I don't know how to rate

Edwardo 2022-04-22 07:01:21

Don't know how to give points because I like to watch Gilmore movies.

The male protagonist is weak but loves the female protagonist and his sister deeply and does not want to hurt anyone. Can only observe silently, hide, do nothing

In the whole play, Dousen is handsome..., the second male doctor is the green leaf in the movie, there are only a few photos of him in the album, no one pays attention to it.

The female No. 2 Chastain, this drama was written for her. If you look at her acting skills, then she is the protagonist of the whole film. Just like Kong Skull Island is all about watching gorilla acting, even if there is a large group of people, there is nothing to say.

I just saw someone thinking the same thing as me. Siblings are a dual personality. But splitting it up into two people seems a bit thin and not complicated enough for human nature. I think either Hirsom or Chastain would be enough for the desired effect.

\t^h/ read 2015-10-15

It doesn't take so much effort to spoof "Beauty's Plan"... In the end, the audience is all laughing (but by comedy standards, the front and back are seriously out of balance). As for the performance, I can only say that if Vincent Price is in the contemporary era, it is definitely a super-class acting school. The Sharpe brothers and sisters wrote that he can act and play like a person, and it is estimated that the effect is better than here.

View more about Crimson Peak reviews

Extended Reading

Crimson Peak quotes

  • Lucille Sharpe: [Looking at the dead butterflies] They're dying. They take the heat from the sun, and when it deserts them, they die.

    Edith Cushing: How sad.

    Lucille Sharpe: No, it's not sad, Edith. It's nature. It's a world of everything dying and eating each other right beneath our feet.

    Edith Cushing: Surely there's more to it than that.

    Lucille Sharpe: [Looking at Edith] Beautiful things are fragile... At home we have only black moths. Formidable creatures, to be sure, but they lack beauty. They thrive on the dark and cold.

    Edith Cushing: What do they feed on?

    Lucille Sharpe: Butterflies, I'm afraid.

  • Lucille Sharpe: You will stay here, with us... won't you? Wait for the storm to pass.

    Dr. Alan McMichael: If you insist.