- Yes, the "tongue" was definitely an actual language. To me it did sound Gaelic or even Aramaic. It was important for the Executive Producer to portray the "tongue" as a real language and not just gibberish.Tom wrote: ↑Fri Sep 27, 2024 7:22 pmThank you for your genuine and honest review, President Wang Chung. I don't think the producers and director are in a position to ask for anything more. I hope you'll post your review on review websites.
As an aside, I've seen film clips of Brigham speaking in tongues. I'm disappointed that the "tongue" sounded like Irish Gaelic.
A few questions:
Who won the tree-cutting contest? Brigham or Joseph?
Did the film depict Brigham's weaknesses?
Did you stick around for the credits and catch the performance of “O Give Me Back My Prophet Dear"? If so, how was it?
If you stayed for the credits, did you catch the list of financial supporters?
Having seen the film, do you agree with the insider's assessment back in July?For starters, as the title of this thread indicates, this insider thinks that the movie is “absolute garbage.” But they go on to elaborate:
—The movie suffers from “Whitewashed history” and “one-dimensional characters”
—There have apparently been serious problems in the editing room since the current cut of the film has “terrible pacing”
—Apparently the “acting is atrocious”
—And the screenplay, which received extensive feedback from the Executive Producer “is pretentious and verbose.”
This informant notes that the movie has a run time of 2 hours and that 3/4 of the movie elapses before they even get to “Day 1 of the ‘six days in August.’”
- Joseph won the tree-cutting contest, but it was close. Before, and after the contest, there was way too much hugging.
- Yes I agree with the insider's assessment. The insider was spot on.
- And yes, the movie is almost over before Day 1.
- I must admit that I didn't wait for the credits to end. I frankly had more than I could endure and once credits started to roll, I took off.
- It didn't portray any weaknesses that BY might have had. BY was portrayed as a manly, strong and heroic figure.