1user reviews 15-year-old Mia faces an overwhelming transformation which puts her entire existence into question. Her body is changing radically, and despite desperate attempts to halt the process, Mia is soon forced to accept that nature is far more powerful than she is. TheGolden Eye for best film in the German-speaking competition went to the Austrian drama Hochwald (Why Not You) by Evi Romen. In her debut film Romen describes the gay relationship between a MyBlood Runs Blue.By Stacy Eaton. This was a book given me by the author, through World Literacy Cafe for review. This was a very exciting book, but would be hard to put into a specific Genre. It's about a policewoman, it has Vampires, romance, re-incarnation, and oh yesA Serial Killer! Fast Money. - Blue My Mind adalah sebuah film yang disutradarai oleh Lisa Brühlmann. Film ini diperankan di antaranya oleh Luna Wedler, Zoë Pastelle Holthuizen dan Regula Grauwiller. Film ini menceritakan tentang Mia Luna Wedler seorang gadis yang baru saja pindah dan menjalani hari-harinya di sekolah baru. Meski awalnya Mia terlihat cuek dengan teman-teman barunya namun ia akhirnya mencoba bergaul dengan orang-orang populer di sekolahnya. Ia berteman dengan Gianna, ketua geng dari trio anak perempuan yang dewasa sebelum waktunya dan mulai bergabung dengan kelompok itu. Sementara di sisi lain, Mia seperti memiliki kelainan yang tidak ia ketahui. Mia menghadapi transformasi luar biasa yang membuat seluruh keberadaannya dipertanyakan. Tubuhnya terus mengalami perubahan, meskipun upaya putus asa untuk menghentikan prosesnya namun Mia seolah dipaksa menerima bahwa alam jauh lebih kuat dari Drama, Fantasy, Mystery Duration 1h 37minRating from usersArtikel Menarik Lainnya Timothee Chalamet Cocok Mainkan Remake "Hotel Del Luna" Versi Amerika ? Sinopsis "My Brilliant Life 2014" - Perjuangan Seorang Anak di Sisa Hidupnya Sinopsis " Look Away 2018" - Bertukar Tempat dengan Refleksi di Cermin Feedback Melaporkan389 Ditonton20/06/2022Review Phim _ Tâm Trí Của Tôi _ Blue My Mind _ Cô gái xuất thân kì lạ cơ thể biếNgôn Tình Trung Hoa 0 Pengikut 291 Videos Your Gateway to the Trends and Tropes of the Horror Genre Eric’s Review Blue My Mind 2017 ★★★1/2 out of ★★★★★ Directed by Lisa Brühlmann Two great tastes that go great together Teen coming-of-age movies and body horror. Blue my Mind explores a Swiss girl’s trying to fit into a new school while slowly metamorphosing into something beastly. It’s a natural combination. The fear of monstrous body changes both normal and highly abnormal. Mia Luna Wedler, Streaker doesn’t know it yet, but she’s a mermaid, and as her subtle behavioral and physical changes, her self consciousness gets the better of her and she keeps these things a secret. For all the women out there who ever wished they had the Ariel experience in reverse, well this might dissuade some of those thoughts. Mia is also going through a rough patch with her parents, bristling at their simple questions, and she is desperately wanting to be part of the cool kids’ clique at her school. And as is true with many girls coming of age films, these young women are capricious, cruel, and undeniably pretty and petty. A similarly themed movie that I recently watched, Mon Mon Mon Monsters!, had similar themes of the outcast trying to become one of the cool kids. Unlike that Taiwanese film, however, Mia manages to win over the bad girls of her school. The naughtiness of risk-taking and boundary-pushing comes naturally to Mia, and she quickly wins over the alpha female of the pack of mischief-makers, Gianna Zoë Pastelle Holthuizen, who is brazen, beautiful, and controls the social dynamic of their school. Soon, Mia and Gianna are bonded, trusting each other as they engage in drugs, sex, and well… more drugs and sex. Eventually, though, Mia’s metamorphosis becomes something difficult to hide. She confides in a doctor, but that becomes a dead-end, and she confronts her mother believing her mom and dad are not really her parents, and there are suggestions through the storytelling that seem to lend credence to her suspicions. She resists her early forms of transformation, such as cutting out the emerging webbing between her toes OUCH! and hiding her legs that are beginning to bruise, molt, and generally look like a horrific massive rash. Thematically, the film reminds me a bit of Ginger Snaps. A teenage girl finding her way through her emerging sexuality at the same time as she’s going through a bestial transformation. These films cry out with the “What’s happening to me?!?” moment that stokes the hormones and fears of adolescent girls everywhere. The movie also bears the marks of the current wave of European horror films, like Raw, Goodbye Mommy, Beast, and Let the Right One In. These are largely quiet films, dramatic studies first, that draw the horror out slowly. In fact, I would suggest that this is actually much more of a very dark fantasy tale rather than a true horror movie, as Mia is more of a risk to herself than she is to others. This film was featured at last year’s Overlook Film Festival, and though light on the violence and gore, there is plenty of “ick” factor, and it proved that it belonged in that collection of genre titles that Overlook curated. This is director Lisa Brühlmann’s first feature film, and it immediately launches her into a director to watch going forward. When a director comes out with a coming-of-age film early in their careers, you have to suspect there is a bit of an autobiographical edge to it. And, in an interview with the website MEAWW, she reveals that she took a lot of her own life experiences, and the shame and aggressive self-destructive behavior. The movie left me feeling cold, and I don’t know that I ever really enjoyed the movie, though it kept my attention. This movie has a whole lot of lonely built into it, and at the conclusion, that feeling is pervasive. Her transformation complete, you wonder what the rest of Mia’s life will be like. The scariest parts of this movie also had nothing to do with her physical change into a creature, but instead, with some of the terrible decisions Mia makes with drugs, booze, and sex. Though the movie features teenagers, be warned, this is not a movie particularly suited for impressionable young teens. There is definitely a hard edge to this film. Both Wedler and Holthuizen both exhibit great charisma and can hold a frame exquisitely. The Swiss movie industry isn’t exactly a juggernaut, so I would be curious to see if either of these actresses start seeing work in more widely distributed films from France, England, or the US. I would be curious to know what our female fans think of this movie. I suspect it is a much more compelling movie for women than men, as the themes are so very tied to female fears. Blue My Mind is Rated R, for strong sexual content, drug use, and language. It is available for streaming on Amazon. Categories ReviewsTags Blue My Mind Review, body horror, Lisa Brühlmann, Luna Wedler, Mermaid Horror, Mermaid transformation, Swiss horror movie, Teen Coming-of-age horror, Zoë Pastelle Holthuizen

blue my mind review indonesia