Review of Samson and Delilah (2009) by Blæke W — 05 Dec 2009
Well this was different, with hardly any dialog, production sets or much else to differentiate it from a documentory. The time in two lives of a young adulthood of samson (an old enough or so 'he thinks') australian aboriginal from a community estate. One put in place for the reason to save the ppls genes if not there ways abt going abt things culturaly, when connection gets even more easier to advanced society and the loss of a beautiful thing.
His partner, he has grown up with, probably not understanding marriage as we do through hardships in megre of not peasant conditions when looking after himself abit sees qualities in delilah with her nana and the partnership grows some tri-gen a little too.
There were incedents (real time) in the early ninties,whereas young young ppls getting stuck on petrol sniffing became known to is. A horrific thing that when naturally a nomadic ppls, encountered as a hurdle even to start with and so are left behind as things get ugly. The journey of thier lives continue not as a movie would have effected them specifically but they carry on nonetheless lesson learned.
Nothing really excite or eventfull but a day in the life of, for a motion picture. The face in the stuff continusly can only relate to unimpeded abuse of things like the coke or soft drugs when pressure for education and medicine applies through life and our society standards but government resources only cover the necessities not prefference for alocation, much. A lot of temptation that just one thing will do somtimes, continuously to come away from. The more advanced the ppls, the more many things to choose from only to find declining the magestic principal, and having only when the time and place is right.
This review of Samson and Delilah (2009) was written by Blæke W on 05 Dec 2009.
Samson and Delilah has generally received positive reviews.
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