REACTING to *Children of Men* THIS IS HEARTBREAKING! (First Time Watching) Sci-fi Movies

Ойын-сауық

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James, Nobu, Hayley, and Stella are reacting to Children of Men and this movie is honestly heartbreaking! Enjoy this first time watching Sci-fi movies reaction to Children of Men
#firsttimereaction #monstermovies #childrenofmen #monstermovie #annihilation #sciencefiction #scifimovies #firsttimewatching #moviereaction #moviecommentary #oceanmonsters #horrormoviepodcast
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  • @whitenoisereacts
    @whitenoisereacts9 ай бұрын

    Sorry, I've been super sick (James), uploads will resume as best as possible this coming week!

  • @EChacon

    @EChacon

    9 ай бұрын

    Sorry to hear that and that would partly explain why your Animator Reacts of the Hobbit and your Rise of the Beasts reactions were suddenly delayed this week. Hope you feel better.

  • @EChacon

    @EChacon

    9 ай бұрын

    Also depending on next week’s film following _Children of Men_ I would highly recommend that after that film, all four of you will react to other different films outside of the Science Fiction and Godzilla/Monster/Kaiju films every Thursday such as those of the Horror, Comedy, Drama, Fantasy and Action genres like The _Kingsman_ films, _Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, Scott Pilgrim, Stardust, Van Helsing, The Mummy films, Star Wars, Indiana Jones,_ a Horror movie _(Happy Death Day, Five Nights at Freddy’s,_ etc.), _Arachnophobia, Barbie_ etc. Because you’ve been reacting to Science Fiction films for 6-7 months and eventually it can get repetitive being stuck to reacting to one film genre (Science Fiction) every Thursday and I always would like to see you expand your horizons and reacting to different movies that you’re missing out on and make the Thursday reactions feel new and to add variety, considering your reactions to _2001: A Space Odyssey, Meg 2: The Trench_ and _Annihilation_ are earning a lot less views than your previous group reactions.

  • @elindayana8174

    @elindayana8174

    9 ай бұрын

    PLEASE REACT TO THE THREE MOVIES OF "ARTHUR AND THE INVISIBLES"!!! 😊💖🔥

  • @esaedvik

    @esaedvik

    9 ай бұрын

    Speedy recovery!

  • @christophertoledo5161

    @christophertoledo5161

    9 ай бұрын

    Pretty soon it might happen or not in future timeline 2027 but it just movie might not happen else no matter And you should watched 2012-Greenland pretty cool

  • @WrathOfGrapesN7
    @WrathOfGrapesN79 ай бұрын

    It's a crime that this movie isn't well known, because it's so good.

  • @geneticjen9312

    @geneticjen9312

    9 ай бұрын

    I mean... it's a Cuarón film with huge actors that received critical and casual acclaim at release, making lots of money and winning awards. It's definitely well known

  • @rasmuspedersen3563

    @rasmuspedersen3563

    9 ай бұрын

    What? Everyone i know knows this movie xD

  • @rowaystarco

    @rowaystarco

    9 ай бұрын

    It didn't make lots of money at the box office, it actually didn't make back the money in the cinemas. But it did absolutely get critical acclaim, well deserved. And luckily the author of the book also liked the film.@@geneticjen9312

  • @t0dd000

    @t0dd000

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@geneticjen9312I came here to state essentially this.

  • @charleshartley9597

    @charleshartley9597

    9 ай бұрын

    Agreed, this movie is so impactful. The novel is amazing as well!

  • @hendrsb33
    @hendrsb339 ай бұрын

    The scene where Theo and Kee exit the building with the baby... and the battle stops... everyone is transfixed at the realization of an actual baby... then chaos resumes... is one of the most powerful moments in any movie. It never ceases to make me emotional.

  • @dylandaly2002

    @dylandaly2002

    9 ай бұрын

    Goosebumps and Chills all around

  • @RenegadeReplicant

    @RenegadeReplicant

    9 ай бұрын

    It makes me cry every single time and I'm not a big movie crier.

  • @AutoAlligator

    @AutoAlligator

    9 ай бұрын

    I'm a grumpy middle-aged man and it makes me tear up.

  • @juanitaschlink2028

    @juanitaschlink2028

    9 ай бұрын

    It's visual poetry

  • @Kittinlil

    @Kittinlil

    7 ай бұрын

    Agreed that scene the reverence shown to the baby was amazing, made my heart stop.

  • @LeonardoKlotz
    @LeonardoKlotz9 ай бұрын

    Alfonso Cuaron did right leaving Harry Potter after the 3rd movie. Usually when you see a small budget director going from small budget to big budget, he usually wants to stay in the big budget territory, sometimes making sequels or similar movies. Cuaron avoided that, and instead used his experience on big budget movies to explore other genres and try different things. I love a director that explores different genres. Is usually what leads to a lasting career

  • @KingApeiron

    @KingApeiron

    9 ай бұрын

    Direct the best movie in the series and get out. Smart man.

  • @jaelynn7575

    @jaelynn7575

    7 ай бұрын

    Google will tell you he left for different reasons.

  • @Justin_Leone

    @Justin_Leone

    5 ай бұрын

    Supposedly it wasn't a choice not to do more, it was simply that the HP franchise churned out so many movies at such a rapid pace (which is necessary if you don't want all your child stars to age out of their roles) that he felt like he wouldn't have been able to finish his work on it before he'd have needed to start on the next one. Perhaps he was a bit more meticulous than David Yates, who managed to direct four of them back to back.

  • @eschiedler
    @eschiedler9 ай бұрын

    FYI the main actor Clive Owen is also exceptional in "Inside Man" by Spike Lee is well known but that should get more attention.

