rezzon8
März 2002 ist beigetreten
Willkommen auf neuen Profil
Unsere Aktualisierungen befinden sich noch in der Entwicklung. Die vorherige Version Profils ist zwar nicht mehr zugänglich, aber wir arbeiten aktiv an Verbesserungen und einige der fehlenden Funktionen werden bald wieder verfügbar sein! Bleibe dran, bis sie wieder verfügbar sind. In der Zwischenzeit ist Bewertungsanalyse weiterhin in unseren iOS- und Android-Apps verfügbar, die auf deiner Profilseite findest. Damit deine Bewertungsverteilung nach Jahr und Genre angezeigt wird, beziehe dich bitte auf unsere neue Hilfeleitfaden.
Abzeichen2
Wie du dir Kennzeichnungen verdienen kannst, erfährst du unter Hilfeseite für Kennzeichnungen.
Rezensionen5
Bewertung von rezzon8
As many of us know, Disney are great at animated features. The lapse in quality among those is extremely rare. However, the same cannot be said for the company's live-action fare, which has been on a downwards spiral since the great family entertainment released in the '60s.
I haven't seen 2002's "Holes" yet (which I've heard is great), but 2001's "The Princess Diaries" showed a glimmer of hope, which, I'm pleased to say, is alive and kicking in "Freaky Friday". I originally hated the idea of this remake, as I didn't think the original was that great anyway. However, this movie is luckily held up by a good script, genuinely hilarious comedy moments (one of the standouts being Jamie Lee Curtis' conversation with the caterers - "Halibut? Eew!") and two terrific performances from the leads.
Jamie Lee Curtis simply chews up the scenery as the mother with a teenager inside her, while Lindsay Lohan proves to be one of the few movie teens with charisma and comic timing.
Yes, it is predictible in places and yes, there are a couple of schmaltzy moments that threaten to bring down the whole movie, but when you're having such a great time, it's hard to care.
What with "Finding Nemo", "Pirates of the Caribbean" and "Freaky Friday", it looks like Disney is on a roll this year. All I have to say is, it's about time we got some quality family entertainment.
I haven't seen 2002's "Holes" yet (which I've heard is great), but 2001's "The Princess Diaries" showed a glimmer of hope, which, I'm pleased to say, is alive and kicking in "Freaky Friday". I originally hated the idea of this remake, as I didn't think the original was that great anyway. However, this movie is luckily held up by a good script, genuinely hilarious comedy moments (one of the standouts being Jamie Lee Curtis' conversation with the caterers - "Halibut? Eew!") and two terrific performances from the leads.
Jamie Lee Curtis simply chews up the scenery as the mother with a teenager inside her, while Lindsay Lohan proves to be one of the few movie teens with charisma and comic timing.
Yes, it is predictible in places and yes, there are a couple of schmaltzy moments that threaten to bring down the whole movie, but when you're having such a great time, it's hard to care.
What with "Finding Nemo", "Pirates of the Caribbean" and "Freaky Friday", it looks like Disney is on a roll this year. All I have to say is, it's about time we got some quality family entertainment.
First of all, I'd like to say how much I loved "Chicago" - an achievement, as I normally hate musicals. It was just so brilliantly acted (Renee Zellweger in court), directed ("Roxie Heart" and the mirrors), choreographed ("Cell Block Tango"), and it had a MESSAGE.
This is the message that I think people like 'dflayne' (comment below) missed; the movie does show two murderers getting away with everything, and the public applauding them. But that's exactly what the musical is about; it's an allegorical, satirical comment on our celebrity-obsessed society: two women can kill a man, but that doesn't make people hate them; in fact, it gets them more publicity. I know, it's a tragic flaw in our world, but it does exist; people get famous for the wrong reasons, and they'd do anything to get their "15 minutes of fame". But soon, those 15 minutes are up, and there's always some new person around the corner waiting to get famous for something completely undeserving respect.
This is the main reason I love "Chicago" - as a musical, it's one of the cleverest I've ever seen. It's dark, cynical, crazy, sexual and raw; rather than applauding Velma's and Roxie's behaviour, Fosse is asking the audience to view them as negative aspects of our society. It would be great to see them locked up - or worse for them, FAIL - but the real world is not that bright. And "Chicago" makes a great job of showing that.
My rating: 10/10
This is the message that I think people like 'dflayne' (comment below) missed; the movie does show two murderers getting away with everything, and the public applauding them. But that's exactly what the musical is about; it's an allegorical, satirical comment on our celebrity-obsessed society: two women can kill a man, but that doesn't make people hate them; in fact, it gets them more publicity. I know, it's a tragic flaw in our world, but it does exist; people get famous for the wrong reasons, and they'd do anything to get their "15 minutes of fame". But soon, those 15 minutes are up, and there's always some new person around the corner waiting to get famous for something completely undeserving respect.
This is the main reason I love "Chicago" - as a musical, it's one of the cleverest I've ever seen. It's dark, cynical, crazy, sexual and raw; rather than applauding Velma's and Roxie's behaviour, Fosse is asking the audience to view them as negative aspects of our society. It would be great to see them locked up - or worse for them, FAIL - but the real world is not that bright. And "Chicago" makes a great job of showing that.
My rating: 10/10
My main problem with Disney now is their live-action films. Although their animated features are miles ahead of every other company's (yes, they are), they seem to have forgotten to add the same quality to their live-action movies. Disney, give us more movies like "That Darn Cat!" (the remake never happened for me) "The Princess Diaries" was very good, in my opinion, but it's nowhere on the level of this movie. Like someone else said, this film doesn't talk down to children; it spurts big, clever words like "conspicuous" and doesn't care whether the kids will get it or not. This film is clever, fast and amazingly funny. In fact, I'm shocked it only got a measly 6 out of 10 here. It deserves much, much more.