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Following their father's shocking death, Hollywood animal wrangler OJ (Daniel Kaluuya) and his sister Emerald (Keke Palmer) begin observing unexplained phenomena on their vast Southern California ranch that leads them down an obsessive rabbit hole as they plot attempts to capture the mystery on camera. Along with a former child star turned family theme park ringmaster (Steven Yeun) who neighbours the siblings, the pair's efforts to chase the spectacle soon bring terrifying consequences and unimaginable horror. The result is a complex social thriller that unpacks the seeds of violence, risk and opportunism that are inseparable from the romanticised history of the American West... and from show business itself. (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment)

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EvilPhoEniX 

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English Best UFO movie in decade? Nope. Actually god damn YES! Jordan Peele is back and will once again divide audiences into two camps, though this time he'll get a bigger ovation than he did with the overrated Us thanks to the awesome material. Peele is a bit unconventional here, the social undertones aren’t as intense as in his previous films, there is a fair amount of humour and there are considerably fewer symbols and metaphors, yet he's made a unique and impressive genre film that again isn't as horror as it could have been, but I'm very pleased. Nope is definitely a horror film that manages to win the audience over with its strong cinematic aspects, and it looks really beautiful, especially in IMAX. The cinematography by Hoytema is a masterpiece in itself, some of the shots are breathtaking (and that's not something you see often in the horror genre), and the casting is great. Kaluuya is good, but next to Keke Palmer he seemed slightly like a shadow, because here she gives perhaps the strongest female performance in 15 years (emotions, screaming, speech, voice), an absolute acting tour-de-force from an unknown actress, whom I immediately want to see somewhere else. The music is well chosen and especially the atmosphere works fantastically, it's very uncomfortable, creepy, weird and unnerving in places. There are quite a few exciting and spectacular horror scenes that I will remember in the future (The chimp, a house covered in blood, a horse's head in a car, the digestive process of the villain and the screaming of the dead still ring in my ears). I'm perhaps only the final act away from a full score, which ironically is weaker than the previous ones (most people complain about the action-packed finale, but I wouldn't call it so, you can immediately imagine a spectacular Secret War style alien massacre and it doesn't really happen). I just wasn't sure if I liked the final scene or not, but you can't deny the creativity. Peele will definitely be making horror films in the future and I'd quite like to see a slasher or pure ghost story from him. Better than Arrival for me. Story 4/5 Humour 2/5 Violence 3/5 Fun 4/5 Music 4/5 Visuals 5/5 Atmosphere 4/5 Suspense 4/5 Emotion 4/5 Actors 5/5 Total: 8/10. ()

TheEvilTwin 

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English NOPE, or Not Of Planet Earth, arrived and with it a Jordan Peele we don't know. Where his previous films, Us and Get Out, relied on a central idea, a social-racial subtext and an attempt to shock, here we get a full-blown sci-fi flick with small overlapping themes (people's fascination with the "spectacles" around them, the quest to tame animals, the domination of nature by predators, the uncompromising Hollywood industry and its treatment of actors and filmmakers as trash, and other themes less visible...). This makes me find it quite amusing that with Us and Get Out conventional viewers grumbled that they wanted a horror film and got social criticism, and here again they grumble that they wanted "classic Jordan" and got science fiction. Whatever, haters gonna hate and they’ll always find an excuse. But about the film itself. The duo of Peele and Daniel Kaluuya are a perfect fit for each other, as they've proven once before, and the same is true here, and the cinematography is great (NOPE is the first horror film to be shot in IMAX format), the sound design is even better and only gives the film its full status in the sci-fi genre. The central idea is admittedly familiar to everyone at its core (UFOs, right?), but it is cleverly differentiated in the details, the rules that are set, and also by the shape of the flying saucer. We discover in the course of the film that it is not actually a classic UFO as we are used to. The first third is a decent start, the second third a complete immersion into the plot and then the final part is an unstoppable, action, blood and tension-packed ride that goes full speed ahead until the end and shows us that Peele knows how to do it. The two-hour running time is not boring at all, the acting is something to behold. I have a small problem with the fact that the trailer promised certain elements that the film shrewdly avoided and as a result not only failed to deliver, but didn't even lean into them at all (I won't spoil specific scenes), but all in all, I'm satisfied. I was looking forward to a "classic Peele", which I didn't get, but in return I was served a spectacular sci-fi flick with an original monster that will please everyone. ()

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lamps 

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English Playful, but without balls and a proper climax. Peele again pretends to amass all the wit in the world for a thrilling finale, but in sum, he just patiently teases and misses the mark. There were a lot of suggestions and I appreciate especially the reference to the history of motion picture and its representative or media function, but I enjoyed the more mysterious and yet more down-to-earth Signs much more. ()

POMO 

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English For viewers who are aware of Peele’s filmmaking talent and screenwriting limitations, Nope is exactly the kind of nonsense indicated by the trailer. As a director, he can grippingly shoot practically any scene. But when those scenes only hint at something for a hundred minutes, and some of them (the Asian and the chimpanzee) have no meaningful relevance to the already thin story, it’s merely pretentious bullshitting. Peele’s unusual mixing of genre motifs (in this case, sci-fi horror and westerns) can come across as bold and original, but in a film that is supposed to be scary while balancing on the edge of parody, the creative vision gets lost. In terms of execution, Nope is somewhere between Get Out, which was based on a brilliant idea, and Us, which was ridiculous bullshit. ()

D.Moore 

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English An amazing atmosphere and so many original ideas... I'm glad that they still make (and get into cinemas) films like this that are probably impossible to fully understand at first, but which have such charm that you want to watch them again and only fully understand them afterwards. Original plot, realistic story, great (and well acted) characters, a sense of constant mystery… It's not horror, because then Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which Peele combines with Jaws, Signs and more, would have to be horror. I haven't seen a more original design of an alien "something" since Arrival, a number of scenes are without exaggeration unforgettable and I look forward to seeing them again. I think Nope is in many ways on par with Christopher Nolan's films, and if Nolan or Dennis Villeneuve had made it instead of Peele, the ratings here would be quite different. ()

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