Jumat, 19 Desember 2014

Streaming All Is Lost (2013) Online

All Is Lost (2013)iMDB Rating: 7.2
Date Released : 7 November 2013
Genre : Action, Adventure, Drama
Stars : Robert Redford
Movie Quality : HDrip
Format : MKV
Size : 750 MB

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Deep into a solo voyage in the Indian Ocean, an unnamed man (Redford) wakes to find his 39-foot yacht taking on water after a collision with a shipping container left floating on the high seas. With his navigation equipment and radio disabled, the man sails unknowingly into the path of a violent storm. Despite his success in patching the breached hull, his mariner's intuition and a strength that belies his age, the man barely survives the tempest. Using only a sextant and nautical maps to chart his progress, he is forced to rely on ocean currents to carry him into a shipping lane in hopes of hailing a passing vessel. But with the sun unrelenting, sharks circling and his meager supplies dwindling, the ever-resourceful sailor soon finds himself staring his mortality in the face.

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Review :

Redford's Masterpiece

Alfred Hitchcock dreaded what he called "refrigerator moments," and worked like mad to avoid them -- that time after people had seen a film, arrived home and stood around the kitchen discussing the picture only to realize it was riddled with holes. No need to worry about this with Robert Redford's latest movie, "All Is Lost." It's one of those rare films that improves in hindsight. Redford has a penchant for making unique films and for exploring the gray areas of life, and with "Lost," he and writer-director J.C. Chandor outdo themselves. It's impossible to tell about the story without giving away too much, but the bare bones are that a lone man far removed at sea has his boat hit and disabled by a wayward shipping container the size of a boxcar and finds himself fighting for his life. Viewers conditioned by tidy endings, scenery shredding by less skilled actors or over-the-top special effects obviously performed before a green screen will find this unlike anything they've ever seen. Add Redford, and you really have something special. He is, in fact, a wonderful actor, a minimalist more in the character mode, which has always been forgotten because of his looks, probably costing him an acting Oscar or two in the process. But this is all Redford - - a one character film, strictly visual, with virtually no dialog save for a brief voice-over at the outset and precious few mutterings by him throughout (those who say that the mark of a great film is how it holds up without dialog can heretofore use this as Exhibit A). There will be a temptation by those who have not seen this film and hear it is a one-man seagoing story to roll their eyes and say, "One of those!" Seagoing stories can be tedious. This isn't one of them. Furthermore, comparisons to other seafaring films, especially more recent ones, uh, don't hold water -- for one, each of the others is a story tethered to land; "All Is Lost" begins at sea and stays there, reinforcing Chandor's concept of being lost without having any reassuring anchor of other human life. Finally, to take issue with the Redford character's sailing wherewithal entirely misses the point (who cares, anyway?). My advice: see for yourself. Make note of the fact that the work is being called a classic by an unusually broad swath of viewers and critics and is provoking, in this era of opening-weekend worship, an almost unheard-of amount of excitement that has sustained and shows no signs of subsiding any time soon. If there's any justice, even in Hollywood, Redford will finally win the Academy Award for acting (he's won an Academy Award, but for directing -- 1980's "Ordinary People"). Chandor deserves the strongest of Oscar attention as well, for direction and best original screenplay. Obviously, you'll eventually be able to see this movie on television. But the movie theater environment transforms this film into an experience, where you, like Redford's character himself, can feel the isolation in the darkness. If you want that, you'll have to traipse to the movie house. "All Is Lost" is not easy to find. It's not being shown in saturation mode (which, by the way, speaks well of it -- distributors will tell you on the sly that the wide release approach is all too often a technique to blunt negative word of mouth). But find it you should, if for no other reason than to make up your own mind, and to say that you saw a classic when it first arrived in theaters.


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