The alyssa arce sex videoDevil All the Timemay sound like a flowery title, but it turns out to be a fairly straightforward description of what this movie is: 138 minutes of devilish deeds, mostly but not exclusively murder. It's a harrowing journey into the darkness of man — or it would be, if it weren't so ludicrous.
The very premise is the kind that suggests big, weighty ideas about the nature of evil, generational trauma, toxic masculinity, and the senselessness of violence. The saga unfolds across two different states over three different decades, bookended on either end by war. In the 1940s, three separate couples meet and fall in love. By the 1950s, two of those couples have children. Well into the 1960s, these families and others continue to find their fates tangled together, by design or coincidence (or, as some of the more religious characters would insist, divine providence).
It's hard to muster up any feeling stronger than "aw, sweetie" about these unconvincing visions of moral depravity.
The parents have passed their pathologies and shortcomings along to their children, who find themselves retracing the same cycles their parents did. Occasionally these wretched souls luck into moments of kindness and grace, but more often they're beaten down by cruelty and violence. By the end, the story has encompassed about a dozen major characters, and racked up an even higher body count. Add in a humid Southern Gothic vibe, a starry cast (Tom Holland! Robert Pattinson!) and a well-regarded director (Antonio Campos, of Afterschooland Christine), and The Devil All the Timewould seem to have the makings of a heavy-duty knockout, or at least a juicy potboiler.
It never gets there. The talented cast flounders with the sketchy motivations and dull dialogue they're given — though Pattinson, at least, turns his portion of the mess into something entertainingly over-the-top. Others seem to be rehashing roles they've done before (Jason Clarke as a violent sleaze), sleepwalking through a nothing part (Mia Wasikowska as a pious young wife), or straining to reconcile an obvious miscasting (Holland as the closest thing this wannabe-gritty thriller has to a protagonist, a basically good young man with a violent streak).
Not even the unnamed omniscient narrator proves much help in fleshing out these narratives, because he spends his stuff explaining stuff like "the boys at school liked to pick on Leonora" when we are already watching, with our own eyes, the boys at school pick on Leonora (Eliza Scanlen). The voiceover is a clear tipoff that The Devil All the Timeis based on a novel, but it's a mystery why the script by Antonio Campos and Paolo Campos felt compelled to retain passages that are neither poetic nor illuminating.
The many misfortunes that befall these characters, meanwhile, are foreshadowed too heavily to be surprising or exciting. You know the beatific young mother is a goner as soon as she asks her husband to bring her back some sugar, or that the other young mother who promises her baby she'll be right back will not, in fact, be right back. Every character gets a raw deal in the movie, but the female ones seem to get it especially rough. At least the men tend to kill or be killed for explicable reasons. The women are sacrificed simply to give the men something to do.
Not that all this haphazard fridging actually yields anything interesting. The Devil All the Timeobviously intends to be grimy and twisted and shocking. The violence is graphic and so is the nudity. There's a scene of a jaded soldier stumbling across a man crucified by enemy soldiers and left for dead, and another of a guy slaughtering a dog in the most gruesome manner imaginable. The characters sink to levels of rage and sadism that should be unthinkable, and endure experiences horrific enough to drive them away from the arms of God.
And yet, it's hard to muster up any feeling stronger than "aw, sweetie" about these unconvincing visions of moral depravity. The more self-important this film becomes, the sillier it gets, especially because The Devil All the Timemanages to trip over every overplayed trope on its way to saying not much of anything. There's only so much you can take of an actor loudly cursing at the skies before it tips over from tragic to hilarious, particularly when he's barely convincing as his paper-thin character to begin with.
Despite all the ugliness on display, the movie comes across as safe, sanitized, and oddly naive in its understanding of the darkness of the human soul: Most women are saints, most men are sinners, neither is worth investigating enough to see what makes them tick, everyone bad gets what's coming. If there's a trick being pulled in The Devil All the Time, it's the one orchestrated by the marketing team to convince viewers that this is a film worth taking seriously.
The Devil All the Timeis now streaming on Netflix.
Topics Netflix
Disney releases first ever full line of LGBTQ Pride merchandiseKensington Palace and the media are to blame for Meghan Markle's preSay hello to Miniature Mail, the cutest form of communicationSomeone put a bra on a cow for a very wholesome reasonSalma Hayek speaks frankly about Harvey Weinstein and #MeToo at Cannes5 ways you never knew you could masturbateRihanna dons glittering Pope getAt long last, we know the 4 words every girl wants to hearA reminder that you should definitely stay in your car while driving through a safari parkWounded cobra is saved thanks to spinal surgery and a very compassionate man The Tongue and the Egg The first moon mission of 2024 failed. Here's why. Universal Failure NASA won't fly astronauts to the moon in 2024 — for good reason Watch how 6 planets orbit their star in perfect sync Stephen King movie adaptations, ranked How to Throw Your Video Game Controller TME 2024 financial result · TechNode Chinese boba tea chain Chagee files for US IPO, reports rapid expansion · TechNode Optogenetics: A Virtual Reality System for Controlling Living Cells
0.1903s , 14305.3984375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【alyssa arce sex video】Netflix's 'The Devil All the Time' is an overheated mess: Movie review,Global Hot Topic Analysis