Tuesday, July 6, 2010

How Strict Is Ryanair With Cabin Baggage

Eclipse

David Slade

Come lasciava sperare il trailer, “Eclipse” di David Slade (ben sceneggiato da Melissa Rosenberg) è il primo film della serie “Twilight” che si possa considerare abbastanza buono. Per il terzo capitolo della vicenda di Bella ed Edward la produzione ha avuto l'intelligenza di assumere un regista capace - e in più, esperto di vampiri (ha diretto il notevole “30 giorni di buio”). Slade per la prima volta introduce un'autentica nota horror in questa saga di buoni sentimenti.
In “Eclipse” Victoria, la nemica fissa di Bella e del clan Cullen (però l'interprete è cambiata), crea un esercito di vampiri newborn (il doppiaggio italiano ha “neonati”, che è corretto ma ha connotazioni sbagliate), che Vampires are stronger than normal. The previous films did not conceal the fierce vampire, but they treated her awkwardly ("Twilight") or subdued ("New Moon"), but here we find the appropriate touch left, both in the description of the army of bloodsuckers is three interesting flashback: the attack of an eighteenth-century vampire and his partner to the tribe of werewolves, the story of Rosalie, raped and abandoned dying, had returned as a vampire for revenge (beautiful appearance at his trembling head rapists, dressed as a bride, with a fierce smile), the story of Jasper, Confederate Army officer and then a fearsome vampire Mexican lieutenant.
Slade sa dirigere gli attori: vuoi grazie a lui, vuoi per la maggiore esperienza, sono migliori che in passato non solo Robert Pattinson ma anche la limitata Kristen Stewart. Il terzo incomodo Taylor Lautner (Jacob) tende un po' troppo a lavorare esibendo i pettorali, alla Victor Mature, ma non è facile per un uomo - né per un licantropo - trovarsi a suo agio nella parte di “seconda scelta”; comunque, il film riesce perfino (sembrava impossibile) a raggiungere un tono di verità nella descrizione del triangolo amoroso. Fra gli interpreti secondari, da citare specialmente Jackson Rathbone (Jasper), Ashley Greene (Alice), e naturalmente Dakota Fanning, che concentra nella sua raffigurazione di Jane tutta la crudele superiorità Volturi.
A higher budget has allowed an improvement of the special effects (the scene of Jacob caressing Bella turned into a wolf is very credible). The fitting of Art Jones and Nancy Richardson is effective: see for example the sharp break from the gloomy speech by Rosalie bloodthirsty onslaught of vampire Victoria in a group of human beings, or the energy to chase scene Victoria by Cullen. The final battle, where two groups of vampires, werewolves, one of which is allied to, collide, in parallel with the mounting battle between Edward and Victoria in the mountains, reaches a dramatic tension that was missing from the series (the final battle of "Twilight" it was ridiculous). Particularly affected the beautiful vampire newborn Bree, a frightened young girl, and perfect the menacing solemnity final arrival of the Volturi.
Of course the film does not neglect the emotional aspect, and a photograph of Javier Aguirresarobe here you grant unabashedly romantic tone. The problem which plagues Bella is no longer whether to marry or before the first bite themselves, but if you lose your virginity before or after marriage. That is, the underlying moral dilemma to books and films in the series (where the vampirization "stands for" sexual intercourse) hours, introduced the topic of marriage comes out of the metaphor: the loss of virginity as content becomes metaphorical parallel theme. Very funny
- But not without logic: after all has more than 100 years - the Puritanism of Edward, rejecting premarital sex and even makes his proposal so nicely "antediluvian" (Bella dixit): "Isabella Swan ... grant me the extraordinary honor of being my wife? ". Along the movies, entr'actes nose-against-nose between Edward and Jacob lead rivals a pleasant note (but not for the three main characters). Cursed monogamy, one might say, and Bella always seems about to say, but this story is located by definition on the side of "let's do not, then nothing. If you learn something ANICA Bella Blake by Laurell K. Hamilton would be better for her - But it would be more "Twilight," right?

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