  • @spencerarnold669

    @spencerarnold669

    9 ай бұрын

    great film

  • @TheJerbol

    @TheJerbol

    9 ай бұрын

    Extremely fun heist movie

  • @kingofbudokai

    @kingofbudokai

    9 ай бұрын

    He's also King Arthur in my favorite adaptation of that myth.

  • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192

    @goldenageofdinosaurs7192

    9 ай бұрын

    @@kingofbudokaiHe’s great with Jude Law, Natalie Portman & Julia Roberts in a movie (based on a play), called Closer..

  • @lp6687

    @lp6687

    9 ай бұрын

    Shoot em up was a fun movie with him too

  • @EChacon
    @EChacon9 ай бұрын

    Without a doubt one of Alfonso Cuarón’s best and his most intense, serious and Heartbreaking films to date, even I got both emotional and terrified of this film due to the film’s portrayal of the collapse of Human Civilization due to decades of infertility, the violence, and the Police Brutality State the film is set in. I think massive credit goes to the cinematography of this film done by Emanuel Lubezki cause I was very impressed how he did the Long Shots of the Fishes attacking the group and killing Julian, and Theo rescuing Kee from the chaos and firearms of the British Army and civilians on the streets and abandoned building which sort of reminds me of a Documentary shot. And while the film didn’t win the Oscar for Cinematography at the 79th Academy Awards, Lubezki would eventually win the Oscar 3 years in a row for _Gravity_ (also by Alfonso Cuarón), _Birdman_ and _The Revenant_ (all two directed by Alejandro G. Igñarritu).

  • @SCharlesDennicon

    @SCharlesDennicon

    9 ай бұрын

    The fact that they didn't talk once about the directing and the photography during their reaction, at least the YT cut, was baffling. I know they're not professionals, but damn.

  • @brianamills6440
    @brianamills64409 ай бұрын

    Im so glad y’all did this reaction. This is one of the most underrated movies ever. Filmmaking alone makes it better than most. I was a teen when I first saw this and it scared me in ways that traditional horror didn’t. The rawness of the film and how bleak everything felt from beginning to end… the rioting, the executions, the destruction, and even the greyish-blue color grading just evoked sadness, fear and despair. Excellent movie.

  • @charlize1253

    @charlize1253

    9 ай бұрын

    The most terrifying movies aren't about aliens or demons -- the scariest ones are the ones that could actually happen in real life, and the way the people react as civilization falls apart in this movie feels so real. The devil isn't nearly as scary as people are

  • @t0dd000

    @t0dd000

    9 ай бұрын

    It's not in any way underrated. Heh.

  • @secularmonk5176

    @secularmonk5176

    9 ай бұрын

    The context of when this movie came out is important. This movie is playing on all the anxiety, anger and angst that was swirling in the population due to the "War on Terror" after 9/11 and the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq ... plus, climate change ("An Inconvenient Truth" etc.) And when Michael Caine's character mentions a "flu pandemic" ... SARS (the older brother of Covid) was a big worry in the news, too. Huge mortality rate if you caught it, but it turned out it wasn't very contagious. In general, everyone was processing how sucky the first decade of the 21st Century was playing out, when the 2000s had been shorthand for "the bright future" since my childhood in the 1970s. And this was before the 2008 housing crash!

  • @cassu6

    @cassu6

    9 ай бұрын

    @@t0dd000 I think it is underrated for what it is. It's a brilliant movie that usually isn't listed amongst other such films.

  • @b00jen81

    @b00jen81

    9 ай бұрын

    @@t0dd000 Unfortunately it is underrated in that it is has never achieved the widely known status or accolades that it deserves.

  • @Mangolite
    @Mangolite9 ай бұрын

    "Children of Men," based on P. D. James' 1992 novel of the same name, draws inspiration from her Christian beliefs. The narrative is profoundly influenced by the Nativity story of Christ's birth. In this allegory, Theo represents Joseph, and Kee portrays Mary, expecting a child. They embark on a lengthy journey to Bethelhem and eventually give birth in a manger due to the lack of room at the inn. Interestingly, all the animals show a fondness for Theo, akin to the animals surrounding the birth of Jesus. Thus, what may initially seem like a bleak and depressing movie is, in fact, a tale of hope and life affirmation, centered around the miraculous birth of a single child.

  • @Martonesdef

    @Martonesdef

    9 ай бұрын

    I guess I'll be looking for this book now 😅

  • @RyanMWilliams

    @RyanMWilliams

    9 ай бұрын

    It's also just a reminder about how much we take for granted.

  • @swish007

    @swish007

    9 ай бұрын

    that makes sense because Theo's character is the epitome of a "peaceful protector." he never once uses or even picks up a gun.. he's constantly hobbled without proper shoes.. he is calm and purposeful in the midst of chaos. I love his character arc too. it starts with him being useless and self-absorbed.. and gradually his motivations become more and more selfless and noble.

  • @bigmikem1578

    @bigmikem1578

    9 ай бұрын

    Not to mention “Son of man” as one of Jesus names.

  • @BBlack70

    @BBlack70

    9 ай бұрын

    Ive watched this movie like 20 times and today is the first time i noticed Clive Owens shoes problem during the movie. Im dumb.

  • @triggerd0wngames611
    @triggerd0wngames6119 ай бұрын

    This movie doesn't get enough credit the emotion I feel when Theo & Kee exit the apartment surrounded by the military always gets me.

  • @TheTomt50
    @TheTomt509 ай бұрын

    The pig was a major prop for Pink Floyd since it's appearance on the cover of their album, "Animals." Much like this movie, it was based on George Orwell's fable, "Animal Farm."

  • @heyheyjk-la
    @heyheyjk-la9 ай бұрын

    One of the greatest sci-fi films ever, and especially in this century. Those super long intricate takes were insane and took forever to choreograph. It was definitey a surprise that none of you had actually seen it, but made for a great reaction.

