Jeanskynebu
the audience applauded
Moustroll
Good movie but grossly overrated
MamaGravity
good back-story, and good acting
Marva
It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,
report-913-957297
is was the worst film I have seen since Tree of Life. If you saw and liked The Tree of Life we have nothing in common.This filmmaker deploys state of the art technology to produce a film that might have some interest in an art gallery; but only you after you have walked your feet off and need a place to rest for 5 minutes. You could fast forward the film, see all the images and make a connection that that we have heard time and again.There is no story and no talking though I would love to have shouted out comments (preferably with expletives).The images were clear and there was music. The film can be deemed to possess artistic merit(almost anything not massed produced can be described this way) but hardly worth a dime, let alone the $16 I paid.
Claudio Carvalho
While facing the challenge of sailing alone around the world in one hundred and forty days, the Australian Georgia Perry (Radha Mitchell) fights against the "ghosts" of her life in her loneliness, including an unresolved relationship with her mother and the engagement with her unfaithful fiancé."Visitors" was a great deception for me. Since "Pitch Black", I have been a fan of the actress Radha Mitchell and I have watched many of her movies. Therefore, I expected that "Visitors" would be a great film. Unfortunately, the confused screenplay, using flashbacks to explain the innermost contradictions and conflicts of the character Georgia Perry, begins with a great atmosphere and very intriguing, but does not work well and in the end makes the movie sometimes boring and messy. The idea is good, but the screenplay is horrible. My vote is five.Title (Brazil): "Visitors"
Eileen McHenry
I liked this one. It's a phantasmal little movie about a woman sailing alone around the world, becalmed in the Indian Ocean when she's only a few days' sail from the end of her trip. She starts to see all kinds of strange and troubling things on board her yacht, including the ghost of her mother, pirates that appear and disappear, and a Maori tribesman in traditional native costume. The movie offers three possible explanations for why this is happening: A) she's been alone too long and is going bazongas, B) she's really seeing ghosts, and C) the magic crabs hitching a ride on the boat's hull are creating the whole situation. I like the crab theory myself, but the movie leaves the question tantalizingly unresolved.
prddad
Spoiler Alert!! The back of the movie is what drew me to it, but it was the ending that sank this boat. I mean, come on, a movie about a woman at sea, is experiencing possible "hallucinations" (of her mom and a sailor to name a few), but these "hallucinations" can actually touch and hurt her. Is it aliens? Is it ghosts? No...(spoiler here) it's some type of spider creature that is at the bottom of her boat that is doing this? I'm sorry, the movie started boring (background on how she ended up on the boat (but we needed this, I understand)), then came the action, then to practically end it all with these "spiders". The director should have had this movie viewed by an audience, and once the boos came when the spiders showed up, he should have redone the ending.