Review of Pink Floyd: The Wall (1982) by Cody Y — 15 May 2009
The wall, based upon an amazing album and the confusing life Syd, Pink Floyd, and about social barriers, has an amazing message to send; a message that can only be told through music just trippy and diverse as it's visuals.
This movie, gives a perfect insight on the perspective of Roger Waters and his views of what each song means. Video truly lets you go beyond the music of the wall to find out the purpose: that each one of us have wall between each other, and people do suffer as a result.
In this movie, we see how our main antagonist, Pink, slowly builds a wall, brick by brick, with the help of disturbing memories and past events. We see how a man slowly looses sanity from the wrong-doing of others. We can see the root cause of every problem and how Pink puts every last brick in the barrier between his mind and our perspective of reality.
Interesting animations and angles allow us to ultimately understand that we will always be adding a brick in the wall if we don't help others. An amazing piece that I can only credit to Roger Waters.
This review of Pink Floyd: The Wall (1982) was written by Cody Y on 15 May 2009.
Pink Floyd: The Wall has generally received very positive reviews.
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