Watching **THE FIFTH ELEMENT** for the FIRST TIME! (WHAT IS THIS MOVIE??)
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- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
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Hey everyone!!
So going in, no clue that there was going to be any sort of comedy and light-heartedness in The Fifth Element, it was such a pleasant surprise and made it stick out that much more to me. I honestly thought it was going to be a very serious, action movie just judging by the covers i saw; you know I love me some action-comedies so it was a fun watch and I hope you guys feel the same!!
More videos comin up SINCE I OFFICIALLY GRADUATED AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA (more time for more videos aw yiss ❤)
Watching *THE FIFTH ELEMENT* for the FIRST TIME!
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#TheFifthElement #BruceWillis #Reaction&Commentary
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And now you'll remember BIG BADABOOM for the rest of your life 😂
@@robertboender5816 and this one: Azeez Light!!
* I agree. The Fifth Element is actually pretty fun to watch. It seems like it's a continuation of that short story that takes place in the future with that taxicab driver in that animated movie called "Heavy Metal". Which is actually not a bad movie in its own right. The main hero of that movie is also a woman, as coincidence would have it.
Luc Besson always has a different take.
Léon: The Professional, Lucy, Subway, Taxi, The transporter and Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.etc.
Very French.
ruclips.net/video/a56SFFqXxyI/видео.html
Saw The Fifth Element when it came out in 1997. To this day I still say 'Big Bada BOOM!'
Costumes by Jean Paul Gaultier! This film stands alone - there's nothing else like it.
MULTIPASS!
My cat's name is Leeloo :)
I say 'Negative. I am a meat popsicle.' whenever I get the chance.
People look at me like I am a complete loon, which is a nice bonus.
Watching the Opera scene at high volume on good equipment is an absolute pleasure.
To this day I still say "Gimme de cash! Gimme de cashhh!"
@Ashes of Zeon you too huh?
This is one of those movies that is even better watching the second time. The first time we are trying to figure out what we are looking out.
The Fifth Element was very much inspired by the French comic series Valérian & Laureline, of which Luc Besson is a huge fan. So much so, that he did an official film adaption of the material in 2017.
If you like this movie, you should check out Leon: The Professional (1994), it's by the same director; Luc Besson. That one will blow you away, if you decide to ever check it out.
And like this film also has Gary Oldman.
Wasabi was a good Jean Reno movie too.
Yeah Leon is definitly a MUST WATCH.
1st movie with Natalie Portman btw
In case some people missed it : The Fifth Element was Love
Captain Planet: "That's cute."
the fifth element in magical terms is life... when all four elements come together carbon/earth, air/ oxygen, fire/heat, water/ hydrogen
Valerian and the City of a thousand planets is also another one that goes along with this, as in the same director.
Also if you haven't seen Chris Tucker in other movies, try watching Rush Hour. There are three movies in that series
The crazy outfits were all made by famous designer Jean-Paul Gaultier.
7:35 cause of the lighting in the room
First, congratulation on your graduation! I saw the movie when it came out and it still puts a smile on my face. It's simply two hours of good entertainment, a little action, a little humour, a little silly. Just fun to watch even today.
You need to see this multiple times to really get it.
"I don't think this movie is about boron" 😂 I hope not lol.
Luc Besson is considered to be one of the greatest French directors of all time, Americans will always recommend Leon, but I'd recommend The Big Blue, the French version however, not the American one. Not as a reaction video, just for enjoyment.
Not sure if it was how the scene was filmed, but most people I've watched this movie with missed the purpose of the mugger's hat when he tries to rob BW.
It's a picture of the empty hallway.
The victims looks out through the peephole in their doors, see the picture, and they think the hall is empty...and they're safe to open the door.
It's honestly one of my favorite little moments in the whole film.
Another great part of that scene was Bruce Willis almost losing it in laughter while watching the other actor.
I don't understand how people miss that detail from this film. I noticed it the first time I watched this.
Couple of dozen times watching this and I never noticed that! Brilliant! kerk
YOU LIKE IT!? UHH!
Also the fact that he's dancing it's because he's been standing in the hallway for so long he has to take a piss.
Something a lot of people miss: The protagonist (Korben) and the antagonist (Zorg) actually never meet each other. That's really rare in a movie.
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan being another example.
