BIBLIOCINE PRESENTS PRESENTS BIBLIOCINE And Cineforo
PRESENTS: Trainspotting
DATE: Wednesday, October 21 2009
DIRECTOR Danny Boyle Screenplay
John Hodge (Novel: Irvine Welsh)
CAST Ewan McGregor, Robert Carlyle, Jonny Lee Miller, Ewen Bremner, Kelly MacDonald, Kevin McKidd, Peter Mulla
YEAR: 1996;
DURATION: 90 min The film tells the amazing and tragic story of a gang of five young people willing to try not to sacrifice the excesses of his life of drugs by the apparent normalcy and comfort of a full-fledged life where family, work and marriage are successful trilogy.
Trainspotting is a great film, which has all the power of rock & roll and drugs and fuel that feeds the whole aesthetic of the nineties
Trainspotting with unusual speed has known success in his native island, England and Europe. And it goes way to becoming a cult film. Adapted from the novel the same title, written by Irvine Welsh (Scotland, 1958) and published in 1993, has caused a massive identification of youth. The international press has rockets exploded and spilled ink on her sick. Either to praise or to raise dusting. And is that for some Trainspotting can be understood as an apologia for a lifestyle that leads to self-destruction, if one is unable to be limits. In that sense the film offers a profound reflection on the use of drugs, but is a contemporary fresh, heartbreaking, on the consumption of 'hard' drugs (heroin, ecstasy, etc). The intense internal and external struggle carried out by one of the key players to undertake a detoxification, and its subsequent failure, vigorously illustrate this situation. Trainspotting
makes a difference to the prevailing intellectual social realism in European cinema today. Nothing here seems to be real and yet, everything is true at the same time.
LIBRARY PARGA RAFAEL CORTES
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