

#A perfect day 2016 movie
But that's not to say the movie is perfect, but I, again, appreciated the fact that it focuses on people who don't really get a lot of credit for their work. Who end up being orphaned without even knowing about it until much, much later. But it's also not a movie that shies away from showcasing the harsh realities of living in war-torn Serba, at least for kids like Nikola. It's a more comical movie than I would have anticipated. Of course, that's used as a stepping point into some of the ideas the film wants to explore and the movie, really, is about much more than just finding rope. Perhaps this film's more small-scale approach, in that the main narrative driving force for the characters is to get some rope so they can remove a corpse from a well. That's neither here nor there, but I do appreciate the fact that the movie focuses on some of the unsung heroes of war, particularly in these parts of the world, and those are the aid workers that, in theory, try to clean up some of the mess that the war has managed to bring to their country. Legal age to join the military should be 21.

And here you are thrown into this world that you probably don't have the maturity to be in. Eighteen is way too young to join the military, you're literally just out of your 'childhood' and, in some ways, you are still a child. But I still find the idea that, on this side of the world, you can sign up for the military, go to war, kill countless people before you're actually legally able to drink. I do have problems with the organizational aspects of the military, but I support the troops much as the next guy. A lot of people, 99% of them conservatives, equate being anti-war as being anti-military, which is a bunch of bullshit. And, again, this is on both sides of the equation. Not to mention the damage done to people who might not even have anything to do with the war itself. No one nation is fully evil and I know some people will argue otherwise, but it's just factually incorrect. The reason that I'm against war are my own, but mostly they're related to the fact that good people are lost on both sides of the equation. While some people say that it is unavoidable in some cases, I've always found that to be a shitty excuse. Really don't know why I started with that, but let's move on. I have posted seven reviews out of 192 films available on the site. I have 3% of Jackie's total films on the site reviewed. Even with that, and Letterboxd lets you see the percentage of movies from a certain actor (or director) you have reviewed. I would like to apologize to the people of Letterboxd, because shortly after I posted my Kung Fu Yoga review, I went into the draft tab of my Gmail account and found every Jackie Chan movie that I've reviewed (pre-Letterboxd) and just started posting them on Letterboxd.
