If You Like this movie you can streaming 56 Up movie without downloading HERE
Movie Title : 56 Up
Release Date : Jan 4, 2013 Limited Genre Movie :Documentary,Special Interest
Mpaa Rating : Unrated Actors :
Visitor Ranting & Critics For 56 Up
User Ranting Movie 56 Up : 3.9User Count Like for 56 Up : 2,725
Critics Ranting For 56 Up : 8.5
Critics Percentage For 56 Up : 98 %
Trailer For 56 Up
TagLine 56 UpReview For Movie 56 Up
Yes, on some level it's just a seven-year check-in with people maybe half-remembered, if that. Yet the films also serve as a kind of check-in with us, too.Bill Goodykoontz-Arizona Republic
What ultimately is so compelling about 56 Up is the universality of the experiences. We were all once children. And we all will die. And in between, there is everything else.
Steven Rea-Philadelphia Inquirer
We feel good, refreshed and depressed in watching these people get older, also embarrassed in moments and cautioned about the passage of time.
Mick LaSalle-San Francisco Chronicle
Apted, himself now in his early 70s, says he hopes to continue the series further. Long may it live.
Moira MacDonald-Seattle Times
Watching "56 Up" gives you the wonderful feeling of seeing a sociological experiment blossom into something novelistically rich and humane.
Colin Covert-Minneapolis Star Tribune
Time has been neither kind nor cruel to the 13 men and women profiled in "56 UP." It has just been time, which is what this groundbreaking series is about.
Ty Burr-Boston Globe
56 Up has become a stirring reflection, even tribute, to the little bends and turns of ordinariness, the ebbs and surges of everyday lives.
Brian Gibson-Vue Weekly (Edmonton, Canada)
Apted's subjects would object to the idea that we really know them, but we think we do -- and that's good enough to make his film feel like a reunion, a visit with an old friend. Or 14 of them.
Mike Scott-Times-Picayune
Chances are that you'll come away from this long film feeling a sense of knowing its characters.
Ken Hanke-Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)
We might say that '56 Up' serves much the same function as 'Amour,' but it responds to the inevitability of decline with compassion, not dread.
John Beifuss-Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)
What started as a crafty way of looking at the U.K.'s rigid class structure has grown into a portrait of melancholy middle age, with its heartbreaks and minor-key triumphs.
Greg Evans-Bloomberg News
Those British kids are now 56
Robert Denerstein-Movie Habit
Watching the eighth film is intriguing but, in a way, disappointing. At this point in the game, it feels as if all the characters have determined their lots in life and are simply plodding through their interviews.
Vanessa Farquharson-National Post
Quite simply one of the great documentary projects in the history of cinema, an engrossing sociological experiment on film; and though this mostly mellow installment isn't as revelatory as some earlier ones, it's still a remarkable document.
Frank Swietek-One Guy's Opinion
... feels like a retrospective and summation of the whole series, with ample quotation from the previous films, an approach that makes it interesting even for viewers who haven't seen the previous installments.
Sarah Boslaugh-PopMatters
A completely unique and remarkable documentary project.
Kelly Vance-East Bay Express
Apted skillfully weaves old footage with the new, and we become poignantly aware of another factor shaping their lives (and our own): biology, as the we watch the once-cute kids grow gray and heavy.
Joe Williams-St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Perhaps the boldest and probably longest running sociological experiment on film.
James Verniere-Boston Herald
I think the best thing about this movie (and the entire series) is that it forces the viewer to think about their own lives. It's kind of an awakening experience.
Austin Kennedy-Film Geek Central
Once again, Apted assembles a captivating documentary that's profoundly educational, essential viewing to aid the understanding of the human experience.
Brian Orndorf-Blu-ray.com
Movie Images 56 Up
Movie Overview For 56 Up
When a cross-section of seven-year-olds were interviewed for 7 Up in 1964 it was immediately evident that their social backgrounds influenced their attitudes towards life. While the upper class children were confident and self-assured, those from middle and working class backgrounds were resigned to a challenging life of hard work. This premise was put to the test every seven years when the same group were interviewed about the progression of their lives. 49 years in the making, the changes that occurred to the original 14 make for fascinating television and are in many ways the stories of all our lives. From success and disappointment, marriage and childbirth, to poverty and illness, nearly every facet of life has been captured on film. Now, at the age of 56, the group are once more brought together and, with the benefit of hindsight, assess whether their lives have been ruled by circumstance or self-determination.TagLine 56 Up
No comments:
Post a Comment