Full thoughts after getting home...
Again, this is why you go to the movies.
The entire experience was just non-stop intensity. This is not a typical war film where you get a back story of the men who fought. There is no real character development. However, through the people you are introduced to throughout the movie, you can feel the desperate atmosphere that had over taken that part of the word in 1940.
I enjoyed the Nolan perfected non-linear format. It was interesting and unique to watch the storylines come together and notice scenes from Farrier's view out of his cockpit be shown moments later through the eyes of the family on the civilian boat. Also, the dog fighting scenes were the best part. Tom Hardy played those scenes perfectly with his eyes.
Nolan deserves the lion's share of credit, and deservedly so, but Hans Zimmer...what more can be said other than that guy is simply a wizard with the scores he puts together. The lack of dialogue was made up with the never ending, almost haunting, music. That tick, tick, tick in the background was so unsettling. The music reverberated through everyone's body in the theatre. The score set the tone for every scene and played up emotions of dread and suspense like no other movie experience I've felt.
The cinematography was great, there were some beautiful shots from those planes. And it sounds cheesy, but to see all those people band together for one cause was really inspiring. This movie is unforgettable, and it isn't a movie to rent at redbox, it needs to be seen in the theatre.
"We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender."