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Runtime: 170 min Audio: AC3 Language: Eng Resolution: 720x480 Frame Rate: 24 fps Video Bitrate: 5428 Kb/sec Audio Bitrate: 384 kbps |
Review: The Aviator - Howard Hughes biopic - clearly one of Scorsese's work for less. Even less work from Scorsese's much better to do a good job of Director of his gun. Here's the rundown: the first quarter of the movie is a total triumph, showing a young Hughes tries to shoot in bold if it is produced at the time of the film's lavish and expensive ever. Scorsese Tipping his hat on the old Hollywood is the most fun he has since Goodfellas. costumes, scenery and pace of some of the film's stunning and suck the viewer's part in.The rest of the film, despite Scorsese's amazing attention to detail and vivid as having Food confusing, let us Hughes glimpse obsessive (and compulsive) methods, women's ambition to foray He started the first day of the flight and the flight of trade, the fight against the Congress and to the end of World War II flight and the fate of the infamous Spruce Goose of its most notorious. Half of all educational and entertaining, but I think that the life of Hughes mystery.As the complexity of the results, they are amazing (thanks mostly Scorsese with the director of marketing). Leonardo DiCaprio title role yet taken my natural loathing for him and even though he seems a bit too boyish Hughes plays last year (and the movies actually suffer for it), it makes a better part of the movie. Cate Blanchett as Katherine Hepburn is simply stunning, and now he steals every screen. His looks, his character, and the voice would fit perfectly with their level of screen legend haunting. Alan Alda and Alec Baldwin play a supportive role in almost the villain is a great option. And the nicest surprise is Kate Beckinsale, actress flaccid as usual, playing Ava Gardner. He was proud, intelligent and goal of their time on a small screen without ever openly steal her scenes. As Sharon Stone casino and Cameron Diaz Scorsese's Gangs of New York once again coaxes great performance pretty face otherwise unremarkable. Finally, a big thanks flies Scorsese and show, even if a real person is also lost in the muddle half-truths and predictions.
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