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Sin has an approval rating of 95% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 19 reviews, and an average rating of 7.3/10. [4] It also has a score of 65 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on 8 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [5]
Chaos: Hideo Nakata [87] The Emperor's New Groove: Mark Dindal: In the Mood for Love: Wong Kar-wai [88] Joint Security Area: Park Chan-wook [89] [90] Memento: Christopher Nolan: Two plot lines, simultaneously developing in opposite directions, join in a final scene at the film's conclusion. [53] [78] [91] Happenstance: Laurent Firode [92] Pay ...
The plotline is rather predictable and similar to many other cop dramas you'll find out there, but the acting of both Rhames and Oldman put Sin just a notch above other releases in the same genre." [5] Forrest Hartman of the Reno Gazette-Journal gave the movie a "C−" score, and said: "It lacks the tension and cohesion that might have made it ...
For fans of Dylan and aficionados of meticulously designed period pieces, A Complete Unknown will undoubtedly have its moments of brilliance. For others, it may feel like a beautifully wrapped ...
Sin (also known as The Beloved and Restless) is a 1971 film written and directed by George P. Cosmatos and marked his directorial debut. The film was produced by Curtwel Productions and stars Raquel Welch and Richard Johnson .
Original Sin is a 2001 American erotic romantic thriller film starring Antonio Banderas and Angelina Jolie. It is based on the novel Waltz into Darkness by Cornell Woolrich, and is a remake of the 1969 François Truffaut film Mississippi Mermaid. The film was produced by actress Michelle Pfeiffer's production company, Via Rosa Productions.
Most prominent is chaos versus order. The play's characters and action embody this, moving from a settled social order, in which relationships arise, toward the final scene, where the social order – and even the separation of the two eras – dissolve in the party's chaos, relationships collapse, and the characters die or disperse.
In new research, scientists find that flocks of birds may become ordered after a disordered start. The way flocks and other “collective motions” form has eluded scientists for a long time.