Saltburn
When I try to choose a movie or a book, I want the title to tell me whether I should spend two hours or days of my time watching it or reading it. When the title refers to something within the plot, I fly without radar and I don't like it. I was watching Saturday Night Live, a long-running American political comedy show, and a young Australian actor, Jacob Elordi, was its star. He did it very well and I decided to see his latest, for me first, film: Saltburn. The atmosphere of Oxford students is very successful, the friendship that is forged between a magnificent and disturbing Barry Keoghan, a scholarship recipient and poor, and the very rich protagonist culminates with the invitation to spend the summer at the luxurious and exuberant Saltburn estate with a dysfunctional family. but loving that they watch 2006 television together with a large dose of the famous British phlegm. The mother is the very elegant and excellent actress Rosamund Pike and the father is the fabulous eccentric Richard Grant. From then on I can't read anything like the notes attached to the gifts from the legendary Spanish television program One, Two, Three. You will enjoy it. Just one last note: I will dance (and more) on your grave and naked through the rooms.