Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Movie Reviews

Rogue One Review
1. Disney

2. Tony Gilroy, Chris Weitz
3. 10
4. It has a strong female lead that we need for young women to look up to.
5. It isn't that connected to the other movies, I mean it is but the orignal plot is hidden and modernized. 
6. "What the film really lacks is a strong and vigorous male lead (such as Han Solo or John Boyega's Finn in The Force Awakens) to balance more equally with Jyn and supply a sparring partner. None of the men here has real physical or vocal stature, nor any scenes in which they can decisively emerge from the pack in a way that engages audience enthusiasm. Both Luna and Ahmed have proved themselves repeatedly in big-screen and television performances, but their characters never pop here, to the film's detriment. And given that Jyn is rather less gung-ho and imposing than was Ridley's Rey, there's an overall feel of less physical capacity on the part of the main characters."



1. Peyo
2. J. David Stem, David N. Weiss, Jay Scherick, David Ronn
3. 8
4.The themes of feminism and girl power are very strong throughout the movie.
5. It isn't an adult movie, it's a young audience appeal, but the messages are good for them too
6. "Sony Pictures Animation has gone back to the well and unapologetically left adults behind for the third entry in their Smurfs franchise. Discarding the combination of live-action and animation that marked the first two efforts, Smurfs: The Lost Village is strictly animated and geared only for younger viewers. The reboot directed by Kelly Asbury (Shrek 2) should please its target audience while providing little entertainment value to any adult chaperones who appreciated Neil Patrick Harris and Hank Azaria’s enjoyably over-the-top turns in the first two films."

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