• Ladies and gentlemen,

    I have decided to write two completely different reviews for the same album for the very first time. The first review is a more traditional and serious review that exposes the record's strength and weaknesses. The second review is close to a theater play and focuses on a dialogue between two people who have quite opposite views. I hope you enjoy this little experiment of mine. Don't forget to check out the album as well!

    In Flames - Battles (2016)

    First review

    In Flames is without a doubt one of the most controversially discussed metal bands. The Swedish quintet has changed, finetuned and progressed its sound on each studio record and shifted away from melodic death metal to electronic alternative rock over the years. While many traditionalists see the band as traitors who are trying to be commercially successful by any means necessary, the group is still playing sold-out shows in front of several thousands of old and new fans alike. I have been a fan of all phases this band has gone through and thoroughly enjoyed each of the last three albums because they had consequent, diversified and energizing tracks that always offered something new.

    This isn’t the case on the band’s latest record Battles. It’s not a bad album by any means and on a purely subjective level I listen to this record quite regularly. From a more honest and objective point of view, one must admit that the band offers quantity instead of quality on Battles. Among the fourteen new tracks, only about half of them manage to stick out and offer something interesting. The other half is solid but ultimately exchangeable and repetitive at times. The band offers catchy electronic alternative rock with minor melodic death metal elements but a true evolution compared to the last effort that felt more courageous is missing here.

    The band convinces during its more concise tunes. The single ‘’The Truth’’ was controversially discussed because it is dominated by simple guitar riffs, rhythmic electronic elements that are almost danceable and a catchy and mellow chorus you won’t get out of your mind. The saccharine clean vocals and the juvenile anthemic backing vocals only add to the controversy. I really like this song because even experienced alternative rock and pop bands don’t come around with such a precise, melodic and addicting track all the time. The lyrics are also quite interesting and the lines ‘’We are the truth that hurts the most; it hurts when your denial’s exposed’’ might as well be addressed to the closed-minded traditionalists that have kept criticizing the group in a most nonconstructive way for far over one and a half decades by now. It fits that this message is delivered in the band’s most commercial track ever and that this song has been chosen as a single. This earworm is one of the few moments on the album where the band really takes some risks. Another great track is the other single ‘’The End’’ that convinces with a balanced mixture of a harsh vocals recalling the band’s roots, a melodic pre-chorus in the key of the group’s more recent material and a powerful chorus supported by a children’s choir that offers something completely new.

    This album also offers several songs where the band either rehashes ideas that have worked better in the past or where the group experiments in an unsuccessful way. An example for the first category is the uninspired power ballad ‘’Here Until Forever’’ that reminds of several mellower tracks on the last studio effort with calm verses and emotional choruses. This song doesn’t have the uplifting lyrics of ‘’Dead Eyes’’ or the emotionality of ‘’Paralyzed’’ though and sounds more like a pop punk ballad that could have been released by Blink-182 or Good Charlotte one and a half decades ago. The chugging ‘’Wallflower’’ falls into the second category with its overlong build-up and a total length above seven minutes. While previous epic tracks of the band such as the menacing ‘’Your Bedtime Story Is Scaring Everyone’’ or the emotionally driven ‘’The Chosen Pessimist’’ had a clear evolution from start to finish, ‘’Wallflower’’ disappoints with simplistic riffs, uninspired electronic background sounds, vocals that are more breathed than sung and weird atmospheric breaks that break the flow over and over again. All those elements are never going anywhere and dragging on for far too long.

    The main difference between Battles and Siren Charms is that the predecessor sounded dark, mysterious and pressured at times while the new album is more catchy, melodic and uplifting. One reason for this might be that the new album was recorded in California while the predecessor was made in Berlin. Since I usually prefer albums that are a rather dark, experimental and profound over more positive, traditional and repetitive efforts, it might not come as a surprise that I prefer Siren Charms over Battles.

