sábado, 13 de marzo de 2010

Review: Green Zone15: 02 12/03/2010, Jeffrey M. Anderson, Amy Ryan, amyryan, Brendan Gleeson, brendangleeson, Greg Kinnear, gregkinnear, Matt Damon, m

Review: Green Zone15: 02 12/03/2010, Jeffrey M. Anderson, Amy Ryan, amyryan, Brendan Gleeson, brendangleeson, Greg Kinnear, gregkinnear, Matt Damon, mattdamon, Paul Greengrass, paulgreengrass, Cinematical


The Oscar-nominated British director Paul Greengrass seems prepared to "issue" movies. His directorial debut was the disease-of-the-week film theory of flight (1998), and found acclaim with explosives on Bloody Sunday (2002) and grip, (2006 United grueling 93), although none them exactly resulted in a bonanza of ticket sales. He seemed closer to his true calling with the second two Bourne movies, The Bourne Supremacy (2004) and The Bourne Ultimatum (2007), bringing his knack for tense action and uncommon intelligence for a couple of movies Summer action. If there were "problems" in the movies, which were buried in plots of kinetics.

Greengrass Now we are at a crossroads. Clearly the issue of bringing more glory movies and more personal satisfaction, but action films lead to happier customers and more wealth. It is an enigma to many artists have faced since the days of Sullivan's Travels (1941), when a comedy film director to the road to make a film about the "real America". But Greengrass has made an interesting question: why not do both at once? The answer to that question is the Green Zone. Loosely based on a nonfiction book written by Rajiv Chandrasekaran, is a fictional thriller with fictional characters, which takes place in a realistic environment. (Greengrass 2006 appropriations to book helping to launch a project he had begun work in 2004.)
Filed under: News, Universal, Theatrical Reviews, New in Theaters, War

Continue reading Review: Green Zone


Permalink | Email this | Comments

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario