Ok, let's get one thing straight. Amorres Perros is not comparable to Tarantino.
Just because you said something, doesn't make it straight. What are you, the un-gayer?
Amores Perros was crap.
If we need to intellectualise it, for the sake of agreement or lack of....Tarantino broke some new ground, and with a youthful panache filled with verve, and memorable cinema. So succesful was he in this, that lazy film viewers, and critics, spawned a name, his, that would cover other films that appeared to tread the same path.
El Mariachi was better than Amores Perros, and that was created with a budget that wouldn't cover costume costs for a normal film.
As I said, Battle In Heaven is cinema that makes people think and talk. They don't forget it. The same goes for Bad Boy Bubby, Old Boy, or Scarface...all of different film genres. Memorable films, tied together by the fact that leave an indelible mark on the viewer.
I'm passionate about films. But there is a class difference between many that I have seen, and I DID own Amores Perros, for a day. I returned it to HMV, citing "jumping", and chose something more enjoyable. I think it was Moolaade.
I probably can't change your opinion, and that is not my intention, its just that I disagree with you on this point, quite strongly in fact.
Just because you said something, doesn't make it straight. What are you, the un-gayer?
Amores Perros was crap.
If we need to intellectualise it, for the sake of agreement or lack of....Tarantino broke some new ground, and with a youthful panache filled with verve, and memorable cinema. So succesful was he in this, that lazy film viewers, and critics, spawned a name, his, that would cover other films that appeared to tread the same path.
El Mariachi was better than Amores Perros, and that was created with a budget that wouldn't cover costume costs for a normal film.
As I said, Battle In Heaven is cinema that makes people think and talk. They don't forget it. The same goes for Bad Boy Bubby, Old Boy, or Scarface...all of different film genres. Memorable films, tied together by the fact that leave an indelible mark on the viewer.
I'm passionate about films. But there is a class difference between many that I have seen, and I DID own Amores Perros, for a day. I returned it to HMV, citing "jumping", and chose something more enjoyable. I think it was Moolaade.
I probably can't change your opinion, and that is not my intention, its just that I disagree with you on this point, quite strongly in fact.