Monday 19 January 2015

The Black Sea Movie (2015}) review, trailer gallery and wach full movie online

Black Sea centres on a rogue submarine captain (Jude Law) who, after being laid off from a salvage company, pulls together a misfit crew to go after a sunken treasure rumoured to be lost in the depths of the Black Sea. As greed and desperation take control on board their claustrophobic vessel, the increasing uncertainty of the mission causes the men to turn on each other to fight for their own survival.

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The Black Sea Movie (2015}) review story – Jude Law under pressure


The black sea is the best hollywood movie in january 2015 and mr jude law is captopn of this movie he is two-time award winner 

 
 
Two-time Academy Award nominee Jude Law captains the cast of Black Sea, the suspenseful adventure thriller directed by Academy Award winner Kevin Macdonald (One Day in September, The Last King of Scotland).
 

Black Sea centers on a rogue submarine captain (Jude Law) who, after being laid off from a salvage company, pulls together a misfit crew to go after a sunken treasure rumored to be lost in the depths of the Black Sea. As greed and desperation take control on board their claustrophobic vessel, the increasing uncertainty of the mission causes the men to turn on each other to fight for their own survival.

The cast also includes Scoot McNairy , British Independent Film Award winner Ben Mendelsohn , David Threlfall, Konstantin Khabenskiy , Sergey Puskepalis ,British Independent Film Award winner Michael Smiley , and Grigory Dobrygin

The Black Sea movie Trailer (2015)

The top latest Hollywood movie Black Sea Trailer (2015)

Film review: Black Sea (15). There's trouble at sea for Jude Law in Black Sea. Picture: Contributed. by Alistair Harkness.



Film Title: Black Sea

Casting: Nina Gold

Director: Kevin Macdonald

Starring: Jude Law, Scoot McNairy, Karl Davies, Konstantin Khabensky, Michael Smiley

Top Black Sea: Film Review 2015

 

The top latest Hollywood movie Black Sea (2015) Trailer Free download online

 



Black Sea movie (2015) - Photo Image Gallery

Black Sea movie (2015) - Photo Image Gallery

       Top 1 Movie black sea(2015) latest photo,images gallery

 










Black Sea film review: Jude Law under pressure

Review: Black Sea – motley crew in sea hunt for Nazi gold



Film review: Black Sea (15). There's trouble at sea for Jude Law in Black Sea. Picture: Contributed. by Alistair Harkness.

Film Title: Black Sea

Casting: Nina Gold

Director: Kevin Macdonald

Starring: Jude Law, Scoot McNairy, Karl Davies, Konstantin Khabensky, Michael Smiley

Production designer: Nick Palmer

Genre: Action

Running Time: 114 min

Production company: Cowboy Films

                                     Black Sea movie trailer

 





Heist movies are universally loved yet rarely reinvented, assembling a band of misfits who work towards a collective criminal goal involving immense riches. Most of the time you’ll see a bank being robbed, or there’s the Ocean’s gang infiltrating casinos, and we can’t forget when those Fast & Furious boys/gals stole an entire vault – but we haven’t seen that many underwater heist films. Sure, Black Sea isn’t a straightforward smash-and-grab story, but Kevin Macdonald’s latest film is an unconventional heist movie at its core. There’s a rag-tag team, their treacherous submersible journey, and a buttload of Nazi gold hidden deep inside a sunken German U-Boat – there just happens to be a little more drama involved thanks to the creaky Russian submarine used to navigate Jordanian/Russian waters. Don’t expect a quirky seafaring adventure from this lot of gold-digging sailors, because I can assure you writer Dennis Kelly channels the Black Sea’s darkness every moment he gets.

Macdonald enlists Jude Law to play a submarine captain searching the depths of the Black Sea for sunken Nazi gold, a man helming a rusty old heap on the dime of a shadowy backer. Along for the ride are a group of Russian/British cohorts (including actors Grigoriy Dobrygin, Ben Mendelsohn, Michael Smiley, and Konstantin Khabenskiy), along with the backer’s financial consultant (Scoot McNairy) as a form of insurance. Carrying out their mission under the Russian navy’s nose, Captain Robinson (Law) must make crucial decisions in order to keep his men alive, but in the wake of mutinies and technical blunders, the treasure hunt turns into a fight for survival. Can the men escape with the gold and their lives, or will the ultimate sacrifice be made in the face of greed?
While searching for Nazi gold on sandy ocean floors sounds like something out of an Indiana Jones movie, Black Sea insights a bit of chaos by locking many clashing personalities inside of a cramped submarine. This isn’t a Danny Ocean production, where collaborators butt heads in funny ways before making up with a begrudging handshake, but instead a social experiment sullied by greed, redemption, and personal survival instincts. Macdonald doesn’t shy away from a darker, serious tone brought upon by claustrophobic conditions and conflicting ideals, sparking a little bit of anarchy beneath the ocean’s glassy surface. The hunt for gold is nothing but a catalyst that evokes suppressed feelings, hidden demons, and a last grasp at something life-altering – not a swashbuckling adventure.