  • @spencerarnold669
    @spencerarnold6699 ай бұрын

    The inflatable pig is a reference to a Pink Floyd album cover with was taken at Battersea Power Station (which was the same HQ building they visited )

  • @spencerarnold669

    @spencerarnold669

    9 ай бұрын

    Also when you said the soundtrack was perfect, that was King Crimson - Court of the Crimson King (I'm assuming you don't know obscure english 70's prog rock)

  • @MagicMarmalade-kv5hr

    @MagicMarmalade-kv5hr

    9 ай бұрын

    And as well as Michaelangelo's David bring in the hall when they enter, they are having dinner in front of paid Picasso's Guernica painting, which has a historical reference of it's own... Although it has come to be emblematic of the horrors of war (this painting currently resides in the united nations building). The more subtle genius moment is having Michael Caine play as an ageing nineties cultural relic, much like the stereotype of the ageing 60s hippie, except here, they've thought about someone of that generation bring old but still being tied to the music and culture of his time.... Sorry to say guys, but you too will get old too one day, and have you considered if you will be dressing in the clothes of this, your hey day, and listening to the same music then, when you are old and grey, as you do now? ... Something to ponder😊 ...... At any rate, I think this is the first time in movies that I've seen anyone consider this particular point. ...

  • @spencerarnold669

    @spencerarnold669

    9 ай бұрын

    Although knowing that the Victoria and Albert museum has a plaster copy of David and the fact its just over the river..... I bet its not the real David haha @@MagicMarmalade-kv5hr

  • @EChacon
    @EChacon9 ай бұрын

    Theo’s death at the end of the film represents the end of the old human society, Kee and the Baby Girl (Dylan) represents the hope and future of a new society different from the War-Torn terror and collapse from the old society.

  • @charlize1253

    @charlize1253

    9 ай бұрын

    Hence the reason why the boat is named "Tomorrow"

  • @runawaytrain9794
    @runawaytrain97949 ай бұрын

    The big ballooned floating pig and the adjacent building are an homage to "Animals", the dystopian-themed album from Pink Floyd. The album BTW sold 4 million copies in the US alone, and that's nothing to sneeze at. Check out the album cover online for an image comparison to the film. Great reaction and analysis from you guys. Cheers.

  • @grandfathergeek
    @grandfathergeek9 ай бұрын

    not too many recently made movies require that I use the term classic when I describe them, but this one demands it. It makes you think about things that you don’t want to think about.

  • @boqndimitrov8693

    @boqndimitrov8693

    9 ай бұрын

    that's right.

  • @batbrick3949
    @batbrick39499 ай бұрын

    When Clive knocked out the guy at the door, would that be considered assault and “battery”?

  • @tinahastie

    @tinahastie

    9 ай бұрын

    Hahahaha 😂

  • @Daniel_Soto

    @Daniel_Soto

    9 ай бұрын

    Lol

  • @TheJerbol

    @TheJerbol

    9 ай бұрын

    Assault and battery _with_ battery

  • @NiersFloater

    @NiersFloater

    9 ай бұрын

    Na, since this guy ment to kill Theo a good lawyer would plead in self defence.

  • @gustonzimasheen

    @gustonzimasheen

    9 ай бұрын

    @@NiersFloater Yeah, definitely all charges would be dropped

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq9 ай бұрын

    I remember watching this film for my Social Studies class, and really being impressed by the long shot of the attack in the car. It places you in the same position as the characters, wishing that you could flee the horrors, but being unable to.

  • @charlize1253

    @charlize1253

    9 ай бұрын

    The climactic riot/combat/rescue scene was staged as one twelve-minute long take with no camera cuts -- crowds, tanks, bazookas, explosions, and all. The camera follows Theo as he makes his way through an urban war zone to rescue Kee and the baby

  • @citizensunitednegatingtech9783

    @citizensunitednegatingtech9783

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@charlize1253BEST ONE TAKE EVER , REAL OR NOT , NONE CONE ANYWHERE CLOSE

  • @rowaystarco

    @rowaystarco

    9 ай бұрын

    The craziest is how the actors had to move around to avoid the camera that moved inside of the car/above them. The behind the scenes stuff is pretty cool.

  • @louisenglish8069

    @louisenglish8069

    9 ай бұрын

    NOBODY mentioned the pov nor the one take. Unreal.

  • @ssotkow

    @ssotkow

    9 ай бұрын

    One take action sequences of films, more popular today, were pioneered by films like this one 23 years ago @@louisenglish8069

  • @dcamaraman939
    @dcamaraman9399 ай бұрын

    I love distopian movies that are odly more optimistic and hopeful than the DISNEY / positive " you can do it " , mentality.

  • @tezster0
    @tezster09 ай бұрын

    I really love this movie - I'm not going to say it's underrated, because it's received a lot of praise, but I do feel that it's overlooked in terms of not being a movie the general public is familiar with.

  • @dunbardunelm3924

    @dunbardunelm3924

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes, overlooked.

  • @cassu6

    @cassu6

    9 ай бұрын

    Definitely a good way to put it! It wasn't that long ago I was exposed to this movie, and it really has become one of my all time favorites. Just so well made

  • @GanciEnglishIdioms

    @GanciEnglishIdioms

    6 ай бұрын

    It took a while, but in 2015, the film was named number one on an all-time Top 10 Movies list by the blog Pop Culture Philosopher. In 2017, Rolling Stone magazine ranked Children of Men as the best Sci-fi film of the 21st century.

