Maleeq

35 Pins
·
6mo
the man is riding his bike down the narrow alleyway with no one on it
The french dispatch/Owen Wilson
a woman sitting in front of a sandwich on a white plate with ketchup
We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011)
two men are taking pictures and one is holding a camera
Trainspotting
Atonement Movie, Cinematography Composition, Filmmaking Cinematography, Beautiful Cinematography, Filmmaking Inspiration, Atonement, Image Film, Cinema Photography, Movie Shots
an image of two women talking to each other in front of stairs and staircases
poor things
Movie/Series stills/collage/insta story inspo Name: Poor Things Director: Yorgos Lanthimos Release: 2023
two men are looking at each other in front of a clock
poison, 2023
two men in hospital gowns standing next to each other and one holding a book
a man sitting on top of a bench in front of a painting and another person standing next to him
a man standing in the middle of a wheat field
moonrise kingdom (2012)
the view through a pair of binoculars at an ocean
Filmmaking 101: Camera Shot Types
two hands on the handle bars of a bicycle
two people are sleeping on the couch and one is holding his head in his hands
Chunking Express
Chunking Express
two different pictures with people in the background and one has a sandwich on his plate
We Need Talk About Kevin Cinematography
four different shots of men in suits and ties playing cards at the same time,
Symmetry and Henry Sugar
the movie poster is shown in three different languages
We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011)
We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011) Director: Lynne Ramsay . "We Need to Talk About Kevin" isn’t just a story about a troubled child; it’s a haunting exploration of parental guilt and the silent judgment that shadows those who dare to question the nature of their own offspring. Eva's journey is less about understanding Kevin and more about coming to terms with the terror of realizing that sometimes, despite our best efforts, we cannot control or even fully know the ones we bring into the world. It’s a film that forces us to ask: When things go wrong, where does the blame truly lie?