Learn more on Graffiti Pictures

August 16, 2010 - 2:10 pm 4 Comments
graffiti-drawings Learn more on Graffiti Pictures

This movie was okay. The scenes are pretty lifeless and I guess artists could go through this. I feel this ones solely for cash. It’s more of a lewd romp for cash and fame. But this really is how some sh$t could go
down. It’s like that movie Kids, but Kids had more made up problems that
actually exist. Still a solid movie in terms of cinema.

What Are Some Extra Add Ons in Graffiti(Like Arrows)?
my friend wants me to do her name is graffiti, im not thaat great Graffiti Pictures but im done and would like to add those extra details, like some graffiti pictures have arrows and clouds, shadows and 3D. i want to know as many graffiti add ons that you can, and if you can supply pictures that would be great.
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4 Responses to “Learn more on Graffiti Pictures”

  1. Benedict Says:

    Wow,,, after watching this movie I was really impressed. The filming is great and the story line is fantastic. The plot isn’t all that realistic but the setting is. The soundtrack is a good fit for the film and the artwork is good. People interested in the underground artwork community will love this as well as serious writers.
    Overall I was extremely satisfied with this film and would recommend it too most.

  2. Gillanders Says:

    I really enjoyed the act of sitting down and watching this film.If you have a big enough screen (or sit close enough to the television) this film will take you on a fun visual and thematic roller coaster right of emotions and stimuli. I don’t know much about graffitti, but the main character and the visuals really drew me in. The story-line wasn’t shakespearian in complexity and originality, but it did what it was supposed to do (and I think bringing in aliens or a vast govermental conspiracy would have been a bit distracting anyway).

    Even if you aren’t into the film at all, if you find the main actor as attractive as I do you might just as well go out and buy the film anyway:p

  3. Espinosa Says:

    I went to `Bomb the System’ thinking it might tell us something about the lie of the graphic artists in New York City. I knew it is not documentary, and the film stars Mark Webber has worked with two of the today’s most eminent New Yorkers in the film industry (Woody Allen’s `Hollywood Ending’ and Al Pacino’s `People I Know’) And it has been more than 20 years since we saw `Wild Style,’ and it is time that we should see another work using graphic art as its theme, set in more contemporary situation.

    But I was disappointed. OK, Mark Webber is good as the protagonist `Blest’ talented artist who has not yet decided his future plan — to go to college or to keep doing what he is doing with his friends and fellow artists. Blest tells us some rules about doing (illegal) murals, but the film actually showed me the inner world of the artists much less than I had expected.

    The reason is simple. The story by first-time writer/director Adam Bhala Louch is so melodramatic and cliché-ridden that you can spot instantly where Louch borrowed things from somewhere else, like numerous police dramas made for TV. The love story is so feeble and the female characters (mother and girlfriend of Blest) are caricatures. And look at the white cop from vandal squad of NYPD, who keeps watching Blest. He is the worst example, a sociopath wearing a badge, ready to blackmail the prostitutes, and bully the weak. Even with the appearance of the real-life artist Lee Quinones as himself cannot save the film from the stale formulaic script.

    I must say one thing about the visuals of the film. The camera captures the darkly-lit streets and the blocks surrounded by demolished buildings very well, and though it is regrettable that he overuses the now corny MTV styles, it should be admitted that Adam Bhala Louch stops that when the characters are supposed to say something serious about their way of living.

    Still I cannot help thinking that this is a missed opportunity. `Bomb the System’ could have been a more thrilling and insightful film about art and life than what it is now. For the real-life artists, Giuliani’s efforts to eradicate graffiti must have had more significant meaning for their career as artist. Ignoring more immediate and complex issues surrounding the graphic artists, however, the film relies on the not-so-original idea that crime doesn’t pay. Maybe so, but just because doing graffiti is a crime doesn’t mean that the film needs a handgun and a violent cop.

  4. Nowell Says:

    Graffiti is fascinating stuff. The people who do it are artists. This movie, however, is garbage. Over-acted and force-fed with idiotic slang that is already dated, “Bomb the System” takes a fascinating subject and portrays it in a way that trivializes all the motivations and purpose behind graffiti. I can only assume that the stellar reviews this movie has gotten so far are from people with no first hand experience of the subject, the same way that “You Got Served” was praised for its accurate portrayal of the breakdancing subculture by an overweight housewife in Muncie, Indiana.

    Avoid this steaming pile at all costs.