  • @dunbardunelm3924
    @dunbardunelm39249 ай бұрын

    I'd forgotten how deep this movie was; I'm so glad I clicked on this reaction. I re-watched Gattaca again this month too so clearly I'm in a reflective mindset. Clive Owen has always chosen (or chooses) interesting roles; such an underrated actor. Well done you guys though; it's like sitting and watching movies with new (and younger) friends lol x

  • @jaelynn7575

    @jaelynn7575

    7 ай бұрын

    Have you seen Croupier? He's really good in that. Only found it about 5 years ago myself and am an avid movie fan.

  • @SadPeterPan1977
    @SadPeterPan19779 ай бұрын

    One of my top 5 movies of the 2000s.

  • @PrinceofArfon
    @PrinceofArfon9 ай бұрын

    When this movie ended, I sat at home for a long time just…feeling all the feelings. I was home alone, and walked slowly around the house letting everything sink in. I wasn’t happy, but I was glad I’d seen the movie. And the ending is hopeful. But it makes you think of how often hope comes with great sacrifice. Theo is one of the most heroic protagonists in recent cinema because he’s so clearly a regular guy, scared out of his mind, but he dedicated himself to another’s wellbeing and has no bitterness about sacrificing himself for a mother and child. Comparing Theo’s hope to the Fishes, it’s like what we say in Christianity: many religious leaders are willing to kill in the name of saving you, but Jesus was willing to die to save you. It’s no accident that our protagonist is named Theo Faron. Theo means god and Faron means lighthouse. Theo acts as a symbolic Christ-figure, and as the lighthouse which guides Kee to a safe port. And Kee is the “key” to the future of humanity. I’m so glad the film ends with the laughter of children.

  • @tomlewis7898

    @tomlewis7898

    Ай бұрын

    great comment man

  • @CSC52698
    @CSC526989 ай бұрын

    Watching the birth scene was emotional because I believe Theo had regained faith in everything at that point as well. It was a powerful moment.

  • @rowaystarco
    @rowaystarco9 ай бұрын

    This movie (and the book I guess) served as one of the inspirations for The Last of Us. There's a lot of similarities between this film and the first game. Theo and Joel are both bitter old men, that lost their kid and gave up their hope for humanity. But during their journey, they regain hope and find something to fight for again.

  • @TahoeNevada

    @TahoeNevada

    9 ай бұрын

    Came here to say just this

  • @lowserver2

    @lowserver2

    7 ай бұрын

    the whole setting seems like its been copied and pasted from this, lmfao. Even to the point of the guerrillas and the girl protagonist dying early

  • @rowaystarco

    @rowaystarco

    7 ай бұрын

    Both Children of men and The road served as inspiration for The last of us. It's quite similar, but that's great. Not a bad idea to get inspiration from great stories.@@lowserver2

  • @Ykoz2016
    @Ykoz20169 ай бұрын

    I think for younger people, they see this movie, and it just looks like a movie. A GOOD movie, but a movie. Similar to things they’ve seen before. Because they don’t have the context. But when it came out this movie was INCREDIBLY ahead of its time. The continuous shots, the “first person shooter” way of following a single character through a battlefield. No cut aways, no wide shots. The intimacy of it that mimicked the experiences of following a character through a novel (the way this was adapted from a book). I won’t say it hadn’t been done before but it was all so NEW. I can see 1917 and some of the most popular scenes from the final years of GOT in this movie. And the dystopian future! The book is from 1992, the movie 2006. But it holds up. The look, the predictions, the WAY society breaks down. When you see movies made in the past about the future it usually looks off or cheesey or cartoonish. But this holds up. This movie is 17 years old and it looks like it could be made today. I think that alone is SO impressive 👏

  • @OrangePony75

    @OrangePony75

    9 ай бұрын

    I’d give young people watching this movie a chance. Let them see the context, a bit of cinema history by their own. Like any great work of art, Children of Men will endure the test of time.

  • @Alexanderthegreat159
    @Alexanderthegreat1599 ай бұрын

    34:00 yeah by the time my cousin got to the hospital she had her baby 20 minutes later. So with how long this girl was having contractions and stuff it's honestly entirely possible. Of course some people aren't so lucky. It took 24 hours for my mom to have me.😅

  • @tinahastie

    @tinahastie

    9 ай бұрын

    Wow, 20 minutes! That's amazing! Often just the pushing part can take a few hours 😵‍💫

  • @UberNoodle
    @UberNoodle9 ай бұрын

    The film is full of incredible cinematography and many long takes, but of course, the sequence in the car and then at the end during the siege, are all amazing. And the way they did the car scene is really incredible. I mean obviously it's incredible how they did the whole film.

  • @UltraHD.7
    @UltraHD.79 ай бұрын

    Absolutely one of my most favorite movies ever. Depressing and heartbreaking from start to finish,, but yet, there's still hope. That scene, when she carries the baby out of the building, the fighting stops and everyone is in awe... that is almost biblical. And though it's a futuristic dystopia, it somehow feels so real. The action scenes are so fantastic, you feel you're almost in there.

  • @EChacon
    @EChacon9 ай бұрын

    I notice that there is hardly *ANY* music utilized in this film, just ambient noises and violent brutality on the streets and Britain’s countryside, but the only time that music was used were in the emotional scenes of Julian and Jasper’s death and when Theo and Kee with her baby exit the building and done by a heavenly choir.

  • @kevin982
    @kevin9829 ай бұрын

    It's been years since I have seen this movie. I am a big fan of Clive Owen.

  • @martinblevin5587
    @martinblevin55879 ай бұрын

    For some reason, the blood on the lens of the camera during the battle sequence always draws me deeper into that moment. Fantastic.

  • @scottn.4865
    @scottn.48659 ай бұрын

    Very good morning to watch.

  • @ChefNourhan
    @ChefNourhan9 ай бұрын

    Bazooka is definitely a unisex name lol!