    In the end, Battles is a good alternative rock record but only an average release in In Flames’ varied discography. Aside of this record’s more uplifting atmosphere, the band fails to explore new territories or to deliver a consistent return to something it had explored before in the different individual tunes. Overall, the record sounds like a mellower version of the group’s previous five studio outputs. Faithful fans should purchase the record while occasional fans can skip it without any regrets and traditional fans will still be stuck in the past and blindly despise the group’s new style anyway. 

    Rating: 3.5/5

    Second review

    This review is based upon true events. It focuses on the meeting of two metal fans named Willy Wrong and Rudy Right at their local HMV store in Montreal last week. They discussed In Flames’ controversial new record, the group’s debatable identity and the questionable evolution of the metal scene in general.

     

    WW: ‘’Man, don’t buy that record. In Flames really suck these days.’’

     

    RR: ‘’Oh, have you already listened to the album?’’

     

    WW: ‘’No way, I only listen to real metal music. I have heard that abysmal single ‘’The Truth’’ though. Boy, that one really sucks. It sounds like Muse or something like that.’’

     

    RR: ‘’Like Muse? That’s interesting. I like this band but didn’t realize the similarity. Which song or album of Muse did the song remind you of?’’

     

    WW: ‘’I don’t know, man. As I said, I only listen to metal music. I’ve read that comparison to Muse in a review. You know, In Flames sound like commercial radio rock these days. Some describe it as a mellow and modern version of Depeche Mode. And let me tell you that I really hate Depeche Mode.’’

     

    RR: ‘’That would be a big complement if it were true. Depeche Mode have revolutionized the music scene and are an outstanding group in my book. Personally, I think that the new single rather recalls bands like Thirty Seconds to Mars. The chorus might be somewhat saccharine, melodic and catchy but the verses are more guitar-driven and offer some great alternative rock.’’

     

    WW: ‘’Yeah, it’s too catchy for my taste. Like Lady Gaga or something like that.’’

     

    RR: ‘’Well, only few bands are able to write such a precise, melodic and addicting song. Even most commercial rock and pop bands don’t manage to be as memorable as In Flames. This song really is an earworm. Just like the other single ‘’The End’’ that offers a balanced mixture of harsher verses recalling the band’s roots, a melodic pre-chorus recalling the band’s more recent outputs and an uplifting chorus with a children’s choir that offers something new.’’

     

    WW: ‘’A children’s choir, huh? That fits, this kind of music is made for naïve teenagers who don’t really know what metal is. Metal music these days really sucks. I’m glad I grew up in the eighties and nineties.’’

     

    RR: ‘’Well, if teenagers discover the metal scene thanks to bands like In Flames, I don’t mind that at all. Everybody has to start somewhere and from that point of view In Flames are indeed quite good ambassadors of our scene. The same goes for groups like Five Finger Death Punch, Disturbed and Avenged Sevenfold.’’

     

    WW: ‘’Yeah, they all suck!’’

     

    RR: ‘’Have you actually listened to Avenged Sevenfold’s new album? It’s truly creative, intellectual and progressive and really goes away from the group’s metalcore roots.’’

     

    WW: ‘’No way, I only listen to real metal. Those kids don’t have a clue. Even if they claimed that the new In Flames were the best album of the year, I wouldn’t give a damn.’’

     

    RR: ‘’It actually isn’t the album of the year. The record sounds like a mellower version of the group’s five previous albums with a more uplifting atmosphere. The album has quite a few fillers with the exchangeable power ballad ‘’Here Until Forever’’ or the overlong ‘’Wallflower’’ that seems to go nowhere. But when the band delivers its catchy, concise and melodic tunes with a few new soundscapes, they hit really hard. The electronically driven and highly atmospheric opener ‘’Drained’’ has an absolutely irresistible melodic chorus for example and opens the album with a bang. Or let’s take the effect-ridden closer ‘’Save Me’’ that mixes the band’s melodic death metal roots with a harmonious and uplifting chorus for the ages. Other bands wish they wrote such an addicting song once in their career and in In Flames’ case this highlight isn’t even the lead single of the album. One might not like In Flames’ new commercial and mellow style but one can’t deny that it’s high quality song writing if you simply can’t forget a song after listening to it for the very first time.’’