@@AlanCanon2222 But Kirk and Khan actually see each other, via communication, and have met before in the "Space Seed" episode.
They are not even aware of each other XD
@@Madbandit77 Right you are, mine was a weak example, in comparison.
Hey... Zorg was korben’s boss... (taxy company)... so yeah... many employees never really get to know the boss... 😂
This and the first Mummy are modern day classics in my book.
The Brendan Fraser one or the oldie? Or, the Tom cruise one?
@@bornbuttery7593 He said first so i hope he's talking about the brendan frazer one because the tom cruise one was a disappointment lol
Is there a reason why Brendan Fraser pops up for one frame at 22:00 ?
@@thesincereone2886 The first 'The Mummy' was made in 1932. It's excellent.
@@IanCaine4728 So that wasn't just me hallucinating?
This movie is one of the great "out of left field" movies. It's a movie that by all accounts, should be TERRIBLE! And yet somehow... it's freakin' fantastic.
It's a French fever dream. You can tell its French because smoking saves the world.
@@MandoWookie And you know it's a Besson movie because there's always a ridiculous amount of police forces chasing one single person
@@febed01 "Bring in everyone." "EVERYONE!"
Besson, crazy French director who gave us Alien 4 ^_^
Because it worked! 😁
RIP Tiny Lister. A man trying to protect 200 billion of his fellow citizens.
President Debo!
Wasn't he the prisoner in the Gotham ferry that threw the detonator away in "The Dark Knight"?
@@Menaceblue3 Yup!
Deebo died?!! That sucks...
@@secludedmisanthrope6388 half the cast of this movie is dead
This movie came out at a time when I was working at a movie theater, and when movies stayed in theaters FOREVER. I think I watched this on my break or before/after work almost 50 times, making it my most watched movie.
Ha! It was the same for me with Chocolat.
I could never flip past it while channel surfing. Every time I'd stop and watch it, get sucked in again and again.
Good times!
@@urborg74 same! I’ve probably watched it 50 times (fully or in parts)
“I don’t think this movie is going to be about boron.”
Honestly this just made my day.
it's certainly a fair comment lol.
I like clever.
I accidentally snorted my food up my nose and died when she kept making references to Boron... absolutely hilarious
Chlorophyll?! More like Boraphyll!
Of all the fifth element reacts I've seen, nobody has brought up the periodic table. I'm ded.
"The Four Elements, like man alone, are weak. But together they form the strong Fifth Element: Boron."
... Lose 10 experience points.
Nice. A Gamers: Dorkness Rising reference...
I cast animate dead on the chicken.
Lol!!! 😁
Glad to know that the Fifth Element is not Moron.
I love that you enjoyed Chris Tucker's character! I get why people thought he "ruined" the movie, but he fits in so well with the quirky vibe of the whole movie. Once the viewer accepts how kooky the whole thing is, nothing can ruin the experience! It's such a perfect film for being the way it is, unapologetically. This is one of my top favorite films.
Chris Tucker, but yes. I forgot he showed up in that ad well before Corben met him in person!
@@emurphy42 Oops, my bad! Gonna edit my OP with the right name!
Not to mention that, the part was originally written for Prince.
Lol, awesome movie, I love it. Chris Tucker is freaking hilarious and Gary Oldman is a chameleon. You should watch another Luc Besson movie called Leon: The Professional, maybe his best. It's got Gary Oldman and your girl Padme in it.
She definitely needs to add Leon to her list.
Yes!!!!
Why do so many ppl suggest that movie? Wasnt the director a pedophile or something, which is why he had like a 12 yr old Natalie Portman constantly flirting with Leon. Yeah i liked that movie as a kid but when u look back its pretty disturbing
@@user-wr9ej6xe4j Besson was accused of rape by 5 different women over a year or so period if I remember correctly in 2018 I think. The 1st case was dropped due to lack of evidence and the 2nd investigation found him innocent of any charges. As for The Professional thing, yeah the original casting was for an older girl/woman in the role who wanted to have sex with Leon/ was in love with him. Once Natalie Portman was cast Besson toned it down (but it still had that creepy love thing going) and the parents etc had him tone it down even more to what is in the movie.
@@user-wr9ej6xe4j Yes, it is supposed to be disturbing. That's what good movies' are. I think you need to stop watching the DC comics trash and watch some good movies with disturbing questions in them.