  • @jeffnicholson2074
    @jeffnicholson20749 ай бұрын

    You don’t know Clive Owen? Hollywood’s been trying to make him a star for years, but somehow nothing he’s been in has taken off. He is Arthur in King Arthur with Keira Knightley. Has a key role in Sin City. Done some Guy Ritchie stuff. I’m sure I’m forgetting something significant.

  • @tatianaferreira5998
    @tatianaferreira59989 ай бұрын

    "woke up, felt like shit. Went to work, felt like shit." - Adult Life.

  • @charlize1253
    @charlize12539 ай бұрын

    The climactic riot/combat/rescue scene was staged as one twelve-minute long take with no camera cuts -- crowds, tanks, bazookas, explosions, and all. The camera follows Theo as he makes his way through an urban war zone to rescue Kee and the baby

  • @alharairah2214

    @alharairah2214

    9 ай бұрын

    Yep, you can see the blood splatter on the camera lens from Theo outside the besieged building to within

  • @jackal59

    @jackal59

    9 ай бұрын

    Except that it really wasn't shot as a continuous take but as multiple takes stitched together.

  • @richardadesmond
    @richardadesmond9 ай бұрын

    You guys, Shan, and TBR Schmitt are my favourite reactors. The top tier, quality watch along folk. Thank you. What I love about this movie is, it does not pull it's punches, it really does put the characters in the worst situation. Gripping till the very sad end.

  • @ChefNourhan
    @ChefNourhan9 ай бұрын

    One of the most well executed films very powerful and heartbreaking

  • @EChacon
    @EChacon9 ай бұрын

    I can’t help that you notice my mention of _Children of Men_ on a reply I made during the _War of the Worlds_ livestream reaction which led you to decide to react to this film. Even the scene with the Fishes attacking the car in the woods and killing Julian felt very reminiscent to the scene from _War of the Worlds_ where the large crowd started swarming and attacking the car where Ray and his Children (Rachel and Robbie) are in. Granted now while both scenes are portrayed differently where one was an ambush orchestrated by Luke to become leader of the Fishes and using Kee’s Baby for political reasons, while the scene in _War of the Worlds_ was due to the desperate crowd in need of a ride/transportation to avoid the Tripods from the alien invasion, what all two have in common was how violent and monstrous humans can become due to the collapse of society and/or desperation of finding something during an apocalypse which I find more terrifying than any horror movie monster/alien or an alien invasion in general.

  • @Martonesdef
    @Martonesdef9 ай бұрын

    Man, THIS was a treasure. I found out about this movie in 2018 and was blown away. How did you guys find this one? Doesn't matter, thank you for reacting! ❤

  • @gluuuuue
    @gluuuuue9 ай бұрын

    Clive Owen gives great performances in every role he does and it's criminal for movie fans of any sort to not know or recognize him at all. You'll generally recognize his distinctive baritone voice when he shows up. He was considered for, and I think even offered, becoming the next James Bond back in the earl 2000s and turned it down not wanting to be typecast, which seems impossible. (He did take a role referencing/spoofing that where he played a gentleman spy, in a Jackie Chan film, I think.) I'd say Theo's character journey and arc is, like much of the setting itself as well as the infertility "apocalypse", symbolic of what humankind has brought upon itself (the causes of which aren't explicitly known) whether for how it has treated the earth, other people (as seen in the refugee camps), etc. I think we're meant to experience the violence towards the end of the film as viscerally as possible because it's our own self-inflicted self destruction. Theo is an Everyman. His journey is a sort of redemption/atonement for humanity's sins against and toward itself, and his death is the bookend to shepherding new life and hope for something potentially optimistic, as the sacrifice parents make for their kids, and the generations of the parents make (or will have to make) to give even a chance to generations of the future. It's an interesting creative choice to not tell us whether or not the Human Project is real, whether or not the Tomorrow will really be there, whether or not they're even truly Good Guys. I interpreted that as kinda symbolizing the reality that parents often won't know if their kids will make it afterward and that there often aren't any assurances they'll grow up or get to live the lives we want for them, have the opportunities we wish they could have, any of it. They have to do their best, on faith in a sense and hope they did enough for their own peace.

  • @boqndimitrov8693

    @boqndimitrov8693

    9 ай бұрын

    they are young, no wonder they didn't recognize him.

  • @saltyhero8698
    @saltyhero86989 ай бұрын

    So glad you guys did this movie! Keep it up!

  • @JoyfulOrb
    @JoyfulOrb9 ай бұрын

    The casting in this is Phenomenal. Every single character with lines is a brilliant actor in their own right! Also, hearing Industrial Music as something back in the day, before dubstep, was a punch in the face to this 42-year-old Goth! Oof, guys, time travel hurts! When this movie was set in 2009, I was 28!

  • @KingPleaseMusic

    @KingPleaseMusic

    8 ай бұрын

    that hurt me too lol

  • @robertscrimgeour3511
    @robertscrimgeour35119 ай бұрын

    As far as short births go, from the first contraction to my first breath was around 3 hours. My brother was not so easy, he also decided to be breach too.

  • @zybch

    @zybch

    9 ай бұрын

    My best friend's labor was only about 4 hours. She doesn't know how amazingly lucky she was even though it was around 3 weeks prem lol

  • @rowaystarco

    @rowaystarco

    9 ай бұрын

    There's examples of women that have suddenly given birth, without knowing they were pregnant as well. Very rare of course, but it has happened. I recall reading about a young woman that got shocked because she suddenly gave birth while sitting on a toilet. @@zybch

  • @LadyBeyondTheWall

    @LadyBeyondTheWall

    9 ай бұрын

    From the time my water broke to the birth of my daughter was only about 2 1/2 hours! She almost came out in the waiting room where they check to see how far you're dilated. My mom was with me and the nurses were checking on another woman in the room and I told my mom I felt like I had to push. They had to rush me into an actual room, lol. She was my first and the nurses just kept telling me how lucky I was. The only bad thing was I had originally wanted drugs to get through it, but she came so fast that they couldn't give me ANYTHING.. so I had to do a natural birth even though I definitely had not planned to do it that way!

