Let Me In, meh.
It looked pretty, but was nowhere near the emotional heft of its non english superior, Let the Right One In.
The kid that gets taken out in the swimming pool always freaked me out.
Let Me In, meh.
It looked pretty, but was nowhere near the emotional heft of its non english superior, Let the Right One In.
Thanks for confirming what I've been thinking about this remake.Let Me In, meh.
It looked pretty, but was nowhere near the emotional heft of its non english superior, Let the Right One In.
The thing about the first one and the remake is, in the first one, I felt Oskar was actually an evil child before he met Eli. Meeting her was sort of a choice for him to go evil or not. In the remake, I felt the boy, Owen was turned evil by Anna. Totally not the same premise.
The second one was SUPER ultra violent, Americans have no problem with that, but that in context flash of nudity that 12 year old Oskar sees when the girl he likes is changing clothes, completely obliterated in this one.
You have to compare them because the second one is so much like the original does not stand on its own at all. Its sad really to make this movie purely so it is in English. Oh well, it tired.
LD
The More The Merrier (1943) with Jean Arthur, Joel McCrea and Charles Coburn. Really sweet movie.
This scene had me fanning myself...
WOW.
WOW is right! What I found fascinating about it was the "dance" their hands were doing while they were talking. You don't catch it at first, but then you do... very well played and not the usual groping that would be displayed in a movie today. Had to bring my wife in to see it as well.
Cheers,
Tom
Them were some roman hands and russian fingers....Yes, the hands moving while she kept talking is what really made the scene work.
Them were some roman hands and russian fingers....
"The Hidden Fortress" which only confirmed what I already thought about Kurosawa. He was a freakin' genius.
Nor have I! Funnily enough, it's the first time I've ever said or written that line. My father made the comment once in response to my cousin's recount of untoward advances from a blind date. I was maybe ten years old and it just sat dormant in my mind until today. Go figure....[huh]Oh Lord... Tomasso.... I haven't heard that line in a stones age lol
Neither have I! Funnily enough, it's the first time I've ever said or written that line. My father made the comment once in response to my cousin's recount of untoward advances from a blind date. I was maybe ten years old and it just sat dormant in my mind until today. Go figure....[huh]
Yeah, kinda like a Rolfer...........I must bring it out in you
Know what, rather than searching YT myself, I'll just let you do the grunt work. BTW, I like comedies...A Letter to Three Wives (1949) with Jeanne Crain, Linda Darnel and Ann Sothern. Very interesting movie.