What makes this film refreshing for me is its NON-Hollywood heart and execution.
Because it's written and directed by Luc Besson
A French man.
Costumrs are designed by Jean Paul Gauthier, haute couture
Fifth element is a masterclass in cutting and fitting it with the music. I always really enjoy it, all little things fit together tightly and appear and disappear on queue.
Re: Why is Zorg helping Evil
Because he doesn't believe it will destroy all life, he thinks through destruction there is profit & opportunity; like how he smashed the glass & all the robots cleaned it up.
And like actual companies that are destroying the planet thinking there will be no consequences...
@@andredulac4456 I'd recommend you check out the documentary "Planet of the Humans".
That's actually an economic theory of operation, believe it or not. Claude Frederic Bastiat neatly refuted it 200 years ago.
My favorite part of this movie is watching my dad do Zorg's entire ZF-1 sales pitch along with Gary Oldman every time we watch this. Sometimes it's not the movie as much as the memories of it that make it awesome. 😊
Haha thats great.
Lol
That’s so sweet!
This movie is a lot to take in on 1st viewing, we're thrown into a whole new world and it takes time to get one's bearings. Great cast though, besides Bruce there's Milla Jovovich (star of the Resident Evil movies and "Ultraviolet"), Ian Holm (Bilbo Baggins), Chris Tucker and of course Gary Oldman as the villain. Also Brion James played Leon in "Blade Runner". Lots of style and humore ("Does anyone else wanna negotiate?") in addition to the action.
This movie is Milla Jovovich debut in kick-a*s action flick actress.
The President played the villian "Deebo" with chris tucker in "Friday"
@@mysticvirgo9318 The late Tiny Lister Jr. He was a wrestler for a while.
This is probably my most watched film. Mool tea pass
"Yes, she knows" .
Luc Besson, the director, and Milla Jovovich developed Leeloo's language together.
They were also having an affair, while Luc Besson's wife is the Blue Opera singer alien. Besson is not known for his fidelity.
They also collaborated on making some kids as well.
@@parker469a Nonetheless, he was behind Leon the professional, Taken, The Transporter and so many other amazing movies. And lets be real here, we are all just human ;)
Among other things. Lol
The Fifth Element is the Paris Fashion Show of sci-fi and I love it 😆
(Congrats on graduating college 👍)
Specially when it’s made by the french moviemaker Luc Besson and the costumes by Jean-Paul Gaultier
This movie is quite improved by multiple viewings. It’s so crazy that a lot of great dialogue gets missed in the first (and likely the second) viewing.
"Negative. I am a meat popsicle" is one of the best lines ever
gimme de cassssssssshhhhhh!!! i say this all the time no one gets it
@Peacefield Lighten up, Francis.
When I watch her I understand my grandpa hating the young folk. Rip my good old friend. Sry I annoyed you. Know I understand you.
Same with Mrs Doubtfire.
"That was, like, a wild ride"
Well you needn't say anymore. Thats the Fifth Element in a nutshell
What i like about movies from beyond 20(ish) + years ago is they try different things and unique ideas.
These days, everything's a remake, reboot or sequel.
and Woke, which ruins everything
@@TheGunderian While making things less cringe worthy for everyone but you and your ilk.
Or a comic book. *sigh*
@@MsHGH1 It was a French comic book. They changed the protagonist's name, but the production design is straight out of the comic.
The Fifth Element had a lot of depth that didn't become apparent to me until subsequent watching. The way scenes flowed into each other, cutscenes that supported one to the next, unique characters, and some major plot quirks (most famous of which is that the protagonist and antagonist never meet)...they made the movie endlessly entertaining for me. Every time I came across this movie while flipping through the channels I'd think "Guess I'm watching this again."
This movie helped sell a lot of Blu-Ray players. It was a perfect movie to promote that format with great visuals and sound.
It's not about the periodic table, that would be pretty boron.
I am really NaCl about this joke.
It'd be boron even for morons!
"Definitely a late-'90s movie..."
Nope. It's a late '60s movie, that just happens to have been made in the late '90s!
It's insane and stylish, and campy and kitsch, and just a lot of nonsensical fun in the tradition of Barbarella or Dean Martin's Matt Helm films, or Modesty Blaise or Casino Royale (the Woody Allen one, not the Daniel Craig one!).
That’s a good observation. To me it follows the fantastic imaginary style of French sci-fi/ fantasy, like Barberella or Fantastic Planet or even the films of Méliès. It’s very allegorical.
You´re on to the right track here. The director Luc Besson is very much into french 60´s sci/fi movies and comics. The Fifth Element is heavily influenced by a French science fantasy comics series called "Valérian and Laureline". Besson also made a movie about them in 2017.
You can definitely see the Moebius inspiration in the production/costume design as well. The whole movie looks like one of his comics come to life.
Barbarella! Wow, haven't heard of that flick in years. Good comparison.
@@johnplaysgames3120 Moebius actually contributed his talents to the film.
My fav scene is when Chris Tucker screaming
Bzzzzzzzt
NIIIIIIINNNNNEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!
Sooooo then you're saying you like all of his movies then? 🤣
Jeff Dees ha yea some of them not gonna lie
You'll have to be more specific.
This is one of those films I can watch anytime.
Agreed
"This advanced alien civilization hobbles so slowly..."
Ever watched Doctor Who? Daleks are the terror of the universe, the most ruthless and powerful warrior species in existence, hellbent on the destruction of all life, and their basic design can be stopped by stairs.
Daleks can _hover._ Stairs are no obstacle to them. Only the Doctor is.
The Daleks could be stopped by stairs ONCE! In their first episode-- during which they also couldn't leave their metal pathways. EVERY SINGLE OTHER VERSION has been able to navigate stairs!
I think it was Jimmy Carr who first posited that Disabled Access ramps were a Dalek plot.
@@johnmcclure40 if your unstoppable killing machine has been stopped by stairs one time, it's one time too many.
@@HaganeNoGijutsushi They could have been stopped by stairs in that episode, but there were no stairs, so they were not. They learned and adapted so that that particular weakness never showed up again.
Great, now I'm going to be saying mooooltii-paaaass for the next few days. Every time man, every time.
The fifth element is Boron, the Sun, Bruce Willis.
Sometime later:
See, I called it she is the fifth element.
Is it confirmed that she herself is the fifth?
She is just a clone of a random alien...
I always wondered if "Love itself" was actually the 5th.
@@mokane86 like a live action Captain Planet
@@mokane86 yep the fifth element is definitely love... it doesn't activate until korben tells her he loves her and kisses her
@@mokane86 Confirmed, Ma-Ti is the ultimate weapon. As proven in Suburban Knights.
Obviously the fifth element is love
Watched it in the theaters. Love it to this day. That opera scene.
The Planet slowly rotating behind the singer. The fight scene choreographed to the music. The Costume Designs by Jean-Paul Gaultier. Beautiful.
It's Gary oldman even when he's a villain he's just hilariously creepy
"It's an older film."
I saw this in theaters. Thanks for making me feel old ;)
If you like this you should watch some Terry Gilliam movies; Time Bandits, Brazil, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, Fisher King, or 12 Monkeys.
You should try watching : The professional
Same director and the first movie for Nathalie Portman. A masterpiece!
The plant was my favorite character.
Director Luc Besson is a stylist, but he's done precious little in the way of sci-fi. This and La Femme Nikita are my favorites. You'd probably also like Leon: The Professional, it's possibly his biggest success (I didn't like it, but admittedly I haven't seen the director's cut).
The director's cut has the "questionable material" (Mathilda gets drunk and flirts with Leon, but it doesn't get fair) and cool stuff (the pair go around killing scumbags).
I've always been confused with that scene where Mr Shadow calls Zorg, what the hell was leaking from his hair and why ? That question haunted me since my childhood until last year, I saw that vid of Rudy Giuliani. Now I understand it's just his hair-dye melting.
It was _supposed_ to be lubricant or coolant from his cyborg/bionic side, but I'll go with that. Future generations of film students will praise you for identifying this visual hallmark of banal villains, and wonder how Messr. Besson was so visionary to predict it!
Hahaha! Good call
@@xheralt If that were the case, then why did the same thing happen to the spaceship commander at the beginning of the movie? I always assumed that the black ooze was just something that happened to you if you were exposed to the Evil directly for any length of time. It happens to the commander when the Evil starts expanding towards him, and it happens to Zorg while he's talking to the Evil. It looks like it just starts oozing from the centre of your forehead, as if your brain can't contain the horror of what you're witnessing.
