Black Death Sub Download

Black Death Sub Download

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Black Death Sub Download

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Set during the time of the first outbreak of bubonic plague in England, a young monk is tasked with learning the truth about reports of people being brought back to life, a mission that pulls him toward a village ruler who has made a dark pact with evil forces.
In 1348, England is devastated by the Bubonic plague which spreads death across the lands and villages. The young monk, Osmund, asks his beloved Averill to travel with him to a remote village near the Dentwich Forest where the Black Death has not reached yet. She says that she will wait for him in the forest, but Osmund tells her that he will stay at the Staveley Monastery as he is a man of God. However, the emissary of the bishop Ulric arrives at the monastery recruiting a religious man to guide his soldiers and him through the forest and the swamp to the village. They believe that there is a necromancer resurrecting people and protecting the village from the plague. Along their journey, they fight against forest thieves and Osmund finds Averill's clothes dirty and bloody. When they reach the village, they find happy and healthy villagers that have renounced God but are living in peace, and they are welcomed by the leaders Hob and the alchemist Langiva.
Only 6.5?? You must be kidding me!! Even for IMDb standards, it&#39;s low.<br/><br/>This movie has everything that I think makes an accomplished work and a very good movie:<br/><br/>1. An unusual and unpredictable screenplay, though not too much or with crazy twists that confuse the viewer. Here, you follow the film wondering what could happen next, the possibilities being wide, and the characters ambiguous. And in the end, when you look back on the story, you realize that the writer had been quite inspired!!<br/><br/>2. An atmosphere, this one being all dark, foggy, mysterious. A good work on the cinematography that conveys an ambiance as much as the sets. It&#39;s nice to see a medieval movie that doesn&#39;t only rely on castles and costumes to create an atmosphere.<br/><br/>3. The story has several layers. On the surface, it&#39;s mysterious, medieval and about soldiers going on a necromancer hunt, therefore there is action. Then, when trying to identify the necromancer, there is suspense, and you&#39;re plunged into a real thriller. But behind that, you have a reflexion on religion, beliefs, power, grief, etc.<br/><br/>4. A good cast, among which a wonderful Carice Van Houten.<br/><br/>I admire the qualities of this movie. Despite the fact that I wouldn&#39;t see it that many times because there are some violent scenes towards the end that I&#39;m not fond of (though it remains highly watchable and it&#39;s not horror), I would give this extremely well done movie a 9/10.
I saw this movie last night on cable TV, and i was not really expecting it to be a good one (more or less) - but it managed to keep it all together and got into a dark mood of thriller / religious questions raised. It also contains strong violence, and emphasized on human nature and its bonds with what is divine and touches base with human faith and what we expect from God. the movie revolves nicely around a very well known phase in human history and turns it into a thriller with some twists and interesting characters. i enjoyed it, and recommend it to all &quot;midieval / dark thrillers with religious background&quot; lovers. i would rate it with 5.5 to 6 over 10.
Though deadly serious, Christopher Smith's European-made bubonic- plague melodrama provides good value with lots of blood and guts, as well as a solid cast.
Osmund (<a href="/name/nm1519666/">Eddie Redmayne</a>), a novice monk in 1348 England during the time of the first outbreak of Black Death, agrees to lead Ulrich (<a href="/name/nm0000293/">Sean Bean</a>), an envoy to the Bishop, and his followers, to a village in the Great Marsh that has not yet been ravaged by the disease. Ulric believes that the village is headed by a necromancer and wants to bring him or her back for confession, trial, and execution. Black Death is based on an original screenplay by Dario Poloni. The Black Death is another term for bubonic plague, caused by the Yersinia pestis bacteria and mostly spread by germ-infected fleas hitchhiking on rats. It is infamous for wiping out an estimated 25 million people in 14th century Europe. At that time, however, germs were unknown (germs were discovered by Louis Pasteur in 1860), so the scourge was blamed on either the sins of the people or on witchcraft. The name &quot;bubonic&quot; comes from &quot;bubo&quot;, meaning &quot;swollen gland&quot;. Swollen lymph nodes (buboes) in the armpit and groin were a sure sign of the infection, which typically kills in 4 to 5 days. Bubonic plague is still active today, but it is treatable with appropriate antibiotics. They&#39;re called &quot;beak masks&quot; because the shape looks like a bird&#39;s beak. Worn by doctors (and robbers) during the medieval plague, the beaks were filled with herbs and other concoctions thought to protect the wearer from &quot;bad air&quot;. In essence, the beak masks are an early type of gas mask. Although they may not have protected against bubonic plague spread by flea bites, the masks may have offered protection against the pneumonic and septicemic forms of the disease. According to Wolfstan (<a href="/name/nm0001487/">John Lynch</a>), one of Ulric&#39;s followers, a necromancer is someone who plucks the dead from the cold earth and breathes new life into them. Not according to the movie. In Osmund&#39;s tromp through the swamp looking for Langiva (<a href="/name/nm0396924/">Carice van Houten</a>), she admits that she used trickery and herbalism to perform the miracles people in her village expected, perhaps to make them believe that she had supernatural powers or perhaps to convince them that there was no such thing as God. When Osmund pleaded with her to resurrect Averill (<a href="/name/nm2632878/">Kimberley Nixon</a>) for the second time, Langiva said that she could not, because Osmund had really killed Averill and by his own hand. Although the village had no plague so far, it wasn&#39;t because of supernatural reasons, but because of its isolation. After the massacre of the witch hunters and many of the villagers, Wolfstan returns the wounded Osmund to the monastery. In a voiceover, Wolfstan tells how he heard stories about Osmund&#39;s heart turning cold in the years that followed and how Osmund took up the sword, looking for Langiva in every woman he saw, torturing them and burning them as witches. Whether he actually found Langiva is unknown, as every woman looked like Langiva to him. In the final scene, Osmund burns yet another &quot;witch&quot;, and Wolfstan says that he would like to think that Osmund eventually found peace and goodness. a5c7b9f00b

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