Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Watch New Movie Post Tenebras Lux No Survey on FULL HD Format

POST TENEBRAS LUX ("light after darkness"), ostensibly the story of an upscale, urban family whose move to the Mexican countryside results in domestic crises and class friction, is a stunningly photographed, impressionistic psychological portrait of a family and their place within the sublime, unforgiving natural world. Reygadas conjures a host of unforgettable, ominous images: a haunting sequence at dusk as Reygadas's real-life daughter wanders a muddy field and farm animals loudly circle and thunder and lightning threaten; a glowing-red demon gliding through the rooms of a home; a husband and wife visiting a swingers' bathhouse with rooms named after famous philosophers. By turns entrancing and mystifying, POST TENEBRAS LUX palpably explores the primal conflicts of the human condition. (c) Strand
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Movie Title : Post Tenebras Lux
Genre Movie :Drama,Art House & International,Special Interest
Mpaa Rating : Unrated
Release Date : May 1, 2013 Limited

Actors :Adolfo Jimenez Castro,Nathalia Acevedo,Willebaldo Torres,Rut Reygadas,Eleazar Reygadas


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Review For Post Tenebras Lux

Life and death, nature and culture, sex and money, man and beast, God and the Devil - "Post Tenebras Lux" embraces the world even if it doesn't open itself up to ready interpretation.
Manohla Dargis-New York Times

This is a movie that, even in its most inexplicable or provocative moments, welcomes each of us into its stream of subconsciousness as a fellow dreamer.
Keith Uhlich-Time Out New York

Confusion often reigns here, but the film offers a degree of lush beauty that makes sitting through it well worth the occasional frustrations.
Steve Erickson-Village Voice

"'Post Tenebras Lux' works so well because - even at its most random - it always feels like more of a single portrait of a man in crisis than it does an impish bouquet of provocative incidents."
David Ehrlich-Film.com

Acclaimed Mexican auteur's self-indulgent exercise in exquisite pseudo-profundity commits hara-kiri on his own reputation.
Neil Young-Hollywood Reporter

The premise is realized with a sludgy, bombastic portentousness; the images, for all their strained rhapsody, show little, and merely recite a thesis.
Richard Brody-New Yorker

Despite a handful of splendid moments, it doesn't quite succeed
Jordan Hoffman-Badass Digest

Creates so many possibilities that it may be likened to a rough draft awaiting editing.
Donald J. Levit-ReelTalk Movie Reviews

Carlos Reygadas's latest, an almost impossibly intellectual film, keeps us at a remove that's as striking as that which separates its main character from the lower classes.
Ed Gonzalez-Slant Magazine

It's just one self-indulgence after (or before) another.
Philip French-Observer [UK]

The film does come across as an evidently sincere attempt to create a new kind of cinema, but opinion will certainly vary on whether Reygadas really does offer, as his title suggests, light after darkness.
Trevor Johnston-Radio Times

Suggests Terrence Malick's The Tree of Life refracted through Tarkovsky's Mirror: terminally self-conscious, intermittently breathtaking.
Tim Robey-Daily Telegraph

This often brilliant director is defiantly playing private games with us, whether we like it or not.
Derek Malcolm-This is London

Post Tenebras Lux does (just about) repay viewers' tolerance with an intermittent succession of cinematic jewels.
Donald Clarke-Irish Times

An irritating, baffling, fascinating film.
Peter Bradshaw-Guardian [UK]

Baffling is the default setting for this movie.
Nigel Andrews-Financial Times

This dark and slightly surreal Mexican film is beautifully shot and features a string of naturalistic and impressive performances, but sadly its bizarre blend of eccentric scenes don't really come together.
Jennifer Tate-ViewLondon

Reygadas is, from a certain point of view, one of modern cinema's masters: a director who wants to work with productive frustration as he creates images using a distorting, bevelled lens to size up a world that is itself distorted.
Tony McKibbin-The List

Mexican experimentalist Carlos Reygadas offers a perplexing, plotless plod about a dysfunctional family living in the countryside.
Siobhan Synnot-Scotsman

Reygadas' big ideas translate with mixed results.
Angie Errigo-Empire Magazine

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