  • @Musabre
    @Musabre9 ай бұрын

    That scene-change moment at 39:00 with the music sting was absolutely terrifying on the big screen, you knew what was coming next was going to be a nightmare. I was loving every minute of it, but my partner at the time was shitting bricks the entire movie, she wanted to leave so many times but i convinced her to stick it through haha. This movie just hit different with women i think, at least i've been told by some that the concept of the movie is horrifying for a mother or /to-be. Doesn't help that it was filmed in such a gritty and realistic way, it comes across as so plausible. Classic, worth revisiting every now and then, and i'd argue one of Clive Owen's best roles.

  • @JonInCanada1
    @JonInCanada19 ай бұрын

    Few films truly deserve the following description, but Children of Men does and that description is Masterpiece.

  • @kpcallahan
    @kpcallahan9 ай бұрын

    The pig and the power station in the background was an homage to Pink Floyd and their seminal "Animals" album - and yes, Alfonso Curon does not like explanatory exposition, he likes the viewer to make inferences on their own based on what's happening. This movie is, perhaps, the greatest film made in the past 23 years. It is resplendent in the sorrow, fear, and hopelessness that comes from a world without children, a world without a future. In our day-to-day lives, no matter what happens or how bad things seem - there is always an underlying hope that things will get better and that our children will do better than we did. What happens to humanity when that underlying hope is taken away? Well, Curon immerses us in that world - a world of fear, bleakness, despondence, and emptiness. Theo is our lens to that world, a man who once thought informed activism could change the world, but was then broken when fate took his child from him - he is now a shell of himself in a world that has become utterly hopeless. We see the shattered world through his eyes and as the movie progresses, we see his hope slowly restored as he does all he can to help this girl and her unborn child. Even as he is dying, we can see the change in his demeanor, we see that his hope has been restored. Of course, Curon does not give us an epilogue, he leaves us with a sense of hope, but also with uncertainty as we don't really know what will happen to humanity - he asks us to believe, to have hope on our own without ever confirming it.

  • @vonhule
    @vonhule9 ай бұрын

    Truly a perfect film

  • @duncankushnir4855
    @duncankushnir48559 ай бұрын

    This movie make my heart turn. Amazing to see your reactions, this is one bit of dystopian stuff to put in the treasure box.

  • @vivacious_me
    @vivacious_me9 ай бұрын

    Such an underrated film ❤

  • @UberNoodle
    @UberNoodle9 ай бұрын

    I've always interpreted that the infertility was a consequence of our behaviour as a species on this planet. You see in the background shots of burnt livestock, which seems to indicate disease maybe even ecological collapse. And the huge amount of refugees is obviously for many reasons, but perhaps parts of the world have become unlivable or unsustainable. And there are species that will change their fertility based on environmental pressures in various ways. And infertility could have also been caused by other factors like pollution. There was also the mention of what was probably a serious influenza pandemic, which further contributes to the overall tone of ecological collapse prior to or simultaneous with societal collapse. I think the film implies that the infertility is related to that. It's a symptom of our existence. The film is a warning.

  • @FSquid
    @FSquid9 ай бұрын

    53:19 It was indeed a pig. It's from the cover of Pink Floyd's album Animals. It's a very iconic album cover that most people assume is a painting but is actually a photograph. That building that Theo goes to to pull some strings to get a pass isn't that guy's home. It's a conservation project where great works of art are being kept in the hopes that they be preserved should Britain fall but someone out there still survives. I guess they felt the pig from the cover was culturally significant enough to warrant preservation. Kind of an odd thing. You got Michelangelo's David, Picasso's Guernica and Pink Floyd's Pig.

  • @calanor4130
    @calanor41309 ай бұрын

    As others have mentioned, the flying pig is a reference to Pink Floyd. Another prog rock reference is when we hear _"The Court of the Crimson King"_ by King Crimson, taken off their debut album that is considered to be one of, if not _the_ first prog rock albums ever published. Superb film with a very raw vibe, it's one of my favourite dystopian films! Thanks for the reaction!

  • @erickknutz5599
    @erickknutz55999 ай бұрын

    Kinda surprised you don't know the Actor Clive Owen, he's been in many amazing movies. Not sure if it would be up your alley, but King Arthur (2004) is very underrated, and has a director you wouldn't expect at all... two other solid choices would be The International (2009) and Inside Man (2006).

  • @wilkesjournal

    @wilkesjournal

    9 ай бұрын

    Has a much smaller part in The Bourne Identity (2002), but is excellent in that too.

  • @KERRYPIKE
    @KERRYPIKE9 ай бұрын

    This movie really is heartbreaking.

  • @rasmuspedersen3563
    @rasmuspedersen35639 ай бұрын

    You guys should check out how they did that car scene when they get attacked and his wife dies. Its quite insane!

  • @TheNightBadger
    @TheNightBadger9 ай бұрын

    I feel really old, because it seems like yesterday this came out and got major praise and hype... yet has now seemingly been forgotten.

  • @surlycanadian
    @surlycanadian9 ай бұрын

    I struggle actually ranking my favourite movies when I’m just thinking about it but when someone asks me, I say Children of Men. I love this movie so much.

