Commenting on the latest and best selling movies at the box office, as well as the hottest issues movie that current trends, with a good quality power and capable of high paint film lovers satisfaction for yourself. So the movie lovers everywhere are able to get an overview before watching the film itself. And here we provide different things from previous reviews. And we make sure you as the movie lovers will be satisfied with it. High-definition video video higher resolution and quality from standard definition. Although there is no standard meaning for high-definition video images, generally with far more than 480 horizontal lines (North America) or 576 horizontal lines (Europe) are considered high definition. 480 scan lines are generally a minimum although most system greatly exceeded the limit. Standard resolution image captured at a rate much faster than usual (60 frames/second North America, 50 fps Europe), by high speed camera can be considered high-definition in some contexts. Several television series shot in high-definition video that is made to look as if they've been shot on film, a technique that is often known as the filmizing. HDTV broadcast systems associated with three main parameters: Frame size in pixels is defined as the number of pixels horizontal × vertical pixels, for example number of 1280 × 720 or 1920 × 1080. Often times the number of pixels horizontally are implied from context and omitted, as in the case of 720 p and 1080 p. Scanning system is identified with the letter p for progressive scanning or i for interlaced scan. Frame rate is identified as the number of video frames per second. For interlaced systems, the number of frames per second must be specified, but it is not uncommon to see a level playing field which is used instead. Naming of commercial products, frame rate often falls and implied from context (e.g., a television set 1080i). Frame rate can also be specified without a resolution. For example 24 p means 24 progressive scan frames per second, and 50i means 25 interlaced frames per second. There is no standard for HDTV color support. The color is usually broadcast using YUV (10-bit per channel) However, depending on the underlying technology produces an image of the recipient, it is then converted to RGB color spaces that use standard algorithms. When sent directly through the Internet, the colors usually pre-convert to 8-bit RGB channels for additional storage savings with the assumption that it's only viewable only on a computer screen (sRGB). As an added benefit to the original broadcaster, pre-conversion losses are basically making these files is not suitable for professional TV Broadcasting again.
THE IMMIGRATION GAME *** Germany 2017 Dir: Krystof Zlatnik 97 mins
An all too credible Dystopian alt-reality is the backbone of this dynamically paced thriller in which Europe has closed its borders, and only Germany offers citizenship to immigrants…that is, if they can survive “The Immigration Game”. This involves refugees earning points and cash for every German citizen they kill. Our hero Mathis Landwehr kills a “hunter” in a bid to protect a refugee and faces a choice of either prison or ostensibly assuming the role of a refugee in the “game”.
Channelling much earlier faux “reality TV” genre films like THE RUNNING MAN and SERIES 7, the movie’s vision of urban Hell seems most influenced by THE PURGE series, filtered through the current climate of Nationalism and European cities on the brink. Though not without humour (“He looks like He-Man”), the movie sustains an intense ambience of unease, as characters talk like Daily Mail headlines (“What will happen to our city? Refugees everywhere…”) and violence regularly erupts, with vivid street-level fight scenes involving baseball bats, knives and chains. Satisfyingly nihilistic, the movie is weakened by the impact-blunting use of slo-mo in hard-hitting scenes and by the final ten minutes at “The Immigration Game” TV studio, where the all too easy target of sensationalistic 21st century media is satirised yet again.
Review by Steven West
0 Response to "Film Review: THE IMMIGRATION GAME (2017)"
Post a Comment