WC
“If every scene is brilliant, your movie is going to be monotonous,” intones Dalton Trumbo to a high-reaching, self-aggrandising Otto Preminger. He’s damn right, and no movie shows it better than Trumbo.
Jay Roach’s biopic of the screenwriting genius blacklisted for his communist leanings isn’t perfect (although it is a damn sight more impressive than what you’d expect from the director of the Austin Powers trilogy). He falls into several of the traps of biopic filmmaking – background information is doled out in movie news reels, the world is full of references singularly to historically important events, images of the real life people play over the end-credits – and yet Trumbo rises above all that as an exciting, engaging, not-quite-brilliant-but-far-fr om-monotonous movie.
"If you are already a fan of this franchise, this is a very good option this weekend at the cinema. It's well made, the actors are great and the story/world setting is very interesting." - Bryan (Resident Entertainment)
Ashley Madison-Sex Lies and Scandal Review: The documentary refuses to take a stand on whether or not it wants us to feel bad for cheaters, infuriating viewers with its wishy washy attitude.
Monster Review: While this film delivers elements of horror and thriller, they're only sporadically effective, leaving the overall experience falling short of expectations.
That's some filmmaking wisdom right there.
Real iffy on this. Cranston is a must see but other than this review, I've heard it getting not so good reviews.