  • @Wang_Monkey
    @Wang_Monkey9 ай бұрын

    A powerful film! Great to see you guys reacting to it, doesn't get the attention it deserves... and filmed here in the UK! Oh and you guys should check out Sphere 1998, Sci-fi/Mystery/Horror another forgotten gem ;)

  • @thomasmartin8227
    @thomasmartin82279 ай бұрын

    For me, it was going into the prison. It brought to the forefront of my realization what refugees go through. I was stunned by this entire movie. Stunned, but I also love it. Thanks for watching it with us.

  • @Za11oy
    @Za11oy9 ай бұрын

    This movie is pretty exceptional, it never fails to get my emotions all over the place. The various facets it explore of how humanity face its slow death, the viciousness even when it's all pretty much completely pointless. The people that just cannot change their ways. My heart was in pieces and I got just so quiet the very first time that Miriam talk about how it all started in the hospital as pregnancies got more and more rare, all while they're standing in a long abandoned school. Just chills. The entire cinematography is top tier! I've seen the movie many, many time and I had noticed that the animals did love Theo, but you're right, it also quite special how much they do end up helping them. If you liked this movie, I cannot help but to suggest you to look up The Book of Eli. It's another post collapse movie that is quite good and it's got some very good cinematography of it's own. And you don't hear about it all that often!

  • @jasonmd2020
    @jasonmd20209 ай бұрын

    The floating pig is a reference to Pink Floyd. The did that to shoot an album cover. It famously got loose and floated around England. So it makes sense it'd be part of an art exhibit.

  • @MindfulMya
    @MindfulMya9 ай бұрын

    One of the best heartbreaking books to film. I loved both.

  • @ShiftyWolf117
    @ShiftyWolf1179 ай бұрын

    God that scene when they leave that building with the baby and all the soldiers stop is one of the most powerful scenes I've ever seen in a movie. I absolutely love this movie, its criminally underrated but absolutely loved by anyone that sees it.

  • @NZBigfoot
    @NZBigfoot9 ай бұрын

    There arent many perfect films, especially in this genre... and this one is one of them. Bleak, Depressing and brutal... but still complete art. Those long uncut takes really ramp the tension up. You also dont cut the cord straight away, since alot of the blood has to drain from the placenta into the baby.

  • @Marina-cq2yt
    @Marina-cq2yt9 ай бұрын

    I saw this movie very young. still one of my favorites! ❤

  • @angelabatiste446
    @angelabatiste4469 ай бұрын

    Thanks for this amazing reaction. This is one of the best movies that's been so underrated. It's a heavy movie, but so good. You can see why Julien entrusted Key to Theo's care. That's Clive Owen, by the way. This movie is one of my favorites.

  • @jazzychues
    @jazzychues9 ай бұрын

    I was just thinking about this movie yesterday, so i’m excited to watch this reaction! I was around 15 when this came out and it effected me a lot when i watched it then. Also i don’t know how it was allowed but we watched this in class in high school as well! And has discussions about it with the teacher etc.

  • @dancer004
    @dancer0049 ай бұрын

    I was in college when this came out and I remember watching it and it just sits with you. I don’t know how else to explain it but it for sure leaves a lasting impression. Now that I’m a mom and I watch it it’s pure anxiety for me. I just want to hold my babies (okay ones five but she’s still my baby) and keep them safe

  • @Zombiesnyder13
    @Zombiesnyder139 ай бұрын

    This movie is the closest thing to a modern Stanley Kubrick classic

  • @mralsal
    @mralsal9 ай бұрын

    I saw this film when it first came out in UK and told everyone to to see it. It is so real now as we in the UK are getting so many refugees coming across the Channel. I love this movie. More people should have and should watch it.

  • @Ceractucus
    @Ceractucus9 ай бұрын

    This movie floors me every time I watch it. It's painful to watch but I keep coming back. I guess mostly because I cannot get it out of my mind. The acting, direction and emotional texture are amazing.

  • @adamdavis9838
    @adamdavis98389 ай бұрын

    I was watching open mouthed when I first saw the exiting the hospital scene. It's one long uncut shot. So powerful. Imagine the minds of the people there. Full blown uprising, with the army unleashing superior firepower. Yet within it all, a baby, the first baby, in 18 years. And they are there to see it.

  • @NR-rv8rz
    @NR-rv8rz9 ай бұрын

    The giant pig balloon is a recreation of a Pink Floyd album cover. The cover was of the same building, then Battersea Power Station where Theo's cousin lived and Pink Floyd was playing as Theo arrived. The interior where Theo gets out of the car was film in the Tate Modern art museum across London.

  • @criss_x
    @criss_x8 ай бұрын

    Ah 2006, seeing this in theaters at 16, angst and anger at the bush administration crystallized by the emotions in this movie, 2016 hadn't happened yet. Good times.

  • @macgonzo
    @macgonzo9 ай бұрын

    Such a great film, it was a pleasure to enjoy it with you all. You all have to watch the making of, especially the car scene. I won't spoil it, you HAVE to watch it! The way they filmed it is so so smart.

  • @user-bk7cl4lc2h
    @user-bk7cl4lc2h9 ай бұрын

    Clive Owen does a lot of TV and stage work these days. Sin City and Shoot Em Up are a couple of others that he did. Blade Runner, Strange Days, Children of Men, Elysium. All some of my favs. If you wanna get real crazy throw in Johnny Mnemonic. It's Keanu Reeves hacker sci-fi before The Matrix.

  • @thecroft6070
    @thecroft60709 ай бұрын

    The scene with the inflatable pig is at Battersea Power Station, and while it's a reference to Pink Floyd's Animals album cover, it's probably also a reference to the seeming impossibility of the task, i.e. "pigs will fly"

  • @joshualore
    @joshualore4 ай бұрын

    Loved this reaction. What a great movie. Appreciated Stella's remarks about how Clive Owen's character played as a device to bring the viewer through the story. Great stuff all around

  • @AJafterhourz
    @AJafterhourz7 ай бұрын

    This movie had several long shots without any cut scenes. My favorite is towards the end where he enters the bus and the gun fire splatters blood on the camera lense, and it stays there as the scene goes on. Chilling.

