пятница, 20 мая 2011 г.

Metro

Movie: Metro

Released on: 1997

Rating: 5.20

More: About Metro

News:

Director Sidney Lumet Dies at 86

Director Sidney Lumet died today of lymphoma at the age of 86.  Lumet began his career in the theater before transitioning into extensive work in the new medium of television throughout the 1950s.  Lumet directed his first film, 12 Angry Men, in 1957 -- it ranks among cinema's greatest feature debuts.  His filmography is littered with classics, including Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon, Network, and The Verdict.  Lumet ended his career on a high note in 2007 with Before the Devil Knows You're Dead.Watch a few of the iconic scenes Mr. Lumet directed after the jump.12 Angry MenDog Day AfternoonAnd from my favorite Lumet film, Network»

- Brendan Bettinger

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Movie Reviews: Hanna

To paraphrase the common clichй: You reads your critics and you takes your choice. Either Hanna is an intelligent top-of-the-line thriller, or its a pretentious over-the-top deceit — the critics are divided almost equally. Among those praising it is Roger Ebert, who writes in the Chicago Sun-Times: “Hanna is good, sound filmmaking. It depends on stylistic order and discipline, a clear story map and ingenious action sequences. It is not all banging and flashing.” Michael O’Sullivan in the Washington Post remarks that director Joe Wright “has come up with one heck of an excuse to go to the multiplex,” creating “a classic popcorn movie, subclassification: chase flick. Eat with one hand, because you’ll need the other to hang on to your seat.” Roger Moore in the Orlando Sentinel observes that the film is “alternately nerve-wracking and funny,” making for “a thriller that is every bit as ruthessly efficient and merciless as its titular heroine.” The 16-year-old actress who plays that heroine, Saoirse Ronan, is being acclaimed for her performance even by critics who fault the movie as a whole. Ty Burr in the Boston Globe praises her “spooky, tightrope walk of a performance” as Hanna, even as he remarks that Wright has “overdirected” the movie, which, he says, is “made with a self-importance the story itself doesn’t warrant.” Scott Bowles in USA Today praises Ronan as “a deft acress who is one of the few youngsters capable of pulling off action with acting.” But the film itself, he says, is merely “an action wannabe.” Mick Lasalle in the San Francisco Chronicle writes that the 16-year-old “has remarkable thinking eyes and a serious actor’s intelligence.” However, he says, the movie “ is no smarter than any other run-of-the-mill cinematic death fest, just grimmer, bleaker and sadder.” And Manohla Dargis in the New York Times comments that Ronan’s “eerie, translucent blue eyes” seem “transformed into opaque pools.” However, she adds, “That they don’t reveal much is part of the big surprise as well as a liability in a movie that is by turns startling and generic, subtle and blunt, and consistently keeps you in its grip if not its heart.”

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