Anemone 4K 2025 Ultra HD 2160p
Early 2000s, a small town in northern England. Jem (Sean Bean), a devout and prayerful man, lives modestly in the same house as Nessie (Samantha Norton), an emergency services worker. Together, the couple is raising their young son, Brian (Samuel Bottomley), who is in the military. Recently, the soldier beat up a fellow soldier and is awaiting a visit from his superiors. Nessa writes a heartfelt letter to Jam's brother Ron (Daniel Day-Lewis), who has been living as a recluse in the woods for 20 years. Their mother is convinced that Ron, a former soldier, will be able to help Brian. Jam volunteers to deliver the letter and spends several days with his brother far from civilization.
User Review
Due to the fact that one of the most brilliant artists of our time rarely appears on screen, each of his films becomes an event, regardless of the quality of the film itself. That is why the film Anemone should be viewed exclusively in two dimensions.
First of all, and there's no point in hiding it, this is Daniel Day-Lewis's benefit performance. His monologues are the most significant and important part of the film. Daniel reveals the image of a lost man, a man who suddenly feels out of place. The war is, without a doubt, just a pretext here. He speaks, he is silent, he confesses, he struggles, but in each of his manifestations he reaches a cry (even if it is silent). For Daniel, such a role is a real gift. Characters full of contradictions and driven to despair are his “calling card.” And Ray Stoker is one of them.
When Stoker-Day-Lewis speaks, everything in the film freezes. The initially static Sean Bean slows down even more. This is how the filmmakers achieve greater expressiveness. In this universe, everything except himself is insignificant. But there is some truth in this interpretation, because it is precisely the egoism of the main character that prevents him from seeing anything other than regrets about his past.
But it is precisely this personal emphasis that weakens the film itself. In essence, there is no particular intrigue, dynamics, or movement here. We meet the recluse, feel the hell he experiences on earth, and realize that he will not take his experiences with him to the grave. No... They will be passed on... A spiral of violence... But behind this unassuming canvas, which is easy to read from the very beginning of the film, there is nothing left. I would only highlight the technical elegance of a few staged shots and the confessional scene on the shore, among the heather swaying in the wind.
And so we come to the most important question related to this film. Are you ready to watch a film that is very modest in every respect, with yet another acting extravaganza from Day-Lewis? This film is more like a master class in artistic acting or a theatrical performance. Let's be honest - the film itself seems to have been made for the sake of giving the Artist another opportunity to demonstrate his Talent.
Info Video
Codec: HEVC / H.265 (60.2 Mb/s)
Resolution: 4K (2160p)
HDR: Dolby Vision, HDR10
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Info Audio
#English: Dolby TrueHD with Dolby Atmos 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
#English: Dolby Digital Plus with Dolby Atmos 5.1
Info Subtitles
English SDH, French (Canadian), Spanish (Latin American).File size: 56.32 GB












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