Only suggest a film you've seen and enjoyed.Don't suggest a Barred Film (listed in the sidebar/wiki).Do not repeat a Suggestion that has been posted in the last 3 months.Whet the appetite, don't go into detail.Encouraged: Use this format: Film Name (Year).Mandatory: Include the title of the film in the title of the post.Suggest a single film, and no more than one every 24 hours.We require a minimum of 125 characters in the body of the post to ensure quality requests and suggestions.Double check that your request wouldn't be more suitable in one of the subreddits outlined in Rule #8.Use a descriptive title that lets people know if they might be able to help or not.Use the search bar before making a request.Request must be primarily about finding films to watch.You will be banned if you request or share links to full features, if you ask or inform how to pirate, or if you mention a pirating site/app/etc. This subreddit isn't your link farm.ĭue to Administrators' past actions against this subreddit, we have a ZERO tolerance policy regarding piracy. If you wish to be banned, do any of the following: Be rude, harass, ignore the subreddit's rules, promote your site/blog/article/channel/etc., promote your app/company, or post about a movie you worked on. Reddit's universal >!Spoiler Tags!< are mandatory when discussing plot details of movies. Indeed, with the minutely crafted Super 8 videos of Oliver and Jordana cavorting on the beaches, with the firework parties, with Alex Turner’s crooning melodies, Submarine makes you crave for a romance you only ever imagined.Interested in a specific genre or just a great film? Check our Community Favorites! The Rulesīe mindful regarding spoilers. But he has crafted a movie so nakedly in love with the diversities and absurdities of cinema, and so allergic to the modernist pretence, political subtext and forced resolutions of our indie industry, that Submarine never feels trapped in the whims of the here and now. Occasionally, very occasionally, Ayoade allows it to – with an overly long voiceover or baggy duologue. Michael Cera grasped the marketability of kookifying heartbreak, and in the process became the most iconic Canadian export since Terrance and Phillip.Īyoade is a confessed Ceraphile and this film could, in the blink of an eye, so easily have succumbed to Youth in Revolt cutesy or Juno quirk. And so we witness it.įrom the gentle irreverence of The Graduate to the high-end angst of Rebel Without a Cause, the hormone-pit of a teenager’s mind has always worked on screen. Oliver, rejected and depressed, wishes for a slow-dissolve to darkness before a cut to a later, happier scene. Like Jon Bon Jovi dreaming of the movies they won’t make of him when he’s dead, Ayoade has made a virtue of self-consciousness.While this film is about a self-absorbed, over-analytical teenager, Ayoade has mimicked Scorsese’s relationship with Travis Bickle – we seem to observe Oliver Tate directing his own movie. After he talks her round, she leaves him with a single piece of advice: “Don’t get cocky.” It sums up the film – witty, gentle, self-deprecating, unsentimental and strung together with a panache wholly unworthy of a debutant. He anticipates the event by wearing one of his dad’s old suits and, to Jordana’s horror, covering his bed in rose petals. While Oliver’s dad (Noah Taylor) plummets into depression and his mum (a lovely Sally Hawkins) considers an elicit affair with a mullet- topped mental well-being guru (Paddy Considine), Oliver fixates on losing his and taking Jordana’s virginity. Submarine has bucked that trend defiantly so. Soon after, the rights were sold to the Weinstein brothers for a million dollars. ![]() It was the ticket at last year’s London Film Festival. ![]() But Submarine is directed by The IT Crowd’s Richard Ayoade, adapted from a novel by Joe Dunthorne, produced by Warp Films, exec-produced by Ben Stiller and scored by Arctic Monkey Alex Turner. ![]() His girlfriend Jordana (Yasmin Paige), a dumpy girl with a Lego haircut and a Don’t Look Now coat, is sad her mother has life-threatening cancer.įeel free to roll your eyes at another gritty British ode to how tough it is in a sink estate somewhere outside London. His parents are barely talking and on the edge of divorce. ![]() The hero of the film is Oliver Tate (Craig Roberts), a lonely teenager who wears a duffel coat and sometimes pretends to have Cotard’s syndrome: a type of autism, his dictionary tells him, that convinces people they are dead. Submarine is a coming-of-age drama set in down-at-heel Swansea in what looks like the 1980s. British cinema isn’t good at being cool, but Submarine has bucked that trend defiantly so.
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