     

    WW: ‘’Man, I hear you talking about catchy tunes, experimental soundscapes and power ballads. The metal scene doesn’t need that at all!’’

     

    RR: ‘’Any form of art evolves. Bands like In Flames actually rejuvenate a genre. This helps the scene to stay alive. I think metal music is even more creative, diversified and energizing than it was decades ago. There is something to find for every taste. I’m glad I didn’t grow up in the eighties and nineties. By the way, In Flames have never claimed to make metal music. They simply do what they like without any boundaries.’’

     

    WW: ‘’I see, you are like one of those gay teenagers that don’t have a clue about anything.’’

     

    RR: ‘’I’m not gay and I don’t see what someone’s sexual orientation would have to do with it.’’

     

    WW: ‘’Dude, I’m telling you. The eighties and nineties were the greatest decades for metal music. You’re only jealous you were still a kid back then and couldn’t see bands like In Flames in their prime. Back then, only real fans listened to metal music. We would skip classes and take a bus ride of two hours to get a new album. We would trade tapes in small fan clubs at the weekend. We would go to the airport to buy some of the few international metal magazines that existed back then to read some reviews about our favorite acts. These days, kids just download their music in a matter of seconds, go to international streaming websites and read exchangeable metal magazines on the internet.’’

     

    RR: ‘’I’m getting the impression that you are actually jealous of these kids because it’s easier these days to discover new music thanks to a globalized world, new technologies and social media. Most of these kids that you criticize probably know much more about metal music than you did at their age. It’s not because times have changed and because it’s easier to get information these days that fans back in the eighties were better than nowadays.’’

     

    WW: ‘’You have no clue about these things because you didn’t grow up in the eighties. You keep defending those kids and that commercial nonsense In Flames keep releasing. I’m getting the impression you aren’t a real metal fan either.’’

     

    RR: ‘’I have about seven hundred physical metal albums in my collection, I attend numerous concerts and festivals in different cities, states and countries each year and I have dozens of metal shirts and other memorabilia in my collection. Maybe that doesn’t mean a thing to you but I do identify with the metal scene these days as much as I did fifteen years ago.’’

     

    WW: ‘’Bands like In Flames are traitors. Their first four albums were awesome, their fifth was okay and then they decided to suck. I have tried out songs from their last seven albums and they all sucked.’’

     

    RR: “In Flames have pioneered and excelled in the melodic death metal genre during the first ten years of their career. They have progressively moved on, experimented and tried out new things over the past one and a half decades. I guess that’s better than keeping on releasing the same type of record over and over again without being able to reproduce the chemistry of the early years. If In Flames released a record that sounded like The Jester Race these days, people would rightfully call them fake and you would probably also complain and idolize the group’s early years anyway. In Flames have moved on. Why don’t you move on if you despise everything the group has released during the majority of its career?’’

     

    WW: ‘’You don’t even know how much this band once meant to me. Lunar Strain was the first album I bought with my pocket money. In Flames were the first big metal band that played a concert in my town. When the Jester Race was released, I hung out with my friends in a metal pub and we knew every song on that record by heart. I kissed my first girlfriend during the Whoracle release party in my metal pub. She was the hottest woman I’ve ever had. These days, everything is different. No metal band is coming to my town anymore. My old metal pub has become a discotheque. I haven’t seen my friends in years. My girlfriend back then left me for another dude with short hair who listened to Depeche Mode. Today, I’m married and I have two kids. My wife forced me to cut my hair and made me lose part of my identity. I had to sell my vinyl collection because there isn’t enough space for it in our house. My son listens to Drake and my daughter to Miley Cyrus. I haven’t attended a metal show in more than ten years. I’m so lonesome. My life has changed for the worse, just like In Flames! Boy, I miss those days.’’

