Who is v in v for vendetta




















The film version is everything I could have possibly hoped for - gripping, chilling, intense, exciting, heartbreaking. It gets Moore's music if not his exact words; elements are slightly different, subplots removed. But the idea - as V himself would be so proud to say - remains the same. The plot is surprisingly complex and nuanced, and I don't want to give anything more away than the previews already have.

Suffice it to say that a masked anarchist voiced by Hugo Weaving must save a young woman Natalie Portman during his attempt to expose corruption in the government.

Weaving is perfectly cast, using his formidable physicality and imposing voice to give gravitas to the insanity of the character. Portman has gone from child to teen star and is finally emerging as a talented, adult actress following her Oscar-nominated turn in "Closer".

Here, she gives her best performance to date as the orphan Evey. John Hurt is characteristically impressive as the enigmatic government leader, and Stephen Rea gives a wonderful supporting turn as the police inspector charged with finding V - before it's too late. Unlike "The Matrix", McTiegue allows the story to be more of a focus than the action, and as a result the film is a tense and emotional thriller, with outbursts of spectacularly filmed and choreographed action.

Showing more maturity and restraint than the Wachowskis, McTiegue doesn't show off, and his trickery isn't self conscious. When slow-motion overtakes a late action sequence, it seems as natural as breathing. The late cinematographer Adrian Biddle the film is dedicated to his memory does an outstanding job, Oscar-nominated Dario Marianelli's score is a fantastic accompaniment to the piece, and the visual effects are astonishing, terrifying, and deeply moving, especially in the climatic moments in Trafalgar Square.

With solid acting, great action, and fantastic technical wizardry, it sounds just like another "Matrix"-style ripoff. But the biggest difference in "V" is that it is a story of real ideas - not a fantastic, science fiction creation, but a genuine examination of the human condition. The power of fear takes center stage here - the fear of war, of disease, of famine. Fear is a basic human nature, and has been exploited as a weapon - a method of control - for centuries.

And for those who would use it, a masked man waits in the shadows to carry out your sentence. The verdict? FAQ Is "V for Vendetta" based on a book? Why wasn't Alan Moore credited as the original author?

Health Energy Environment. YouTube Instagram Adobe. Kickstarter Tumblr Art Club. Film TV Games. Fortnite Game of Thrones Books. Comics Music. Filed under: Entertainment Film. V for Vendetta knew our future would be a bleak one New, 29 comments. Linkedin Reddit Pocket Flipboard Email. Next Up In Film. Sign up for the newsletter Verge Deals Subscribe to get the best Verge-approved tech deals of the week. In the comic and graphic novel Delia Surridge states in the diary "Physically, there doesn't seem to be anything wrong with him.

No cellular anomalies, nothing". His confidante Evey Hammond speculates in the comic that V might be her own father, who was arrested years before as a political prisoner; V denies it, however, and Moore has confirmed that V is not Evey's father.

There is also some speculation that V could actually be Valerie, the prisoner in the cell next to his whose autobiographical letter inspires V not to give up and which he later passes on to Evey. However, Prothero and Surridge both describe V as the "man" from room five V claims Valerie was the "Woman in room four" and also that he did not write Valerie's letter , which would seem to dispel this theory. As Finch comments on the pages V tore from Surridge's diary, "What was on the missing pages, eh?

His name? His age? Whether he was Jewish, or homosexual, or black or white? He later describes himself to Finch as "an idea".

Late in the story, Evey, having taken over V's mission, also appears to consider herself anarchy incarnate. In effect, V is an Everyman: potentially, anyone oppressed by their government could become a revolutionary avenger.

Four years after his escape from Larkhill, V begins his vendetta against the government by blowing up Parliament on November 5, Guy Fawkes Day. V then kidnaps Prothero, who is now the "Voice of Fate" on the government's propaganda radio, and drives him insane by destroying his prize doll collection in a satire of the exterminations that occurred at Larkhill. V kills now-Bishop Lilliman by forcing him to eat a communion wafer laced with a lethal dose of cyanide.

Film gossip is so prevalent in Hollywood that the industry of celebrity news is practically as old as the artistic medium itself. And with such a stacked cast, V for Vendetta could easily have been a breeding ground for juicy, eye-catching tidbits of actor feuds and studio-driven creative differences.

Fortunately, this was not the case and most of the cast and crew universally reported enjoying the production. John Hurt compared working on the film to his positive experiences working on and Aliens. Natalie Portman was very public about how she felt she was able to really sink her teeth into her role and had been looking forwards to her head shaving scene for some time. Stephen Fry in particular seemed enamored with the production, gushing unironically in an interview about how he always wanted to be in an action film and get beaten up onscreen.

One of the major draws of V for Vendetta was that it was written by the famed Wachowskis who were still riding the massive success of The Matrix even after its lackluster sequels. The two were apparently fans of the original comic and had written their own version of the script in the mid-'90s. Though it was drastically different from the Hilary Henkin script that had been hopping around Hollywood circles for years, it was selected for the movie nonetheless. However, once it formally left the Wachowskis' hands, it was almost immediately re-edited by James McTeigue and the studio, cutting scenes, switching some around, and in some cases redesigning the plot entirely.

V for Vendetta is filled with busy, difficult to shoot scenes. The fast paced and action-packed center of the film meant thousands of cuts, fades, and transitions had to be edited together, some all at the same time.

So you might think that the most difficult scene to shoot was a fight scene or an explosion or a one-shot take. The scene used 22, dominoes and professional domino assemblers a real thing apparently were hired to set it up. It took them over hours to set the scene, which had to be shot several times to get different angles of the dominos falling. For starters, the score samples tracks from British anarchy band the Sex Pistols, including their anthem "Anarchy in the UK.

V paraphrases a quote from American feminist-anarchist Emma Goldman when he dances with Evey.



hartiobede1972's Ownd

0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000