


Super 8 (4K UHD + Digital)
J**F
Abrams' tribute to Spielberg is mostly good and worth watching.
âSuper 8â was made as a summer adventure/Sci-fi film in 2011, aimed at a young audience, and as such should be fairly free from controversy., but the opposite is true. People seem to be passionately either for or against the film in a way unthinkable in previous decades. Over time, science fiction films went from low budget affairs strictly for kids to gigantically budgeted films of much greater significance; from trivial fare to films that attracted serious critical attention.Add to this the problems that arise with great expectations. âSuper 8â came with an impeccable pedigree: producer Steven Spielberg and writer and director J.J. Abrams, the equivalent of royalty in the world of science fiction films. Spielberg everyone knows, but in this case itâs important to know that he was personally very involved in the project and was frequently on set. J.J. Abrams was already a major writer and producer who came out of television hits like âFelicityâ, âAliasâ and âLostâ before directing the first two âStar Trekâ reboots, âMission Impossible IIIâ and âCloverfieldâ. (He has stumbled somewhat with the last two âStar Warsâ films, but thatâs a fanbase that is impossible to please). Still, with expectations as high as they were, there was a big chance of disappointment.The film is an intentional homage to classic Spielberg of the late 70âs through early 80âs and as such is practically perfect. There are many literal references to Spielbergâs films that I wonât give away, but if I say itâs about a group of typical American suburban teenagers in 1979 who get involved in a mystery that involves a space alien, I think you get the picture. But thereâs more to it than that. If you were to go to the theater without any knowledge beforehand, you would think you were watching a Spielberg film.All The Spielberg tropes are there. The setting in suburbia or a suburb-like small town, a place considered too mundane by most other directors, which Spielberg used to show that magical things can happen in the most ordinary places. The teenage central characters, a specific link to âE.T.â (in some ways you could call this film a dark version of âE.T.â), and the fact that in most of his less-serious adventure films there is at least one teen in the primary cast. Of course there is the alien being present as well as government interest with the government people here being far more serious than in âE.T.â, more like âClose Encountersâ where they also stage an evacuation on false premises. Oh, and the first movie he ever made, at age 12, was about a train wreck, using his model trains.The kids even make their own movies, much as Spielberg did in his youth with âFireflyâ and âAmblinâ among others. As a map shows, the town is just north of Cincinnati, where Spielberg was born (though his family moved around the country a few years later). Abrams, no doubt with excellent advice, even achieves the look of a Spielberg film with camerawork, lighting and color. At one point a car races along in the foreground with a big, âClose Encountersâ starry sky above.The film is a real success in summoning up the world of Spielberg, especially in âE.T.â and âClose Encountersâ but how is it on its own? It mostly succeeds, especially in its first two thirds. The kids are differentiated enough and the central group (of 8) interact like real kids with conflicts, in-jokes and working together. The central character, Joe Lamb, isnât the one directing the home movie, and thatâs a nice touch. Heâs also a rather quiet, slightly introverted boy into making models and is played that way convincingly by Joel Courtney. The real standout is Elle Fanning (as Alice Dainard), whose acting beyond her years is absolutely astonishing. She jumped out of the screen at me in an early scene of the group making the movie at a local train station. Her acting was so far beyond any expectation and anyone else in the film, that I had to watch the scene again. The other kids are funny, their main role. The adults are adequate, but not much more than that. They each convey the role they are supposed to be, but thatâs all.The writing is a bit hit or miss, though here you get into matters of personal taste. I thought there was too much of a soap operatic backstory to the Lamb and Dainard families. Their connections may have looked great on paper but the whole thing was unnecessary and a bit too distracting. The military man in charge was too much of a stock villain without any clear motive for being so. It was much more interesting that in âE.T.â the seemingly sinister government people, in the end, were only trying to help.The special effects are good, though gratuitous at times and require the audience to suspend disbelief a few times too many. A heavy, speeding train would just smash right through a small pickup truck and keep going, but it sets up a big scene thatâs wonderfully executed. Later on the CGI gets a bit much and takes over for the entire problematic finale. The finale, at least a quarter of the film, almost drops all pretense of reality (yes, it is a movie, but still...) and is the part that causes much of the negativity toward the film. One always has to give any film a certain amount of wild coincidences and improbable happenings, but here they really pile up. When the alien is shown, late in the film, itâs a bit too much of a monster and not enough of a sentient being for me. No effort at all was made to explain how the alien Rubikâs cube-like technology worked; just a hint would have been fine.Letâs get back to the beginning. This was a summer movie made for a mostly young audience to enjoy. It totally succeeds in that for me. Yes, the ending is not up to the rest of the film and feels grafted on. But itâs a good film with a great atmosphere, and most people should really enjoy it.