  • @garth7816
    @garth78169 ай бұрын

    Based on the novel The Children of Men by the English crime fiction authoress PD James. The movie script only loosely follows the original plot of the book (where Theo used to be a Minister of the Ruling Council, his nemesis is the Warden of England and one-time step-brother) but both stories are haunting and powerful in their different ways.

  • @Escapee5931
    @Escapee59319 ай бұрын

    Great to see you all so invested in this movie!

  • @joshuayeager3686
    @joshuayeager36869 ай бұрын

    The greatest modern cinematic masterpiece ever

  • @StoneyHoliday
    @StoneyHoliday9 ай бұрын

    45:20 wow you're young. This movie got all the hype in the 2007 academy awards, was nominated for 3 of them and made Alfonso Cuaron famous.

  • @MatthiasAI
    @MatthiasAI7 ай бұрын

    I remember seeing Children of Men in theaters with a bunch of friends and it was a freakin amazing experience.. I remember we all just left the theater sniffling and didnt start talking for a good 20minutes just walking and ingesting the movie. Also the "probably more unknown heroes then known heroes" is the reason we have a communal "Tomb of the unknown soldier"

  • @sydney33thomas
    @sydney33thomas9 ай бұрын

    Guys, if you likes science fiction comedy/action movies, you should watch Galaxy Quest (1999) and The Fifth Element (by Luc Besson, in 1997)!

  • @CNTconnoisseur
    @CNTconnoisseur9 ай бұрын

    This is my favorite film of all time. I saw it when it first came out on DVD. I cry every time at the end. The "cry scene." I still tear up whenever I watch a reaction to this film. Every aspect of the filmmaking is astounding. This subject matter just chills me to the core.

  • @michaelkb8783
    @michaelkb87839 ай бұрын

    Great reaction. This is one of my favorite movies. I've seen it dozens of times. Y'all picked up on some things that took me multiple watches to notice - especially the animal stuff. Very nice insight. Cheers.

  • @frannydai
    @frannydai8 ай бұрын

    Loved your reaction to this one. You were so invested in the story and characters that it brought you together as a group.

  • @yzolakitchi
    @yzolakitchi9 ай бұрын

    So glad you watched this. Such an engrossing and at times horrifying "what if?" premise. Growing up in the UK, in school we were shown THREADS (1984) which similarly is very real and visceral. It depicts life in a town in England after a nuclear holocaust and how the world changes afterwards. No idea if you can get hold of it in the USA but like this, it is a super thought-provoking and gritty watch. An odd film to recommend, but one of those important ones, like this. Always appreciate your commentary and discussions. Looking forward to Gravity.

  • @shtface9637
    @shtface96378 күн бұрын

    It's an underrated movie. I was surprised like 10 years ago that no one was talking about it.

  • @pollyparrot9447
    @pollyparrot94479 ай бұрын

    I saw this in a cinema when it first came out. The elements that stuck with me were the realistically shambolic rebels, the scene of Miriam being led off to the refugee camp, and the dorkiest getaway ever. The religious undertone of the movie leaves me cold, but is true to P.D. James' novel. She said that she didn't set out to write a Christian fable, but that was how the book turned out.

  • @otterpoet
    @otterpoet3 ай бұрын

    Putting aside the incredible story, characters, and intensity of the film, the fact some of those extended shots are a single take boggles the mind. Ms. Moore discussed the incredible experience in the car-attack sequence, where literally the actors and the camera man had to work together - while performing - passing the camera around, constantly repositioning themselves to allow the camera to move between them, etc - all in a rapidly moving vehicle. One screw up and they had to reshoot. Which makes the final assault on the tenement building all the more impressive - Mr. Owen said he got closer to the cameraman than his costars because they were like brothers at arms, trying to get the perfect take.

  • @DavidAntrobus
    @DavidAntrobus7 ай бұрын

    Late to this as I only just discovered this channel, but I've loved this movie since it first came out and it makes me happy to see people discover it and appreciate its grim beauty, as you all did. Very quickly as I imagine others will have described some of this, but in the Ark of the Arts scene, the building his cousin lives in is the disused Battersea Power Station, an art deco London landmark beside the Thames, and itself a form of art. The balloon pig is a reference to the cover art for Pink Floyd's _Animals_ album. In the building, they've preserved some of the world's most valued art, including a damaged Michelangelo's David and Picasso's _Guernica_ (which is about war).

  • @maddwitch
    @maddwitch9 ай бұрын

    Clive Owen, Theo, is an underrated actor.

  • @edsp666
    @edsp6669 ай бұрын

    We watched this movie in school...definitely not a complaint, it was a good movie to show us, but needless to say we left school that day looking a little shell-shocked 😂

  • @chrisgriffin919
    @chrisgriffin9195 ай бұрын

    This movie is a straight up masterclass in filmmaking. One of my top three favorite films ever.

  • @oldcdog91
    @oldcdog918 ай бұрын

    Idk why I watch reactions to movies like this at work when I know I’ll be teary eyed by the end 🥲

  • @glennbotes8937
    @glennbotes89379 ай бұрын

    One of the top ten movies of the 21st century. Best movie of 2006. Even if the awards ceremonies didn't agree.

  • @jazzx251
    @jazzx2517 ай бұрын

    During Covid lockdown - I visited the supermarket (for "essential purposes only") for the first time ... There were arrows on the floor, and black and yellow tape everywhere. And signs telling me to stay 2 metres away from anybody else It felt like the end of the world. The first words out of my mouth were "This is just like Children of Men!" That's how great this movie is.

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