Tuesday 18 September 2018 photo 7/7
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V For Vendetta Movie In Hindi Hd Free Download
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Set against the futuristic landscape of totalitarian Britain, V For Vendetta tells the story of a mild-mannered young woman named Evey who is rescued from a life-and-death situation by a masked vigilante known only as "V." Incomparably charismatic and ferociously skilled in the art of combat and deception, V ignites a revolution when he detonates two London landmarks and takes over the government-controlled airwaves, urging his fellow citizens to rise up against tyranny and oppression. As Evey uncovers the truth about V's mysterious background, she also discovers the truth about herself - and emerges as his unlikely ally in the culmination of his plot to bring freedom and justice back to a society fraught with cruelty and corruption.
In this obscure and Gothic tale, one attractive girl, Evey gets involved accidentally in a terrorist attack, perpetrated by a masked and megalomaniac character, V. V is following the same steps of Guy Fawkes, a sort of terrorist of the XVII century, who wanted to blow up the English Parlament in London. However, in the present time, the Orwellian London lives under the fascist government of chancellor Adam, and V will fight against his regime, using the power of powder, blowing up important buildings. Evey will be chased by the secret police, thinking that she's the accomplice of V, who will accomplish Fawkes' mission of destroying the Parlament on the 5th of November, in this mixture of The Phantom of the Opera, George Orwell's 1984 and Batman.
I loved this movie, but I love what it could've (and should've) been a lot more. James McTeigue directs the film version of Alan Moore and David Lloyd's graphic novel, one that easily ranks as one of my favorite graphic novels. In the film, young Evey is rescued by a mysterious stranger in a Guy Fawkes mask who goes by the name V. She is soon brought into his world as he exacts his revenge against those who've wronged him and plots against the totalitarian government reigning over England. This film was McTeigue's first run as director and he did a fantastic job with the heavy subject matter, high profile cast, and dense storyline of Moore/Lloyd's novel.
I had not read the book before seeing this film in theaters, and I think that's why my love for it wasn't completely tainted. I was able to view the movie with a clean slate and enjoy it for what it was. After reading the novel, I can definitely understand why Alan Moore would've gotten so upset with its film adaptation. The film trimmed a lot of story and character development in an effort to fit it all into a two hour runtime, which is a shame. There was so much more to the story that I wish could've been included. In my opinion, the movie would've been better off being turned into a trilogy, in which each of the book's three chapters could've acted as a standalone film in one three-part saga, allowing for the full story to play out.
Unfortunately that's not the case, but the movie was still great. A fan of the book couldn't have asked for better casting, with strong performances from Natalie Portman, Hugo Weaving, John Hurt, Stephen Rea, and Stephen Fry. The cast was each perfectly suited for their roles; you'd almost think the book was written with these actors in mind for each character. I noticed that the movie feels a lot longer than it actually is because of how much story is crammed into the two hours, but it never drags and it never becomes difficult to follow the dense plot. On top of that, the film has some great action scenes; I loved seeing V in action with his daggers. Forgiving the fact that the movie had a lot more potential that may never be realized in future cinema, McTeigue's film is a great action flick with strong messages behind it that I feel everyone should see at least once.
This is the best movie I have seen in years, maybe the among the top ten of all time in my book. This is an important movie for all who fear a creeping totalitarian state coming to America.
It is a compelling, concise, and riveting movie that will hold your undivided attention. Much better than the Matrix, it doesn't confuse or obfuscate.
The visuals are outstanding. See it in all the IMax glory. And then take heart that there is still hope against oppressive power, that the power of an idea is more powerful than all the guns of the oppressive state.
Setting out more to challenge us with its ideas than make us whoop at the action, Vendetta can be clumsy, but there are enough impressive flourishes to make up for its stumblings.
movie, it doesn't occur either in Christopher Marlowe's Faustus or Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's Faust but in fact was a motto of the 20th century occultist Aleister Crowley, who likely had as much of a fascination with Johann Georg Faust as Marlowe and Goethe yet isn't known for explicitly writing about Faust in correlation with the motto. It could be speculated that V was in possession of an unpublished and furthermore esoteric work of art of some kind that linked these, but for Evey's sake, V's attribution was dubious, since she being an ordinary civilian would have no awareness of the hypothetical artifact. No one knows as it is not stated in either the movie or the graphic novel. Furthermore, V says that he lost his memory while at Larkhill, so during the time frame of the movie's events, even he didn't know why he had been sent there. It's only stated that he was an "undesirable", which could mean that he was not heterosexual, a non-Christian (perhaps not the right denomination of Christian), that he had possessions that were deemed offensive, that he spoke out against the political regime, or that he was/did anything else the totalitarian government prohibited/feared. In an interview, Hugo Weaving did with IndieLondon, he offered the following:
You understand that he's been tortured and physically abused and that's what has created him. But at the same time the reason he was imprisoned in the first place was, I would suggest, because he was some kind of political activist. And I think he was probably an actor so he has very strong opinions.
The original graphic novel's Larkhill was based loosely off of Hitler's concentration camps and the Nazi atrocities, and it is left open whether V is a member of a racial minority, is homosexual, or that he was taken for his political views. However, it's possible that he was not being specifically punished, seeing as he was placed in a group that was almost certain to be unceremoniously disposed of. A man who can fashion explosives and destroy a detention facility in which he's being held captive is likely to make authoritarians nervous wherever he goes.
Throughout the film, V exhibits an intricate knowledge of the workings of the Norsefire regime, and it's possible that he knew these things before being shipped off to Larkhill, thus it wouldn't be unreasonable to suspect that he was a some kind of strategic agent of the executive branch, perhaps the Sutler's administration or ones prior. He could have been a serviceman, a commissioned officer or a covert operative. This ties in with the symbolism of him impersonating William Rookwood, along with the symbolism in the unmasking of Dietrich's parody V revealing a parody duplicate of Dietrich's parody Sutler. And furthermore, the number five pops up in consideration of the concept of a fifth column emerging within Sutler's dictatorship. However, for this to work, it would mean that Sutler's loyal forces were unaware of the extent of the security clearance held by the man who would become V, for they surely would have killed him instead of imprisoning him, in order to maintain their party/state secrets. Nothing in the movie suggests that the transition from the previous administration to Sutler's was not smooth, but there is no telling how many state employees were sloppily fired and not murdered or executed. V and the other prisoners were injected with a virus that was later used at St. Mary's, Three Waters (water treatment plant), and a London tube station. More specifically, the Larkhill prisoners were the "lab rats" in Norsefire's experiments while the party was attempting to develop a super-bioweapon. There is an implication that the St. Mary's virus came from the blood of V himself, since he was the trial which gave the coroner hope and since he was the only subject who survived the Larkhill explosion. This would provide another reason for his vendetta against the government, since he felt partially responsible for the virus. This is seemingly contradicted by the diary of Delia Surridge, who claims that all her work was destroyed in the explosion at Larkhill; however, she might have been writing that as merely an assumption, as she afterwards distanced herself from the project and might well not have known if any data had survived. During the "flashback" scene it was rather definitively implied that everybody who was injected died—except for V. Thus, we may assume that for whatever reason he is unique, or at the very least an extremely rare specimen in some biological or physiological sense, and that most people would not develop as he did—or else Larkhill would have been overrun by V-type super-people. The movie does seem to imply V is given some sort of superhuman ability by the experimentation at Larkhill, as Delia's diary says: "the mutations seem to have triggered the abnormal development of basic kinesthesia and reflexes." Those responsible for Three Waters and St. Mary's also came out with a miracle vaccine for the virus that made them very wealthy and allowed them to be saviors in a time of fear and utter chaos. It would stand to reason that this vaccine would be developed from V's blood, as he was the only one able to resist the virus. V's role in the viral attacks would then be as the originator of the vaccine. This would explain how V knew of the history of the virus and vaccine that he relates to Finch and Dominic. The graphic novel merely implies that the prisoners were experimented on with no real purpose, like the Nazis with Jews in World War II. The super-soldier story line is the Wachowskis take on the purpose of the experimentation. This is explained in an expanded voiceover of Delia Surridge's (the coroner that V killed) journal, which exists in the original script but was cut much shorter for the final product. While at Larkhill, V was allowed to tend the garden there, for which he had access to chemical supplies, grease solvents, ammonia, and fertilizer. He used those to produce napalm and mustard gas.There are two theories. (1) The doctor is talking metaphorically, i.e. she couldn't see his eyes because of the fire but knew he was looking at her. Throughout the movie, V can be seen reading books, watching movies, and visually noticing people. (2) Yes, he is blind. You can clearly see his face around his eyes is caved in and completely black on the close up, with no flames distorting your view, and it can be assumed that his enhanced kinesthesia is the way he views the world now, with no need for visual perception. This would, of course, necessitate an expanded definition of the the meaning of the term 'kinesthesia." a5c7b9f00b
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