I have the movie on DVD, I haven't watched it in a while...
But I remember I saw it in theaters with some friends and we went out to dinner afterwards and discussed it, and we were all blown away. I think what captured it for me was how real it seemed. When she was delivering the speech, it wasn't fake movie tears. She cried like a real person, and all I could think of was when I was in sixth grade (about 12 years old, for non-Americans) and my teacher was letting us all talk about a priest we all knew who had just died (it was a private school, obviously). We were all broken up about it, and I was trying to share something, and instead started rambling on because my grandfather was dying, and my dog had just been put to sleep, and I had been really close to Fr. Bob, and I was crying and did exactly what Paikea does, which is sit there for whole minutes of silence, trying not to cry out loud, while everyone just sat and tried to let me finish.
The memory itself isn't bad, but I remember the moment itself being about the most agonizing thing I had ever gone through. It's just as painful to watch her, and you don't want to stop her, but at the same time, you want to just want to take her out of that painful situation. I wanted to kill Koro right then. I felt really bad about the whales, but it was a seperate issue. It didn't make up for his being late and ignoring her and stuff.
Well that was a little TMI, but I don't think I'm quite alone. Paikea was played so real, and I think that's what made the movie so touching. Nothing felt like acting, like it wasn't real. It was gorgeous, and it was real, and it really grabbed you by the throat and wouldn't let you go.
This is one of my favorite moveis ever. I love it so much.
I am serious, and stop calling me Shirley
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