Lol
Leeloo Dallas Moultipass
I love this film. Luc Besson's best, alongside Léon (IMHO).
Congrats on graduation Vicky :-)
When this movie came out, I was a young early 20s lad. Walked out of the theater and was in love with Milla Jovovich. Hugely influential film.
I think we all were at that time. She's still stunning today.
@@shugaroony Especially the director. Hey Oh!
OMGosh ... woah! That peek-a-boo get-up she starts out in ... wait, did I say "get-up"? I left out "it"!
Now you need to watch the sequel, it's even better:
The Fifth Element 2 - The Search for More Boron.
I thought 2 was Boron Boogaloo (sometimes called The Wrath of Boron). And 3 was The Search For More Boron...
Sweet Spaceballs reference lmao
The production design of the film was by one of my favorite artists Jean Giraud aka Moebius.
There is actually a short story by Moebius published in Metal Hurlant back in the 80s that already included the opening scene of the movie.
"I see Bruce Willis and know there's gonna be at least 4 giant explosions..."
Big Bada BOOM!
Thats Bruce for u 😆
Jean-Paul Gaultier made all the costumes (french stylist).
French general all around crazy person. Which I suppose is why he worked so well with Luc Besson. 😄
Yeah it could only be Gaultier. Oldman's suit-jacket when he blows the aliens up, is stunning though.
Please, react to The Big Lebowski. Then I will concur: "Definitely a late-'90s movie..."
There is a lot of depth to this film and the more you watch, the more you get , the more pieces you catch.. And as you watch it as you get older, things will change.
Fun fact: the main protagonist and antagonist never meet or interact in this movie, and arguably don’t even really know about each other’s existence (Bruce Willis’ character has probably heard of Gary oldman’s character since he technically works for his taxi company, but y’know, still pretty cool)
That's one of my favorite facts about the film. Having the hero and the bad guy never meet or never being aware of eachother.
It's the perfect editing that sells it.
"Why is that your go to? That's disgusting. You just, like, molested her." Yeah, but in fairness, that generation was trained in social etiquette by Walt Disney. Kissing sleeping dream girls was a thing.
Haha. You forget that Disney is based on stories that are hundreds, possibly thousands of years old.
As for the kissing, maybe relationships being so overly complicated, confusing, and stressful instead of fun, exciting, and awesome is why dating, marriages, and child birth rates are down; and divorce rates are up. Too many restrictive rules and not enough spontaneity kills romance.
Oh, well. hahaha
@@LA_HA They weren't in a relationship at the time though.
@@winstonmarlowe5254 Do you have to be in a relationship to kiss someone? And, how do you get into relationships if there are so many negative rules that even giving a compliment might get you fired for harassment, listed as a pervert, having to defend yourself at great cost, and possible threat of court/jail time?
When this came out, this wasn't the audience's view of it. People laughed at his mistaken assumption. Now, he'd be roasted on social media, cancelled, and left without a job. Am I wrong? I mean, look at the responses. Seriously, please tell me if I am because I don't want to think this is how things are if it's not generally true
@@LA_HA When this came out people weren't obsessively looking for reasons to be offended. That's why we got movies like this and Tropic Thunder.
@@flatebo1 That's what I was talking about, but wanted to get another point of view if one is available
In the late 90s, I had a program that could decode pay tv, and I recorded the encrypted version of the movie on VHS. Watching it that way, it lost almost all color, but I still loved it.
I first saw it on a VHS pirate copy, very bad copy BTW, on a 21" TV, and I also loved the movie.
One of my absolute favorites. Saw it at a drive in when it first released. I often pondered that the fifth element was not actually Leeloo herself, she was the conduit. The fifth element in my mind was love. The power expelled by the weapon was so great that it would take a being engineered to withstan the engergy being emitted. That was always how I viewed it. Great movie, love it.
It's SUPPOSED to be that goofy: It's French. They like it that way.
(And don't even ask about "Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets"...Seriously. "Alien: Resurrection" was bad enough.)
Valerian was awesome, what ur problem?