The bleakness of Black Sea is both a strength and weakness, for vastly different reasons. While I appreciate a film that doesn’t sugarcoat the loss of human lives, making enemies out of lunatics supposedly working together, the methods in which characters depart feels structurally forced in some cases. This isn’t just any heist where a few muscly thugs can be wrangled up. Captain Robinson’s plan is a technically refined mission involving divers, a highly-pressurized situation, and a submarine needing many specialists – yet Robinson enlists a random kid pulled in off the street when his partner declines? Why start a gang war aboard a submarine with no escape, when there’s a common goal at stake? Can humans really be this despicable? Kelly’s examination of morality in the face of panic packs a heavy punch when executed without showmanship, but some deaths and risks seem absolutely asinine with survival in mind, even when trying to argue there’s an expected mental deterioration brought upon by frantic wishes of survival.

Macdonald’s saving grace is a stellar cast led by Law, still in shape from his turn as Dom Hemingway. Law embodies a fearless leader slowly losing grip of his (once) faithful following, and he does so while putting forth the masculine intensity needed to quell national territory wars breaking out across a metal tomb. Even more impressive are his crew members, turning in pitch-perfect roles as only Michael Smiley and Ben Mendelsohn can. While I’d wish Mendelsohn could get a role playing the hero more often, watching him waver in and out of sanity is still too much of a treat worth enjoying – and Smiley is one of the most charming everymen around. Robinson’s Russian allies are also lovable in their own burly, heavily-accented ways, as the likes of Sergey Veksler and Sergey Puskepalis look like they could tear down the Iron Curtain by themselves.

Black Sea is a damn interesting concept with some questionable execution, but becomes a serviceable watch thanks to a group of “seamen” who find themselves switching from robbers to survivalists quicker than they anticipated. Macdonald constructs an immersive seascape, nailing the vast nothingness divers blindly trudge into, but clouded judgements reign supreme whenever monumental decisions are to be made. With that said, Black Sea takes viewers on a unique ride with a poignant historical background, exploring great depths in search of a new take on heist movies – something the cast hammers home while cabin fever sets in.

Sunday 18 January 2015

Top Black Sea: Film Review 2015


the black sea is the best movie in 2015 and caption of this movie the great and Two-time Academy Award Nominee Mr Jude Law stars as a
submarine captain seeking treasure in “Black Sea."
 
Black Sea in US theaters January 23, 2015 starring Jude Law, Grigoriy Dobrygin, Konstantin Khabenskiy, Sergey Kolesnikov.
 
 
A suspenseful adventure thriller directed by Academy Award winner Kevin Macdonald,
 
Composer: Ilan Eshkeri
 
 
Costume designer: Natalie Ward
 
 
Sales: Film4, London

 
Editor: Justine Wright
 
  

Black Sea review - Jude Law is good and it does a good job of creating the oily, claustrophobic environment of the submarine


Black Sea movie review - this movie is the best in January 2015 all movies



Executive producers:  Jim Cochrane, Merve Harzadin, Tessa Ross.

Production company: Cowboy Films

Cast: Jude Law, Scoot McNairy, Bobby Schofield, Grigoriy Dobrygin, Ben Mendelsohn, Michael Smiley



Director: Kevin Macdonald
Screenwriter: Dennis Kelly



Producers: Kevin Macdonald, Charles Steel


Composer: Ilan Eshkeri

Cinematographer: Christopher Ross

Production designer: Nick Palmer



Costume designer: Natalie Ward

Editor: Justine Wright




Casting: Nina Gold



Sales: Film4, London



Rating R, 115 minutes


Movie story- Black Sea review

Top Movie Black Sea(2015}) review – adventure of Jude Law in deep water

The Top Great Hollywood black sea movie by director Kevin MacDonald

top academy award nominee jude law is caption of this movie


jude law 

jude law

                           Top Movie Black Sea(2015}) review - Story     

 

     Top Movie Black Sea(2015}) review - Story

     


Two-time Academy Award nominee Jude Law captains the cast of Black Sea, the suspenseful adventure thriller directed by Academy Award winner Kevin Macdonald (One Day in September, The Last King of Scotland).

Black Sea centers on a rogue submarine captain (Jude Law) who, after being laid off from a salvage company, pulls together a misfit crew to go after a sunken treasure rumored to be lost in the depths of the Black Sea. As greed and desperation take control on board their claustrophobic vessel, the increasing uncertainty of the mission causes the men to turn on each other to fight for their own survival.

The cast also includes Scoot McNairy (Argo), British Independent Film Award winner Ben Mendelsohn (Starred Up), David Threlfall (Shameless), Konstantin Khabenskiy (Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy), Sergey Puskepalis (How I Ended This Summer), British Independent Film Award winner Michael Smiley (Kill List), and Grigory Dobrygin (A Most Wanted Man).