A Perfect Day

2015

Action / Comedy / Drama / War

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Olga Kurylenko Photo
Olga Kurylenko as Katya
Benicio Del Toro Photo
Benicio Del Toro as Mambrú
Mélanie Thierry Photo
Mélanie Thierry as Sophie
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
776.51 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 46 min
P/S ...
1.61 GB
1920*800
English 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 46 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by deloudelouvain7 / 10

Aid workers in the Balkans

A Perfect Day tells the story of a group of aid workers during the Balkan War. The daily problems they encounter to do their job as good as possible. Don't expect much action or so because the story is just them trying to find a piece of rope so they can extract a dead body out of a well. Seems easy but in a hostile environment where all the concerned parties are not willing to help it becomes a challenge. Even though there is not much action the story is enjoyable to watch. Add on that first class actors and you get a good movie that is worth a watch. Benicio Del Toro and Tim Robbins are always a delight to watch and in A Perfect Day they do what we are used of them. The script is good, the actors are good, the filming is good, and there is even a bit of humor. Entertaining movie.

Reviewed by kosmasp9 / 10

A perfect movie?

Of course a perfect movie is always something subjective. So while there are movies that generally get a high rating, there will always be people who won't like that movie (even if not as many as with other movies). But this is about real people, who try to help people who had to suffer a lot and still have to suffer, in "former" war zones.

There is also a dynamic between the group of people and there is a history too. It's what drives the movie (no pun intended) combined with the great performances. The jokes and the story will not be everyone's case of course (the rating, mine and the overall) is showing that. But if you like your movies to be subtle, to have jokes that might take you a second to identify as such, than you are at the right place ... although the characters would argue you are in the wrong place and should leave as soon as you can. Something they can't do ...

Reviewed by ferguson-66 / 10

We need rope

SPOILER: Greetings again from the darkness. "Somewhere in the Balkans, 1995" is the notice we receive in the opening frame, and the post Kosovo War setting is less about fighting a war and more about finding humanity in the aftermath. Based on the novel by Paula Farias and adapted by Diego Farias and director Fernando Leon de Aranoa, the film follows a group of Aid Across Borders workers as they make their way through the community, attempting to navigate the cultural and political challenges to offering assistance.

The corpse in a drinking water well is the immediate challenge facing the aid workers. Benecio Del Toro (Mambru),Tim Robbins (B),Melanie Thierry (Sophie) and their interpreter Fedja Stukan (Damir) are facing a short deadline in order to save the well from contamination for local villagers. Most of the movie revolves around their quest to find a rope so they can hoist the large corpse from the water. Searching for rope may seem a flimsy story center, but on their journey, we get to know these characters, some of the local cultural differences (in regards to dead bodies),the bureaucratic red tape faced, and the always present danger faced by do-gooders from the outside.

It's understandable that a group in this situation would utilize humor to offset the ugliness, and there is no shortage of one-liners and wise-cracks, especially from B (Robbins). His cowboy approach is in distinct contrast to the veteran Mambru and the idealistic rookie Sophie. Soon enough they are joined by a local youngster named Nikola (Eldar Reisdovic) and an inspector Katya (Olga Kurylenko) sent to determine if the Aid program should continue. Oh yes, Katya and Mumbru are former lovers and it obviously didn't end well.

As they work their way through the ropes challenge and the threat of land mines, we learn through the actions of Mumbru that no matter how much one wants to help, it's only natural (and sometimes painful) to ask yourself if you are truly making a difference, or simply wasting time in a place filled with people who don't seem to care. The specific use of multiple songs is at times distracting, and other times a perfect match (Lou Reed, The Buzzcocks). Del Toro proves yet again that he is a fascinating screen presence, and the message is strong enough to warrant a watch.

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