"It's SUPPOSED to be that goofy: It's French"
THAT is TOTALLY RIGHT !
As a french guy: it sounds like a compliment...
5th Element is the greatest sci-fi action flick of all time. Absolute classic.
I think the 5th element is a woman because women are capable of creating life, and what "activates" the 5th element is love
The Fifth Element was clearly inspired by the science fiction stories and artwork of guys like Moebius and comic books like Heavy Metal magazine. Check out the Heavy Metal animated movie and you'll see the similarities.
Also Jewish mythology. Lelu is supposed to be Lilith, the first woman.
Heavy Metal is a great film
The Harry Canyon part of Heavy Metal is basically the set up for this movie.
@@kevinpogue7294 You noticed that too, huh? Yep, cab driver Harry Canyon in Heavy Metal was certainly the inspiration for Bruce Willis' character, Corbin Dallas, combined with Den's storyline. Leelu might have a bit of Taarna in her as well.
@@tarmaque Thanks for the info! I thought it all looked familiar.
Gary Oldman, playing Zorg, is the same actor portraying Sirius black in HARRY POTTER and Commissioner Gordon in DARK KNIGHT
How have you not seen The Fifth Element?!!
It’s like Blade Runner but set in a bright colourful world.....and a planet sized ball of concentrated evil hurtling towards Earth.
SUPER GREEN 😆
The part where Lelu learns about war is particularly memorable.
I love this movie so much. I know it completely by heart and will never tire of it. So much great and funny dialogue. It definitely needs to be watched more than once.
Agreed!
The hat was a picture of his hallway through the camera. That mugger was standing in front of his door for possibly hours, waiting for him to open it.
The director of this movie Luc Besson did one of my fave action thriller La Femme Nikita! Check it out and his other films!
Léon is another epic movie by Luc B.
@@Blandina11 I’m from NYC and remember seeing The Professional (aka Leon) in the theatres and not liking it but after rewatching it years later I really enjoy it. I feel his most epic film is Joan of Arc starring Mila Jovanovich
@@aldepal I've totally forgot Joan of Arc... Yes, that's an epic movie 👍👍👍
Hey guys, it's called the MESSENGER. Just sayin.
@@kirbywilliamson2942 that must be an American title, here it's called "Jeanne d'Arc" and that's the original title too.
But thanks anyway 👍😊
Luc Besson makes the best weird movies. The Professional is another great movie
Solid Luc Benson shout out, and 💯 on
“Leon, The Professional”-
I recommend watching the directors cut or extended version whatever it’s called.
The crazy villain (one of the best actors of all time btw, research his body of work; every movie he is in, in worth watching.) is also in “Leon”
@@DevInvest damn you ruined the sarcastic comment I was going to make. "AHKTUALLY ITS LEON, THE PROFESSIONAL". I definitely love the professional more but 5th element is fuggin fantastic.
@@DevInvest Another amazing one is "Angel-A" Luc's movie about a female guardian Angel
Ahh, the 90s, when big blockbusters were actually good movies with interesting ideas and often unusual, experimental style.
I think you're forgetting all the (forgettable) terrible shlocky action movies that came out in the 90s. It was Jaws that started the modern trend of blockbusters.
Tjis movie was based on the comic "Valerian and Laureline", and some theorize Star wars borrowed its style fron the comics. By the way the producer also made "Valerian" amd it was not the success many hoped... I think because Valerian ceammed waaaaay too much in one movie.
The main problem with Valerian was the casting. Absolutely miscast movie.
Valerian is good entertainment as a rental, lucky me I didn't watch it at cinema.
The movie might have been *influenced* by Valerian and Laureline, but it was not based on it. It was based on a story Luc Besson began writing when he was a 16 years old kid.
Curious to see how you'd react to the original Star Treks II, III, IV, and VI.
lol i love that you left out I since its so hella boring
@@themiIes and V
@@teammartin95 I like V
@@themiIes Yeah, that'd be a weird reaction. I like it, personally, but it's this long, high concept business about the Enterprise just entering in contact with a strange alien entity... pretty much no action, no combat, no Kirk making out with alien chicks, just abstract imagery and slow flight shots with ominous music.
@@themiIes Star Trek I is perfectly fine. Its more akin to something like 2001 than other Trek media; but I think it works well enough. The soundtrack is good too, though III is the best soundtrack for all the Treks.
