Acquiring and beautiful story

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The first team, the first images may discourage, can make we would like to get out of the cinema, because I think we got here by accident. Razi us apathy, alienation of man, the total alienation in the world around him. Lack of purpose in life, a job that is only killing the passing of time, otherwise void. And here there is a complete metamorphosis, when transferred to a new, charming place - Newfoundland. The first impression is not very nice, but after a while Quoyle realizes that in spite of everything, but at the end of the world for the first time able to enjoy life, to draw from it handfuls, able to smile at her daughter, in a way, to forget about his wife's death. Make his life and work, can have a particular value when, through it all he finds himself in a new, much pogodniejszego man.

I work in the local newspaper "Tattler" meant that he began to see much more, "looking at the main character, we realize that life must be something more - otherwise it will be empty." She used those words Agnieszka Duda, writing a very similar climatic (literally and figuratively) film "101 Reykjavik". Somewhere along the way Quoyle also finds its happiness in the form of a second woman, as he is raising a child alone, as well as rubs the dust of history and reads the shocking fate of his ancestors. Here modernity is intertwined with the past through vividly sketched images, the dark, but beautiful.

Each of them is underlined full of charm, supporting this mysterious atmosphere, the music, full of Celtic rhythms.

One of these paintings is a large wooden house drawn by a group of people on the ice, the house, which once will fly! Kevin Spacey has created an interesting role, giving it a personal shape, making just he and not someone else to be the best suited.

Yes, as in "American Beauty", so also now his role is heavily scratched, full of contradictions, but at the same time very friendly. On the other hand, Lasse Hallström made reflective, deeply deposited in the consciousness of the image, before "The Cider House Rules" and "What's Eating Gilbert Grape," an adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-Annie Proulx's novel of the same title. The film also occurred Julianne Moore, Judi Dench and Cate Blanchett ..