You are on page 1of 2

We all know that it is difficult for a family to lose, so if we are to be blessed by the beautiful and whole family

we must also appreciate. Any problems that come to our lives are just a test of our lives. because not all families are
happy or are involved with others are forced to cheer even if there is no family. Based on my favorite movie, it was
very difficult for them to have a big problem with their lives. they still get the problems they encountered in their lives.
Just as the family has a lot of problems coming to us we still get along and go through the hardships that come to our
family. My family does not really need to appreciate the things I need to be. It's time to lose your family or you do not
get to be happy with them or in other words you will not be happy as someone else is with the family. so who are the
people in our life? we should appreciate. because they are the ones for us to watch over or guide us. Even though my
family is not all that I appreciate, I am happy that we are always watching over our siblings. Just as in the story I
remember that my family has been very fond of the past while my family was full but I did not go back because I was
happy with others. but I'm just nodding out that the family is more important than ever when you're in trouble not
just friends at the time you need them but you and your family or parents for you. but at the end I realized that it was
so hard that you were going through all the difficulties and difficulties you'd split. but we still get the joy we see each
other and still enjoy our grand mother happily. so the whole family feels so tired. you just have to pay for it so you do
not lose it. In the end we are able to appreciate that it is hard for parents to lose because since our childhood they
were born and raised in us. they endure the difficulties and enlargement of us so that if we have a parent we will
always give the time. because they are more likely to guide us when we need them so they are more often weaken
when we need our mother. First of all, you should know I’m writing this before I see “The Impossible”. Why am I doing
so? For a couple of reasons, actually. One, I think it’s fun to see just how good I can be at predicting the course and
outcome of a movie based solely on the trailer. More importantly, when it comes to this trailer, it’s so laden with
spoilers that I wondered if there even was a point to watching the full-length feature.So here’s what I have to say
about the movie based on its 2 minute, 32 second trailer:The film is based on a true story about a lovely looking family
happily on vacation in Southeast Asia in 2004. The huge tsunami that devastated the region that year hits and they’re
washed away and separated, the two little boys with Dad (Ewan McGregor) and the oldest boy with Mom (Naomi
Watts). We’re told 45 seconds into the trailer, This is one family’s true story of survival . At this point, we already
know how it ends and of course they’ve cued a stripped down version of U2’s One to start tugging at the heartstrings.
Then we find out that Dad is going to spend the movie searching for Mom and the other son, who were helped to a
shelter by caring locals in the back of their truck. She’s in bad shape but tells the boy to spend their time there helping
others, which he goes and does even helping one man find his family who are strewn about the shelter somewhere.
Dad is closing in, tearfully telling over the phone what is probably his wife’s family that he will find her. We then end
the trailer with some shots of the two main characters reunited. So what have we learned? Well, if you were worried
this would be a downer and one of the white people who make up the main characters would die in the Asian
tsunami, your worries can stop now. I mean, what’s the point of watching a fictional movie about such grave and
tragic material when you’ve already eliminated the ultimate consequences. Judging from the trailer, Ewan and
Naomi deliver excellent, heart-wrenching performances and share a lovely chemistry. Their kids are precocious and
exhibit the kind of resiliency and strength of character that one only wishes they could instill in their own offspring.
The production quality is excellent and the tsunami sequence will be hard for some people to watch due to its
authenticity and the knowledge of its impact. For those out there who find this kind of predictable human-interest tale
uFor those out there who find this kind of predictable human-interest tale up your alley but only want to see it
because the ending will be happy and safe, go ahead and see it. Enjoy getting what you think you’re going to get. If
you’re like me and don’t see the point in having your predictions proven right only to lose two hours better spent
retooling your fantasy football team or building Lego, then skip this and do something more useful with your time.
On 26 December, 2004 a powerful earthquake off the Indonesian coast triggered a tsunami that devastated countries
around the Indian Ocean, killing more than 230,000 people. The Impossible is based on the true story of one of the
survivors, Maria Belon, a Spanish tourist who was lounging by a pool in Thailand along with her husband and three
young sons when the tsunami hit. Belon has high praise for director Juan Antonio Bayona, who she says has made an
accurate account of her harrowing story for the big screen - with only one discrepancy."The ball was yellow and in the
film it is red," says Belon, referring to one of her son's Christmas gifts. "The rest is exactly the same." Bayona
recreated the tsunami with a mixture of digital effects and real water surges. "We created miniatures that were
destroyed by a huge wave that we created in a water tank in Spain," he says. The Spanish director admits it was
"crazy" to commit to working with real water rather than a computer generated wave, but he wanted the story to be
authentic. This meant Naomi Watts and Tom Holland, who play mother and son Maria and Lucas, were gulping water
in a massive water tank for five weeks."Being in the water tank was not something I particularly enjoyed," says
Watts. "Tom loved it. He thought it was his own personal water park everyday, but he's 14 and he's got great athletic
abilities, and I'm not close to either of those things," she adds. The actress, who nearly drowned after being caught in
a rip current as a teenager, admits she was scared and found it difficult to film scenes underwater. But Watts has been
rewarded for overcoming her fear of water with a Golden Globe nomination for best actress and she is being tipped as
a possible Oscar contender for the role. Maria Belon is also impressed with her on-screen character. She describes
Watts' performance as "extremely professional, extremely talented, extremely generous and beyond any
expectation". Belon helped Watts throughout the production and assisted with pivotal scenes in Thailand after the
family returned to the country for a set visit."It was a bit painful sometimes during the whole process of working on
the movie but it is pain that is worth going through because we truly believe in this film," says Belon. Watts praised
her off-screen counterpart for the courage it took to share her story. "Some people who have gone through that kind
of shock and disaster, it's hard for them, but she's incredibly articulate and it was really helpful to have that constant
reminder of just how serious it was," says Watts. Belon says her family agreed their stories could be told as long as the
film-makers "took care of the soul of the story". The director achieved this by involving the Belon family in the
production and consulting real-life survivors and volunteers on "every important decision" in the film. "We were
shooting in Thailand in the same place where the story took place, surrounded by people who were there and that
was incredibly helpful," says Bayona. The director says the tsunami survivors he met provided him with "a filter of
truth" which helped him choose "the right way" to tell the story. He trusted his cast with "a lot of improvisation" and
filmed key scenes unscripted. "Ewan, Naomi and Tom threw themselves into the characters in a very brutal way," says
Bayona. Ewan McGregor, who plays Henry, says his 16 years of real-life parenting experience helped him with the
role. "It's not to say that if you didn't have children you wouldn't be able to still act in the role of] a parent, of course
you could, that's our job as actors. But it certainly…deepens it somehow," says McGregor. "You know what that feels
like to be in love with your children. It's a unique love. We don't have that kind of love for any other people in the
world," he adds. The real-life mother that inspired this Hollywood tear-jerker says she wanted to people to
understand what it is like "to be alive". "This personal story had another dimension, a universal dimension, and in that
way it was important to tell the story," says Belon. "I think before the tsunami I was blind. I was a blind person and
now I see clearly."

You might also like