aramis-112-804880
Entrou em jul. de 2011
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Selos4
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Avaliações1,3 mil
Classificação de aramis-112-804880
This series started my reading of Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe books.
Nero Wolfe is an eighth of a ton detective who never leaves his house and has a wide variety of fears, including automobiles.
For legwork he relies on his assistant, Archie. Though Archie is his Watson, detailing his cases, since Wolfe never leaves home Archie takes a large part in the cases. He also has extremely witty narration (carried over in this series by voice-overs by the actor who plays Archie, Tim Hutton).
Hutton is wonderful and his dialogue and voice-overs are delicious for anyone who enjoys the English language.
I'm not familiar with the actor who plays Wolfe, but he seems young for the role. Still, he's suitably rude.
Warning: though the books ran for decades, the series is set in a colorful, never-ending 1950s, as they never were. The art design is fresh and vibrant, though occasionally bewildering. This series is worth watching for the ties alone.
The series has an ensemble cast where the actors play various parts in different episodes, and that works great.
Not all the episodes are that great. They mainly focused on the shorter works and rarely touched Stout's finely written novels. I wish they'd been allowed to do more.
Enjoyable detective show. Enjoy.
Nero Wolfe is an eighth of a ton detective who never leaves his house and has a wide variety of fears, including automobiles.
For legwork he relies on his assistant, Archie. Though Archie is his Watson, detailing his cases, since Wolfe never leaves home Archie takes a large part in the cases. He also has extremely witty narration (carried over in this series by voice-overs by the actor who plays Archie, Tim Hutton).
Hutton is wonderful and his dialogue and voice-overs are delicious for anyone who enjoys the English language.
I'm not familiar with the actor who plays Wolfe, but he seems young for the role. Still, he's suitably rude.
Warning: though the books ran for decades, the series is set in a colorful, never-ending 1950s, as they never were. The art design is fresh and vibrant, though occasionally bewildering. This series is worth watching for the ties alone.
The series has an ensemble cast where the actors play various parts in different episodes, and that works great.
Not all the episodes are that great. They mainly focused on the shorter works and rarely touched Stout's finely written novels. I wish they'd been allowed to do more.
Enjoyable detective show. Enjoy.
Henry II of England (and most of what we call France) and his erstwhile pal Thomas Becket, become enemies during a squabble between church (in the form of ecclesiastical courts) and state (the mercurial king).
The multitudinous historical errors are too many to list! Foremost among them being, Beckett wasn't a Saxon.
This is no historical treatise. Don't mistake it for one.
It's based on a play depicting two mighty opposites. And it's a great acting contest between two of the best actors of their day, Peter O 'Toole (Henry) and Richard Burton (Becket).
Also in the mix is John Gielgud as the French king. But Gielgud is no match for the O'Toole Burton axis, as King Louis was no match for Henry in real life. No matter who is in this movie, it's basically a two-hander between o'Toole and Burton.
O'Toole returned to the role of Henry in the more fun "Lion in Winter" and he's superb in both. Watch for the acting, not the history.
The multitudinous historical errors are too many to list! Foremost among them being, Beckett wasn't a Saxon.
This is no historical treatise. Don't mistake it for one.
It's based on a play depicting two mighty opposites. And it's a great acting contest between two of the best actors of their day, Peter O 'Toole (Henry) and Richard Burton (Becket).
Also in the mix is John Gielgud as the French king. But Gielgud is no match for the O'Toole Burton axis, as King Louis was no match for Henry in real life. No matter who is in this movie, it's basically a two-hander between o'Toole and Burton.
O'Toole returned to the role of Henry in the more fun "Lion in Winter" and he's superb in both. Watch for the acting, not the history.
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