phadrs
dic 2001 se unió
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Harold & Maude came on the satellite the other night and I became gradually transfixed. I'd never been a great fan of Cat Stevens but his music was perfectly fitted to the story. I'd seen bits of the movie before but not the whole thing. I'd have remembered it.
Many movies of the era come across as dated and annoying but this one doesn't. It evokes emotions that are always relevant and the period elements become inconsequential.
I was struck looking at the IMDb rating chart that it rates almost equally across all ages and gender. It is rare to find a movie that we "Over 50's" and youths both find great appeal in.
Many movies of the era come across as dated and annoying but this one doesn't. It evokes emotions that are always relevant and the period elements become inconsequential.
I was struck looking at the IMDb rating chart that it rates almost equally across all ages and gender. It is rare to find a movie that we "Over 50's" and youths both find great appeal in.
My wife is a polio survivor, and obviously handicapped, from the disease's last American days in the 1950's. I was a little worried about selecting it for our evening viewing because too often movies about a physical or other handicap tend to fall into a mushy wallow of pity and become insulting. Whatever failings this one has as an historical or biographical document, so ably pointed out by my fellow reviewers, it was clear to us that the real topic was his facing, accepting, and surviving polio and then moving on. It did so realistically and with complete grace. The portrayals of paternalism/pity/revulsion shown the handicapped by many and by Franklin himself were spot-on examples of the well-meaning but hurtful attentions that people carrying many different burdens get handed daily. The polio didn't ultimately define FDR-the man, any more than his hair color did but the movie does a wonderful job showing his transition to that realization, and yet never asks us to feel sorry for him.
Army recruits categorized as, shall we say, neither the best nor brightest, but they somehow get turned on when reluctant teacher DeVito reads Shakespeare's Hamlet to them and it hits a chord. The high point of the film is reached when one of those recites on command his "irrelevant" Shakespeare on a rainy night's drill to Sergeant Gregory Hines and finds in his memory from "Henry V" (with lead-in not at hand) "We few, we happy few, we band of brothers. For he today that sheds his blood with me, Shall be my brother." This is a truly nice movie, about heroes but not about touting war. At a later point, my usually stoic wife shed some tears. Danny De Vito is surprising to me. He generally leaps over my expectations, no matter how far I raise them up.