Surprised she didn’t give any love to Leeloo. Mila’s performance is my fav part of the flick.
'Milla' :)
@@tsogobauggi8721 oh sry I missed a letter lol
"is this movie going to be about Boron?"
That may be the only thing it doesn't have.
I love love love this movie! That being said, it was as strange back in the day as it is now.
The voice of the guy named "Finger" is none other than Vin Diesel.
now for "Leon: the professional", and "Valerian"
Gary Oldman classic villain.
Besson has this running gag of giving Oldman one word that he yells in each of his movies. Here it's "Unacceptable!", in Leon the Professional it's "Everyone!"
If you like the effects in this-
You should watch the original
“Dune”-
From 1984-
Especially since the new theatrical release is upcoming.
You would be well served to read the book prior-or listen to the audio book prior- it’s a very layered read.
The book is a masterpiece
The movie was actually panned by the author, the director took many liberties however, it is a visual feast.
Kwisatz Haderach
🙏🏻✨
Oh please no. It should have been Jodorowsky's Dune that was made and released.
I ❤️ this movie
"Since Covid is ending..." That didn't age well. (Also congrats on your graduation!)
Gary Oldman is such a phenomenal actor. Such a chameleon; every character he portrays is totally different. Commissioner Gordon, Sirius Black, Winston Churchill, Count Dracula... He's very much like Daniel Day-Lewis in that regard. Every character he plays is a complete transformation.
The only thing I couldn't stand about this movie was all the SHRIEKING. Oh. Em. Gee.
VKunia, did you realize the protagonist and antagonist don't know about each other's existence and never even meet? That's pretty rare in a movie.
Allthewhile the protagonist happens to be employed by the antagonist when he meets his love interest and happens to get fired by same antagonist. :-)
This movie is a wild ride. Pacing, on a timer, the bright colours, the costumes... It's so fun.
European sci-fi is definitely more flamboyant and comical than American. In Europe sci-fi was a medium, rather than a true genre. The sci-fi culture here always thought of the genre as a device to tell outlandish stories with a hidden meaning. It was never serious as it was in the US. That's the cultural disconnect you're feeling. I love Fifth Element. Loved it when I watched it first those 20 years ago.
So many great scenes in this film, but I can still remember breaking out in a fit of laughter when Zorg is choking on the cherry and after desperately pushing buttons, that useless creature appears, I don't know how anyone cant laugh at that!
The little creature was supposed to use its long trunk as a vacuum and extract the cherry.
The director was kind of a scumbag.. He was engaged to the actress who played the Diva, and dumped her to marry Milla Jovovich (Leloo) who was 21.
This is one of my favorite movies ever. The visual sense of director Luc Besson is unparalleled. He started writing the story and creating Leeloo's language when he was a teenaged kid in France. A movie that I liked, that a lot of people didn't, that is similar to this is Besson's 'Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets' with Dale DeHaan, Cara Delavigne, and Rihanna. It's similar because 'The Fifth Element' was co-designed by the creator of the 'Valérian and Laureline' comic books that helped to inspire this film's story, Jean-Claude Mézières (the other 'Fifth Element' designer was another French artist Moebius aka Jean Giraud). To me, as a sci-fi nerd, both of these films are comforting..you don't care how many times you've seen them, one more time won't hurt and sometimes you even catch new details in all the craziness happening on screen.
Thanks for doing this one!!! I loved watching it through your eyes!!!
Am I correct to assume you have seen LOTR already or will that be a reaction you will make? As you may or may not have recognised Ian Holm as the priest in this movie as someone from LOTR.
One of my top 25 movies!! Gary oldman delivers a masterful performance!!! Love his character in this!! And the colors are amazing!!
"I... I don't even have words to describe it."
Yes you do. "Big bada boom!" and "Multipass!"
Gary Oldman (Zorg) once again shows his versatility in this movie. Harry Potter, Batman series, and so much more.
I think Zorg was helping Mister Shadow cause of the money. Zorg did not really know what Mister Sahdow was going to do. So for him is just about the money.
This is a great movie, unique but great
Just pointing out the Captain at the start of the film wasn't panicking. He had blood dribbling down his forehead. The Evil was in his head.
The director is s French, so i hope that explains a lot.