     

    RR: Don’t cry, my friend. I know a great metal pub. Let’s go there and drink a beer. Just give me two minutes to buy the new In Flames record. It might not be the band’s best one but it’s still an above average alternative metal album. And a true fan has all the albums in his collection anyway, aren’t I right?’’ 

     

     

    Shortly after this conversation, Rudy Right invited Willy Wrong to a couple of pints in the local metal pub. Willy Wrong decided to make some changes in his life. He decided to let his hair grow again, discovered his children’s favorite music with an open mind and bought tickets for In Flames’ next concert for his whole family where they all had a great time.

     

    Final rating: 70%

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  • Pantommind – Searching For Eternity

    November 15, 2016 in Reviews by Sebastian Kluth

    PantommindPantommind – Searching For Eternity (2015)

    Reviewed by Sebastian Kluth

    Pantommind is one of my very favorite progressive metal bands of all time, and it’s a shame that the quintet never really got its international breakthrough. One reason for this might be that the band has only released three regular studio records over a career that started twenty-two years ago (under the Lavender Haze banner).

    Things might change soon however, since the band re-released previous records Shade of Fate (from 2005) and Lunasense (from 2009) in the form of an inexpensive dual digipack edition. These days, the band and its management have been putting a lot of effort into the promotion of third studio album, Searching For Eternity. Despite breaking for some time, the band had already worked out most songs for a third release, and after a lengthy but highly efficient maturation period of two years, the quintet finally recorded, mixed, and mastered a new record. This really shows how much these artists care about their music. This band might only have released three records in twenty two years, but each output is a quality, creative milestone of its genre. Searching For Eternity is worth the extended waiting period, and is on the same level of excellence as its predecessors. The overall sound of the album is comparable to the laid back feel of Shade Of Fate – which recalls progressive rock acts such as Pendragon and Yes – rather than to the more versatile and vivid Lunasense, which I feel is more inspired by progressive metal bands such as Fates Warning and Symphony X. Just to give you an idea of what to expect from this third record, I might point at the first three studio records and the first EP of Dream Theater as comparison points, or maybe the Chinese progressive rock band Mirage for a more recent example, though Pantommind indeed has a very unique sound. 

    Something I have always adored about this band is its sound, which is filled with mysterious atmospheres, profound soul, and appeasing warmth instead of focusing on lengthy tunes where each musician tries to show off his talent. The band really functions as a collective, even though each musician himself is technically outstanding. The calmer songs on this album are unbeatable. The uplifting “Moon Horizon” has a soothing sound crowned by a simple yet magical chorus you can’t get out of your head. There is no doubt that, for my taste, “Lost Lullaby” is one of the very best progressive metal ballads ever written. The relaxing keyboard, the gentle, harmonious acoustic guitar, the temperate, slow, and carefully employed electric guitar, and last but not least, the charming lead and uplifting backing vocals fuse in a simple, yet most enchanting way. “Down To The End” has a longing, melancholic, and mysterious tone as it starts with a wonderful combination of acoustic and electric guitars before crystal clear vocals take you on a hypnotizing journey. The song then takes on some speed and adds powerful riffs and versatile drumming. The perfectly integrated middle section features keyboard-driven symphonic fills and passionate guitar solos. As is the case for the very best of progressive metal ballads, the circle is closed when the last minute goes back to the soft acoustic guitar introduced in the overture. My favourite song, however, is the incredible title track “Searching for Eternity’’. It’s a slow- to mid-paced epic closer of nine minutes with warm acoustic guitar, longing, lightly distorted electric guitar, cryptically rumbling bass, smartly diverse percussion, and of course, uplifting vocals that entreat the listener to dream of a place far away. Even among the elevated number of fascinating progressive pearls from this band, the title track really stands out as one of their best ever, and is an example of a perfectly written genre song.

