for her other roles, had to master Spanish dialogue; David Gyasi as Luisa’s father, Lester, a celebrated war correspondent who is her inspiration; and Ben Whishaw in a poignant portrayal as a record store clerk who cannot get a certain 1930s melody out of his head.

    2012, England
    Jim Broadbent returns in the form of small-time publisher Timothy Cavendish, who happily falls into a mound of cash when sales of his latest book—a vanity bio by the thuggish Dermot Hoggins, played with a rugged Scottish brogue by Tom Hanks—go through the roof. Unfortunately, his windfall attracts creditors, some of whom are seeking more than money.

    Says Broadbent, "He goes on the run and finds what he believes is a secure place, but it turns out to be so secure that even he can’t get out of it. So it becomes an escape story where poor Cavendish has to find a way to save himself."

    Hugh Grant takes a turn as the publisher’s vengeful brother, Denholme, while Ben Whishaw is Denholme’s faithless wife, Georgette. Hugo Weaving also appears as domineering female Nurse Noakes, with whom Cavendish does battle in this piece that offers the saga’s most liberal sprinkling of comedy. Susan Sarandon portrays Cavendish’s redemptive long-lost love, Ursula; Jim Sturgess appears as a volatile Scottish football fan; James D’Arcy as a nursing home orderly; and Halle Berry as a woman who momentarily catches author Dermot Hoggins’ eye.

    "Nurse Noakes was the biggest challenge for me of all the parts and also the most fun," offers Weaving. "She’s a hideous gorgon who infantilizes and despises the residents, but it’s her who’s dead inside. She’s been in this institution for many years and I believe the place has gotten into her bones."

    2144, Neo Seoul
    Doona Bae takes center stage as the fabricant Sonmi-451, genetically engineered to spend her brief existence as a compliant restaurant server in an ominously totalitarian society built atop the ruins of a flooded Seoul. Encouraged to nurture forbidden independent thoughts by sister fabricant Yoona-939, played by Xun Zhou, Sonmi embarks on a path from which there can be no retreat. With the help of revolutionary Hae-Joo Chang, portrayed by Jim Sturgess, Sonmi takes her courageous and perilous first steps toward a far-reaching insurrection.

    "Yoona and Sonmi were not content with their lives. They had their own way of thinking and came to believe that things did not have to be a certain way. They wanted freedom," says Chinese actress Zhou, making her Western film debut with "Cloud Atlas."

    Bae, likewise making her Western screen debut, acknowledges, "It’s Yoona who makes Sonmi curious about the larger human world. She wakes Sonmi up so she can think for herself, but it’s Chang, the first pureblood who is kind to her, who shows her that she can stand up for herself with dignity."

    Representing the repressors in this society are Hugh Grant as smarmy Seer Rhee, the restaurant manager who extends his authority after hours, and Hugo Weaving as Boardman Mephi, bureaucratic upholder of the status quo. Halle Berry and Susan Sarandon take on the male roles of Ovid, a doctor who removes Sonmi’s restricting collar, and Yusouf Suleiman, a scientist who champions the fabricants’ rights, while Keith David leads the resistance movement as An-Kor Apis. Tom Hanks appears as an actor in a movie depiction of the publisher Cavendish’s life, which inspires Sonmi, Jim Broadbent appears as a Korean musician, and James D’Arcy is the government Archivist tasked with recording her confession.

    After the Fall, 2321 and 2346, Hawaii
    Hanks last appears as the damaged but fundamentally decent goatherd Zachry, one of a peaceful tribe that survived a planetary cataclysm that plunged most of humanity into a primitive way of life. Among the remnants of their cultural past is an image of Sonmi, who has taken on goddess stature, and whose words are cited by Susan Sarandon, playing the village Abbess.

    For this world, author Mitchell reached into the future for an imagined dialect in the form of an unadorned, shorthand communication. The directors retained this language and worked with the cast in a Los Angeles recording studio prior to shooting, to ensure it would translate on screen.

    "We settled on a language that was simply stripped-down English, using minimal words to convey feelings," states Halle Berry, who appears in the segment as Meronym, an emissary of an advanced human community called Prescients. Adopting the pidgin dialect to gain his trust, Meronym seeks Zachry’s aid to locate something she desperately needs. But to help her, Zachry must not only put his life at risk and deny everything he believes in, but quell the doubts inside that speak to him through the taunting voice of Hugo Weaving’s character, Old Georgie.

    Xun Zhou appears as Zachry’s sister, Rose, Jim Sturgess as his brother-in-law, Adam, and Ben Whishaw as a fellow tribesman. Hugh Grant takes his most spectacularly evil turn as the Kona Chief, leader of a marauding band of cannibal warriors, while Keith David, David Gyasi and Jim Broadbent are counted among the enlightened Prescients.

    Addressing how the life cycle of his roles reaches its nadir here, Grant observes, "Clearly the potential is there for souls to improve—and some do, dramatically, but some don’t. They never get better. They get worse. It all comes down to free will and the choices we make."



    Suggest you get a good night's sleep beforehand, take a comfy cushion to sit on and thoroughly empty your bladder before it starts :)
    There are 10 types of people in the world. ‹(•¿•)›
    ‹(•¿•)› Those that understand binary and those that do not!


    Veni, Vidi, VISA ! ................. I came, I saw, I PURCHASED
    (11)A104.28S94.98O112.46N86.73D101.02(12)J130.63F126.76M134.38A200.98M156.30J95.56J102.85A175.93
    S LOWER CASE OMEGA;6.59 so far ..
  • ^^ Haha Quoia :rotfl:- anticipate a deluge of returned tickets for this film!! I didn't fancy it at all and this synopsis has just confirmed it.

    Also, just noticed your index of codes here- it's enormously helpful and I've bookmarked that post. Thank you so much!! :j :kisses: :j
  • Re: extra tickets for CloudAtlas through Sky

    Thanks Ledrex just got my tickets today looks like they are releasing early.
    :j
  • Cloud Atlas blew me away, not at all hard to follow (I have the attention span of a low IQ goldfish as well, lol!) and each of the 6 stories were engaging and the total? Well added up it is possibly one of the best films I have ever seen!
    "Sealed Pot challenge" member No. 138

    2012 £ 3147.74 2013 £1437.532014 £ 2356.52
  • quoia
    quoia Posts: 14,497 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    Cloud Atlas blew me away, not at all hard to follow (I have the attention span of a low IQ goldfish as well, lol!) and each of the 6 stories were engaging and the total? Well added up it is possibly one of the best films I have ever seen!

    I'm looking forward to seeing it on Tuesday evening.

    Did you read my post (#2308) beforehand or not?

    Did it help or would it have?

    Is it or would it have been a spoiler in your opinion?
    There are 10 types of people in the world. ‹(•¿•)›
    ‹(•¿•)› Those that understand binary and those that do not!


    Veni, Vidi, VISA ! ................. I came, I saw, I PURCHASED
    (11)A104.28S94.98O112.46N86.73D101.02(12)J130.63F126.76M134.38A200.98M156.30J95.56J102.85A175.93
    S LOWER CASE OMEGA;6.59 so far ..
  • Locky
    Locky Posts: 1,019 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    edited 10 February 2013 at 9:09PM
    Hmm, not sure about Cloud Atlas! It was very complicated and I'm not sure I really understood it all. I've got a headache now!

    I'm watching it again tomorrow so will have to see if things become clearer! I'm going to read the synopsis that quoia posted too as I didn't get round to looking at that.

    Someone on FMUK posted an infographic, which may help.

    Has anyone read the book?
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