“—Sergeant Angel, someone from London called you.
—Tell them I’ll call them back.”
What a great piece of English action-comedy I just witnessed!
This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.
“Honey, where are the blueberries?!”
Can a movie be rich with details and lack them in the same time? Well, this one does. Ambiguous opening sequence with private club where naked women crush spiders is never benign developed throughout the film, yet after you finish ‘Enemy’ you realise, that opening sequence can potentially be the continuation of the ending.
If you go with the idea, that Anthony and Adam are two different people, than the only source that keeps this…
The film from the start emphasises the importance of symbolism in this movie.
It begins with a symbolic scene-a black crow is sitting on top of the church cross. Immediately it creates a sense of church’s corruption and implies the power it has during the mid 20th century in Ireland.
The blurry shots taken after the symbolic introduction were consisted of working-class people in urban areas, where blurring communicates lack of hope for a better future and their acceptance of…