    Pantommind also offers some dynamic mid-tempo tracks, and this helps to deliver its most balanced record so far. I might point out the two collaborations on this album. Bonus track “Lost (Beautiful Life)” features former Pantommind guitarist and keyboardist Jiip Randam. While the main riff sounds a bit more clipped, a tad heavier, and slightly dystopian, the dreamy vocals and sensitive guitar solos add the warm signature sound of the quintet to the tune. The vivid “Walk On” features Swedish vocalist Michael Anderson of progressive metal act Cloudscape and heavy metal outfit Fullfore. His darker, lower, and slightly raspy vocals cooperate stunningly with Tony Ivan’s cleaner, more gracious style in an epic chorus that could find a home in an Activator or Ayreon album. Tony Ivan proves that he can employ more aggressive and strained vocals on his own in the fittingly tight opener “Not For Me”, which is probably the heaviest track on this release that reminds me a little bit of the Allen/Lande project.

    In the end, this perfectly balanced effort doesn’t include any fillers. Even the two instrumental tracks work well as interludes during this sixty-three minute metal gem: the faster, almost power metal-inspired “Hypnophobia” and its melancholy, neofolk-sounding slow motion counterpart “Heart”. As with all great progressive metal records, this release has both songs that leave an immediate deep impression (such as “Not For Me” and “Walk On”), and tracks that open up in all their beauty after several spins (“Searching For Eternity” and “Lost”). It’s the kind of inspiring record to completely escape from reality to for an hour. Despite its progressive and sophisticated style, this release sounds effortless and fluffy or dreamy in a positive way. As you might have realized by now, I consider this record to be a must-have for any progressive rock and metal fan, and a serious candidate for my album of the year of 2015.

    I can only solicit the five outstanding musicians from Gabrovo in Bulgaria to continue making this kind of music. Even if it takes them another decade to come around with another release, I’m confident that all of the reviewers and true fans are willing to wait. Since the band wisely reworked three outstanding songs from one of its three demos (recorded between 1996 and 2004) into this output, I would like to point out that many more comparale gems are hidden amongst these demos for the searching listener. Believe me, if you care for progressive rock or metal music at all, you just can’t miss out on Pantommind.

    4.75 // 5

     

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  • Blind Guardian – Beyond The Red Mirror

    November 11, 2016 in Reviews by Sebastian Kluth

    Blind Guardian 2015Blind Guardian – Beyond The Red Mirror (2015)

    Reviewed by Sebastian Kluth

    Blind Guardian’s tenth studio release Beyond The Red Mirror is not only another concept album, but also intended as a direct sequel to Imaginations From The Other Side, which came out twenty years earlier. Objectively, Imaginations was a popular record that revolutionized the power metal scene (and arguably the entire metal scene in general) due to its progressive mixture of crunching speed, epic power metal, and increasingly important orchestral elements at a time when heavy metal needed fresh influences to survive. Personally, that release is by far my favorite record from this band. Blind Guardian’s earlier records were a little too fast and simplistic for my tastes, while the later releases have felt more and more like overloaded headache symphonies to me. Imaginations From The Other Side had well-balanced production, creative and concise song writing, and featured amazing musicianship in all areas. I was curious to hear the band returning (at least in spirit) to this outstanding release after a wait of almost five years since the last regular studio output. 

    Overall, Beyond The Red Mirros really can’t contest the creativity, energy, and spirit of Imaginations From The Other Side. Still, there are a few positive aspects about this record. Blind Guardian slowed down the pace of its songs, which is a striking change. All tracks here are mid-tempo. This gives the huge emphasis on choirs and orchestration the occasion to integrate better into the band’s complex soundscapes. Hansi Kürsch’s unique vocals also get the chance to fully dominate. The album comes around with some more powerful choruses than the predecessors as a result. The first highlight of the album is the uplifting chorus of the single “Twilight Of The Gods”, which comes closest to the essence which made Imaginations so outstanding. In my opinion, the two bonus tracks for this album happen to be both its best and most interesting, so make sure to get the limited earbook edition or the Japanese version of this release if you decide to purchase it. “Distant Memories” is an appeasing ballad with reasonably employed orchestration, a few beautiful guitar melodies, and varied vocals that take their time unfolding throughout six magical minutes. “Doom” has an apocalyptic atmosphere which is shown through dark and calm passages in the beginning, then by more dramatic and faster sections that come back throughout the song.

