Very similar themes and plot and ideas of Snowpiercer!
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CosimaValkyrie — 9 years ago(October 04, 2016 02:56 PM)
A few months late here, but just finished it so it's fresh in my mind. Very quickly residents seemed to lose their connection to the outside world: Wilder asking Laine for a ride because he doesn't know where he parked, but Laine says no because he doesn't know where he is either. Little things like that where peppered through the beginning.
A few things didn't really make sense to me, but I'm not worried about it. They're not plot holes. -
glass_hopper — 9 years ago(May 11, 2016 11:42 AM)
I posted this elsewhere but it fits the topic here too:
I've said it before in the past, but to me, this is nothing like Snowpiercer. On paper, a lot of people will make comparisons that this is like "Snowpiercer inside a building" but that's such a lazy comparison. First off, High-Rise does not seek a greater purpose like SP. It's a perverse, voyeuristic look at a microcosmic world that devalues order. The chaos never breaks outside its confines, like how SP ended up. The characters relish in anarchy. The characters in SP fight for change. High-Rise is satirical in its premise, whereas Snowpiercer is a straight forward dystopian.
"The dream is to keep surprising yourself, never mind the audience." - TH -
RolandDeschain1990 — 9 years ago(May 12, 2016 05:55 PM)
There's definitely a connection. Since the novel of High Rise was released decades before Snowpiercer, I'm sure the writer of Snowpiercer had that book in his mind. With the movies, it's the case of the inspired somehow coming ahead of the inspiration. Similar to how John Carter of Mars was stripped mined by seemingly every sci fi movie ever, leaving the movie feeling really trite and cliched.
And this feels to me like if David Cronenberg in the early 90s made Snowpiercer.
http://popculturallyinsensitive.com/author/tommylorenzo/ -
paula-gein — 9 years ago(May 13, 2016 08:31 PM)
And this feels to me like if David Cronenberg in the early 90s made Snowpiercer.
Which is funny because David Cronenberg (who, I'm sure you know, has always cited Ballard as an inspiration and adapted his novel Crash) released Shivers the same year that High Rise was published and there are definitely parallels between the two.
It rubs the butter on it's skin, y'all. -
RolandDeschain1990 — 9 years ago(May 14, 2016 07:46 AM)
Yeah, theres definitely alot of snake eating its own tail going on with this.
http://popculturallyinsensitive.com/author/tommylorenzo/ -
Holiday_Hobo — 9 years ago(May 17, 2016 01:06 AM)
The thing is that Snowpiercer was intelligent, funny, entertaining, and entirely coherent. High-Rise was none of those things. Well actually not entirely true. High-Rise was entertaining. Just not intelligent, funny or coherent.
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filmfancy — 9 years ago(October 05, 2016 05:37 PM)
Snowpiercer is decidedly more compelling and interesting.
Although I thought Snowpiercer got rather silly in the second half, I enjoyed it a lot more than High-Rise. The characters were more interesting and the plot was easier to follow. The characters here all seemed to blend together, especially the 'upper-class' ones. The only ones who stood out for me were Luke Evans and Jeremy Irons.
And all the pieces matter (The Wire) -
thebigmouth — 9 years ago(September 07, 2016 10:40 AM)
I had the same thought and found Snowpiercer to be a far superior film. In a weird way, I think the implausible post-apocalyptic setting of Snowpiercer actually worked in that film's favor. Because the premise was so ludicrous on its face, I was able to suspend disbelief from the start and give myself over completely to the allegory.
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