Alicia
I love this movie so much
UnowPriceless
hyped garbage
Baseshment
I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.
Kaelan Mccaffrey
Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.
thesmythley
The Lobster is a revolting, dull and unfunny film that attempts to be funny (in a blatantly ironic & satirical way) by employing deliberately stilted dialogue delivery and awkward scenes that sometimes present outright disgusting cruelty/gore. As the main theme of the film is to make a mockery out of modern human forms of communications & relationships this is understandable, but it falls like a limp, smelly half-dead fish that flops hopelessly on the sand in the hopes of trying to elicit attention from it's audience.The idea that this is a film about the social conformity and the pressures of marriage and monogamous relationships is typical of a postmodern mindset that arrogantly rejects any kind of stability whatsoever. Besides, is this really a critique of the modern world? Is this really a film about how suffocating monogamous relationships are? If so, it seems to be a film about the pressures of the 20th century rather than the 21st since an increasing amount of people live alone than ever. The question is then: Why does The Lobster seek to satirise such a thing? One answer is partly because it is a film devoted to a specifically air-headed sort of person who lives a fairly modest if not boring state of existence, both in their social and "professional" lives. Of course, you can debate as much as you want about what "The Lobster" is about, which really shows how completely pretentious and, at the same time, vacuous it really is.Of course, all this is seen by people who admire the film as very intelligent and daring because, as well all know, laughing at modern existential suffering of humans in the form of presenting scenes full of crude and violent symbology is apparently hilarious - if you're someone with an anti-social, psychopathic or sociopathic mindset, that is. All the scenes are typical of the symbology of an arm-chair psychologist. It seems to make the overall point that people do irrational things - out of fear of loneliness - to belong in society. It screams out: "This is what we all do."Ultimately, it is a film that presents a presumptuous and misanthropic view of "all" human beings with the exception of the arrogant admirations of the "one" person watching and lapping up the self-indulgent narrative of the film. The fact that this is categorised as "comedy" only reflects the overall sadomasochistic nature of The Lobster.
draminos_morris
I'll just leave my rate here, sitting on my sofa watching the cars passing by my window wondering if this movie was able to make a point or any kind of a point beside. I will not explain anything as the movie did not as well, but I guess those who saw the movie will understand.
asidal_pk
Acting of all the lead and supporting characters were awesome, every scene and every clip is trying to give the hidden message, Direction is marvellous, Fully captivating.
bridgetwaldbaum
Okay, in the forest, she's explaining their conversational body signals... raise this hand and it's "I love you more than anything", raise that hand and it's "we're in danger", we have to be careful not to mix those two up at first...Then, he's in the bathroom, steading himself...Then, she's thanking the waiter for filling her glass though she's been sitting without touching her glass, so she must have been drinking it over a while...The way she said "thank you very much" to the waiter was strange - either she's up set like she was when he hadn't brought her rabbits for a while, or she's thanking the watier not for the first time...I swear, I swear, I think I see some sort of construction vehicle - a front end loader? drive behind her from right to left... and as it goes off camera on the left I swear the driver has his right arm all the way up in the air (palm facing the camera)... which signal was the right arm again??Or I could be imagining the 'arm up' part at the end. You tell me!Either way, I thought this movie was brilliant. And the casting was phenomenal !!