Review of 12 Years a Slave (2013) by Pauljohnson — 09 Feb 2014
This film makes The Shawshank Redemption look like King Arthur.
Never have I been stunned into an emotional silence after watching a film in the theater. Literally. Never. I've come out of films before thinking "My god, that was unbelievable", like when I saw the Lord of the Rings for the first time, but this film just hits you on another level entirely. You sit there after its over, wondering if what you'd just experienced was real. The day after, you feel the same. It's like seeing your favourite band live - you have trouble believing it at the time, and you still have trouble believing you ever saw them a week after.
One of the most vivid depictions of slavery ever put to film with phenomenal performances from Ejiofor and Nyong'o, but the real stand out performance here is Michael Fassbender. Combined with excellent cinematography from Sean Bobbitt, a very tight script by John Ridley, excellent direction by Steve McQueen, beautiful editing by Joe Walker and a great score by Hans Zimmer that greatly marries modern orchestral work with contemporary music, serving to underscore the emotions of the film rather than intrude into the film's actual story.
While it may not be a film that you can watch repeatedly - I think everyone needs to see this film at least once. A very, very important film.
This review of 12 Years a Slave (2013) was written by Pauljohnson on 09 Feb 2014.
12 Years a Slave has generally received very positive reviews.
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