    There are also many things wrong with this release. First of all, the production sounds clinical, powerless, and unbalanced. The guitar sound is not as gripping and dominant as usual, the drums sound distant, and the bass guitar is barely audible in many places. There are just too many unclean layers of loud “noise” stacked on top of each other, which harms the dynamic of the final product. Blind Guardian, in my opinion, should have chosen someone other than Charlie Bauerfeind as producer, and might ask their cross-genre colleagues from Dimmu Borgir, Epica, and Therion how to fuse classical and metal instrumentation in a coherent way. Another big problem is the song writing. The ambitious concept has become more important than the songs themselves. The band wants to tell an epic story, but focuses too much on the lyrics (which are also very repetitive, as you can already tell just by taking a look at the song titles). This is not just due to the fact that this record quotes Imaginations From The Other Side from time to time. The band wants to proudly show off its lyrical effusions without realizing that they are, in fact, one of the album’s main weaknesses, as they sound mildly amusing, peskily repetitive, sometimes nonsensical, and redundantly stereotypical. Apart from the three tracks mentioned above, all others end up sounding extremely similar. The constant overwhelming inclusion of digital orchestration, choirs, and strong, multi-tracked vocals takes up so much space that the core instrumentation has no real impact on the song writing whatsoever. These musicians are therefore essentially reduced to the role of session players, relegated to support. The transitions between the tracks are quite good, and different passages within individual songs sound fluid, but this only underlines the fact that one gets the impression of listening through the same boring symphony for almost a full hour. The longer tracks (between six minutes and nine and a half) especially lack focus, and are hard to sit through. They are not the kind of complex tracks that need some time to grow on you either. It’s not because these tracks are overloaded and overlong that they are progressive. Actually, they go straight nowhere most of the time.

    On Imaginations From The Other Side, each song felt creative, powerful, and outstanding, the mixture of genres was balanced and progressive, and the production was avant-garde, crystal clear, and has aged gracefully. Twenty years later, Beyond The Red Mirror offers tracks that sound elegiac, overambitious, and repetitive; a mixture of styles that feels one-dimensional, bloated, and tiring; and a production that comes across as loud, mushy, and uneven. Ironically, the bonus tracks are by far the best songs on the record, giving mixed hope for the band’s future. Blind Guardian still has a lot of talent, and the capacity to release another true symphonic metal milestone if can strip down its ridiculous mixture in the future. Blind Guardian needs to learn that sometimes less is more (as on A Twist In The Myth, perhaps), and that the sum of an equation is sometimes less impressive than its different parts. In the end, I can only suggest you to stick with the excellent original. I can’t recommend this unnecessary sequel.

    2.5 // 5

     

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  • Ladies and gentlemen,

    I simply felt like sharing a few pictures I have taken over the past few days with you. This is the first of three parts. These photos were taken at different places in Gatineau and Ottawa. I really enjoy walking around autumnal landscapes. One has to seize these opportunities since winter is already getting closer. I hope you enjoy these pictures as much as I do.

    Autumn in Gatineau and Ottawa I

    Halloween pumpkins close to my dwelling.

    Autumn in Gatineau and Ottawa II

    A look at Parliament Hill.

    Autumn in Gatineau and Ottawa III

    Ottawa River and Gatineau.

    Autumn in Gatineau and Ottawa IV

    Parliament Hill.

    Autumn in Gatineau and Ottawa V

    Anglican Christ Church under the moon.

