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Tripican presents Scarlett Johansson & Morgan Freeman in “Lucy” | Get Tickets Now
Hello Tripican fam! It’s Wednesday again and we have a a great movie feature for you!
The Action packed movie Lucy starring Scarlett Johansson is in cinemas now and you can get your tickets at just N700 only here: www.gdc.tripican.com
Check out the synopsis by www.regerebert.com
“Lucy” is a fun, confident work. It’s fast and tight and playful even when it’s sadistic and violent, which is often. It lasts about 90 minutes and change but feels longer in a good way, because every second is packed tight. It’s full of itself, yet it still keeps winking at you. It wants to be taken seriously, but not so seriously that you don’t laugh at (and with) the sight of Lucy strolling into a gunfight wearing nosebleed heels, or making enemies writhe like marionettes on invisible strings. The movie is alive. It pops.
Imagine a stranger-in-a-strange-land revenge thriller about a wide-eyed Anglo bombshell (Scarlett Johansson) who gets kidnapped and abused in Taiwan by nasty, sweaty, shouting Korean gangsters and then escapes to seek justice. Then imagine this same movie starring, say, a lightning fast kick boxer who can knock a dozen opponents’ teeth out before they can raise a single fist. Now imagine this same movie injected with a dose of apocalyptic science fiction, with the woman gaining strange powers as the story unfolds. Then envision midnight-movie touches mixed into the filmmaking: flash cuts of predators and prey enhancing otherwise typical scenes of plans being hatched; monologues about brain capacity and the true meaning of time coupled with psychedelic visions and wormholes and explanatory objects materializing from thin air.
That’s Luc Besson‘s “Lucy,” a thriller about an American woman who gets kidnapped into service as a drug mule bearing an experimental synthetic hormone, accidentally absorbs some of it, then sheds her physical, intellectual and perceptual limitations. I could describe five or six other kinds of movies that in some way also echo “Lucy.” Sections may remind you of the original “The Matrix” and the last hour of “Akira,” and the final ten minutes play like a Greatest Hits of science-fiction “trip” movies. You’ve seen a lot of the individual situations and filmmaking techniques in “Lucy” as well. In fact, you’d be hard pressed to identify one idea, scene or element in the picture that is not a cliche.
Check out the Lucy trailer
For this and more tickets, visit www.tripican.com