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  • Hacksaw Ridge (2016)

    ''Hacksaw Ridge'' is a superbly crafted anti-war movie and easily the best movie of its kind since the release of the South Korean war epic ''My Way'' five years earlier. This movie is based upon true events and tells the story of Seventh-day Adventist Desmond Thomas Doss who enlists in the Army to take part in the Second World War to defend his country but refuses to carry a gun due to his religious beliefs and negative experiences with his violent father who is a war veteran. In the beginning, Doss is bullied, criticized and rejected because of his convictions but he ends up gaining the respect of his brothers in arms during the crucial Battle of Okinawa where he saves the lives of seventy-five soldiers as a medic.

    The movie can basically be divided into three parts. The first part introduces Desmond Thomas Doss' life in Lynchburg, Virginia. It shows us how he almost killed his brother as a child because his fighting was encouraged by his broken, brutal and depressive father who is a war veteran of the First World War. It also shows us how his father abused of his wife and almost shot her. Desmond Thomas Doss had to fight his father to protect his mother and swore to never touch a gun again. It also shows us how he fell in love with a local nurse called Dorothy Schutte that he would later on marry. This part of the movie shows us a caring, peaceful and smart young man with clear and strong convictions.

    The second part of the film shows us how Desmond Thomas Doss enlists in the army. Initially, he convinces with good results during his training and gets along with most of his brothers in arms. It's only when he openly refuses to carry a gun that he gets rejected by his brothers in arms who are encouraged not to trust him or follow his actions by their superiors. Desmond Thomas Doss gets bullied both mentally and physically by his brothers in arms and has to face some time in prison as well as a trial for disobeying the orders of his superiors. In the end, the charges against him are dropped when a former commanding officer and brother in arms of his father states that Doss' refusal to carry a firearm is protected by the Constitution of the United States of America. This part of the movie shows us an authentic, honest and persevering individual that holds onto his beliefs despite all the hardship he endures.

    The third part of the movie takes places during the Battle of Okinawa at a place nicknamed Hacksaw Ridge. Doss' and his brothers in arms must take down the strategically placed Japanese forces atop a cliff. The battle turns out to be pitiless, long and brutal as losses are heavy on both sides. At night, Doss is the only non-injured American who remains on the battlefield to save as many injured soldiers as he can all by himself despite Japanese soldiers occupying the territory. This part of the movie shows us a brave, selfless and strong medic who risks his own life to save as many brothers in arms as possible.

    Aside of the inspiring story of a selfless medic, this movie convinces on many levels. The acting is authentic and emotional. Especially the main character portrayed by Andrew Garfield has a lot of sympathetic charisma. His father and war veteran portrayed by Hugo Weaving shows us a torn character who is brutal and depressive on one side but also honest and determined to help his son during his trial no matter what. Another great character is the main character's wife Dorothy Schutte played by Teresa Palmer who convinces as a selfless, faithful and elegant young woman who loves her husband for all the right reasons. 

    Aside the extraordinary acting, one must point out the movie's epic cinematography. The costumes and settings are authentic and unpolished. The last third of the movie shows us quite brutal, graphic and gripping battle scenes that truly show us the horrors of war. These scenes are not gratuitous, melodramatic or overwhelming, they are just as close to reality as it gets. These intense scenes kept me on the edge of my seat. Another element I liked is the balance between wide shots to capture the horrors on the battlefield and the close-up to capture the emotions on the faces of the injured soldiers in the last forty-five minutes or so of the movie.

    To keep it short, ''Hacksaw Ridge'' is a memorable anti-war movie that convinces with an unusual, epic and detailed story line, outstanding acting performances and gorgeous cinematography. It's one of the best war movies in recent memory and also an outstanding drama at the same time. The only reason why this movie didn't get the highest rating is the fact that it focuses a little bit too much on the religious views of the main character. I'm aware of the fact that these beliefs are incredibly important to the main character but the movie felt a little bit repetitive, overwhelming and melodramatic concerning these elements that almost felt like religious propaganda at certain points.

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