J**D
SUPER 8 - A masterful original story, with omage to Spielbergian Cinema.
As a kid who grew up in the late 70's and 80's watching films like ET, Jaws and Close Encounters I was destined to enjoy this movie. For me to say that Super 8 is a nostalgic and entertaining movie would be true. To say that Super 8 is a J.J. Abrams tribute to Spielbergian cinema would be partly true. Partly. There are so many parallels to story, characters, time period and genre that's it near impossible not to immediately start making connections to which Spielberg film is being referenced in any particular scene.That said, before I get into Spielbergia I must give J.J. Abrams his due as an original artist. Anyone who has watched American television the past decade knows Abrams can deliver solidly on story and character with series like Alias, Lost and Fringe under his belt. However, until now his feature film career has been rooted in existing properties like Mission Impossible III and the new Star Trek. Both highly entertaining and visceral films in my opinion. But with Super 8 being his first original screenplay for a feature film, in some ways this was uncharted territory for Abrams. But with someone like Spielberg as his collaborator and producer and Abrams litany of experience in film-making and storytelling its hard to imagine his first original feature being anything but what we would come to expect from him. Emotional, well plotted, well acted, funny and just plain entertaining.Now that we've gotten that out of the way lets get to the fun part - the Spielberg parallels! Here's the ones I spotted, in no particular order:1. The "catalyst" into Act 2 is a spectacular train crash. Any coincidence that the 1st movie Spielberg remember's seeing as a child was 'The Greatest Show on Earth', which also contains one of the biggest train crashes in movie history? In fact, that train crash is said to be what inspired an 8 year Spielberg to shoot his first film; 2 toy trains crashing into each other (also as a way to get away with seeing his toy trains crash over and over without getting them taken away by his father.) Notice the discussion in Super 8 about filming the toy trains crashing into one another, which ultimately they do.2. The obvious MILITARY parallel of Alien Life in Close Encounters being covered up by a staged viral outbreak that kills anyone or thing that breathes it causing town evacuation. This VS. the Military coverup of Alien Life in Super 8 being a staged grass fire that causes town evacuation.3. In JAWS the scariest thing about the shark is the NOT seeing it. Same is true in Super 8, we don't fully see the monster until the film is almost finished. Builds suspense much more effectively.3. Any coincidence the place that that the Alien in Super 8 makes his final takeoff into space from a water "tower". In Close Encounters the Alien Mothership arrives and takes off from Devil's "Tower", Wyoming.4. The town hall meeting in Super 8 is very reminiscent of the town hall meeting in Close Encounters. All citizens EXCEPT the sheriff seem to be clueless and way off base about whats really going on.5. The sound that the Alien makes is VERY similar to the sound of the T-Rex in Jurassic Park (as well as the sound of the dying truck in Spielberg's 1st feature 'Duel'.)6. The main kid, Joe doesn't make good grades, as evidenced by him throwing his C+ papers aside when the Alice sees them (this could easily be a J.J. Abrams childhood connection too however.)7. In ET & CLOSE ENCOUNTERS the alien makes a "psychic" connection of some kind with the people it interacts with. In ET its Elliott "feeling" what ET feels (i.e. classroom scene with frogs & Elliott getting drunk & Elliott getting sick when ET gets sick, etc.) In Close Encounters its Richard Dreyfuss and Melinda Dillon being obsessed with the image of Devil's Tower, which ultimately draws them to it. In Super 8 every human the Alien touches "sees" what the alien feels and has been through, thus sympathizing with it.8. In ET a group of underdog kids led by Elliott "save the day" for ET. In THE GOONIES a group of underdog kids led by Mikey "save the day" for Mikey's families home which is about to be sold and bulldozed. Same here in Super 8 with Joe, the main kid taking one of the cubes which is close enough to the Water Tower to be drawn to it, thus creating a foundation for the Alien's ship to work from. Remember all the other cubes had been taken away by the government until the very end. And Joe is the one who tell the Alien to "GO" and that he understands and that bad things happen and its OK. This could be seen as the alien's motivation to leave. (my brother mentioned a parallel to 'Stand By Me' underdog kids, which is also true.)9. Slight Spielbergian cinematography connections - 2: a. The way both the gas station attendant and the airfare bus driver are "pulled away" feet first screaming by the Alien is very similar to the first death in Jurassic Park, where the gatekeeper is "pulled away" feet first screaming by the Velociraptor. b. The side tracking dolly shots of the kids running through neighborhood "up and over" hills, fences, etc is very similar to side tracking dolly shots in ET of kids riding their bikes through neighborhood "up and over" hills, fences, etc trying to get ET to the forrest.10. And here are a random sampling of other various connections I saw to Spielbergian cinema - the use of smoke and light, the conversational cadence of the kids interrupting each other & using cuss words poorly, loss of a parent, military being overly "big brother" in hiding alien, tracking and dolly shots, overhead shot of bus. I could go on and on.Without question Super 8 has a multitude of connections and parallels to Steven Spielberg films but it is also good to keep in mind that good story elements are good story elements no matter when, where or who they are used by. Many times the good ones pop up over and over again, precisely for that reason, because they work. Overlap to previous archetypes or story mythologies is inevitable because the ones we like are the ones we like, whether they are set in space or in the old west. Good storytellers are drawn to these same archetypal stories, they just flavor them differently each generation. In summation, all of these parallels could simply be a MASTER STUDENT (Abrams) following his MASTER TEACHER (Spielberg) with such skill that it comes off as an omage, which it very well may be and does not keep it from being a truly original work.BONUS!#. Not a Spielberg omage but the name of the gas station KELVIN is the 2nd reference J.J. Abrams has made to his grandfather in a feature film, the 1st being the name of one of the spaceships in Star Trek (the "U.S.S. Kelvin") And of course all LOST fans know Kelvin is the name of the guy that was in the Swan Hatch before Desmond.#. Also not a Spielberg parallel, but the kids zombie file "The Case" pays omega to George A. Romero, the godfather of zombie films by naming the chemical plant 'Romero Chemicals'. Loved that.
H**S
Steven Spielberg underrated movie
The movie is great but it's got decent grain if anyone likes it but it's great 4k transfer
L**D
Blue Rays*
BientĂŽt dix ans pour ce film â Ă noter dâailleurs pour les amateurs de 4K quâune nouvelle Ă©dition va paraĂźtre Ă lâoccasion de ce 10Ăšme anniversaire. La nostalgie / cĂ©lĂ©bration des annĂ©es 80 nâen finit plus de battre son plein, qui pour sâen tenir Ă un univers relativement proche a depuis pu culminer par exemple dans la sĂ©rie Stranger Things. En 2011, J.J. Abrams Ă©tait non seulement le crĂ©ateur de sĂ©ries que lâon sait, mais aussi un producteur et rĂ©alisateur de cinĂ©ma dĂ©jĂ accompli, notamment pour son travail au sein de franchises comme Mission : Impossible et Star Trek. Rendre hommage Ă ce quâon Ă©tait adolescent et ce qui nous a formĂ©s, servir dans le mĂȘme temps les « mauvais » genres que lâon aime tant : la formule nâest pas nouvelle, et comme toute formule elle trouve assez vite ses limites. Avec Super 8, mĂȘme dans un cadre limitĂ© et mĂȘme sâil ne dĂ©veloppe pas franchement tout le potentiel de son point de dĂ©part, Abrams me paraĂźt cependant avoir vraiment rĂ©ussi son coup et signĂ© un film Ă©minemment sympathique.Le secret du succĂšs : ĂȘtre honnĂȘte, bien sĂ»r, ne pas sâengager dans une entreprise de rĂ©cupĂ©ration tous azimuts, et Ă©viter ce qui abĂźme tant de films plus ou moins sur le mĂȘme modĂšle. Il Ă©tait donc capital de ne pas faire uniquement dans le festival de rĂ©fĂ©rences dâune part, de ne pas perdre la part de candeur admirĂ©e dans les Ćuvres auxquelles on rend hommage en faisant constamment dans le clin dâĆil et/ou le deuxiĂšme ou troisiĂšme degrĂ©. Bien sĂ»r, câest le genre de films conçus par des âgeeksâ qui sâadressent au moins en partie Ă une communautĂ© dâautres âgeeksâ du mĂȘme genre, en particulier ceux qui ont Ă©tĂ© jeunes Ă la mĂȘme Ă©poque. Mais pas que, et pour cela on peut remercier Abrams, qui a vĂ©ritablement cherchĂ© Ă rendre hommage mais aussi Ă crĂ©er une Ćuvre autonome susceptible de prendre le relais, aujourdâhui et pour une autre gĂ©nĂ©ration, de celles qui lâont nourri lui et une partie de sa gĂ©nĂ©ration trois dĂ©cennies auparavant. A nâen pas douter Super 8 aura de lâimportance pour nombre de spectateurs qui lâauront dĂ©couvert, enfant ou adolescent, dans les annĂ©es 2010, et qui sait peut-ĂȘtre autant que les productions Spielberg en ont eu pour leurs aĂźnĂ©s. Sa rĂ©ussite se jugera finalement aussi Ă cette aune, mais je suis pour ma part assez peu inquiet.En ce qui me concerne, les parallĂšles avec E.T. (ou dans une moindre mesure Rencontres du troisiĂšme type) ne me gĂȘnent en aucun cas. Quant au cĂŽtĂ© Club des cinq â le filon creusĂ© par dâautres productions Spielberg des annĂ©es 80, Ă commencer Ă©videmment par les Goonies (1985) â sâil nâa bien sĂ»r rien dâoriginal, il est ici traitĂ© avec assez de sens de lâĂ -propos et de fraĂźcheur pour ne pas ĂȘtre quâune pure resucĂ©e. Nourri de ses propres souvenirs â le point commun avec Spielberg Ă©tant bien sĂ»r quâils Ă©taient tous deux des enfants ayant expĂ©rimentĂ© trĂšs jeune en faisant leurs petits films de leur cĂŽtĂ©, en 8 mm pour lâaĂźnĂ© et en Super 8 pour le cadet â Super 8 trouve de fait un Ă©quilibre assez enviable entre le retour sur lâenfance de lâart et lâhommage aux genres toujours aimĂ©s (parfois un peu Ă la Joe Dante, mais avec moins de mauvais esprit et dâironie mĂȘme si lui aussi a pu se pencher sur eux Ă©galement avec tendresse, comme dans Matinee / Panic Ă Florida Beach, 1993). Bien sĂ»r, on peut prĂ©fĂ©rer la candeur des modĂšles â et aussi une forme dâangoisse plus profonde, qui est sans doute pour beaucoup chez Spielberg pour faire ressortir dâautant plus la victoire du merveilleux â et on peut aimer justement un peu plus de mauvais esprit. En dĂ©finitive, un spectateur comme moi prĂ©fĂ©rera toujours un Joe Dante Ă un J.J. Abrams**, mĂȘme si le deuxiĂšme, Ă lâĂąge numĂ©rique, peut rĂ©aliser des films plus immĂ©diatement impressionnants que le premier. Je ne pense pas que la façon dont il a repris la franchise Star Wars, pour moi de façon trop servile et en montrant assez peu de personnalitĂ©, soit une trĂšs bonne nouvelle relativement Ă sa capacitĂ© Ă rĂ©sister au formatage plus quâĂ la marge. Mais pour ce qui est de la façon avec laquelle il a au prĂ©alable saluĂ© Steven Spielberg en suivant sur ses pas, je trouve pour ma part quâil a mis le curseur lĂ oĂč il le fallait, prĂ©cisĂ©ment de façon assez autonome â mais cela est Ă©videmment dĂ» au fait quâil pouvait crĂ©er son histoire de zĂ©ro, ce qui est plus difficile Ă faire dans les Star Wars â et sans trop faire le malin. FilmĂ© sur pellicule avec quelques plans occasionnellement tournĂ©s en numĂ©rique (et Ă©videmment avec de multiples plans filmĂ©s sur fond vert), remarquablement assistĂ© par son chef opĂ©rateur Larry Fong, Abrams use et abuse du âflareâ et de lâeffet « rayon bleu » que lâon trouve ici aussi bien dans les intĂ©rieurs quâen extĂ©rieur (notamment dans la scĂšne de lâaccident, puis celle dans la chambre avec le projecteur)***. Un bon signe que les modĂšles sont des films des annĂ©es 80 et 90, bien sĂ»r, une volontĂ© de retrouver un type de lumiĂšres et de caractĂ©ristiques visuelles qui Ă©taient prĂ©cisĂ©ment ceux des films de Spielberg et de quelques autres, et sans doute une façon de pointer vers un ailleurs merveilleux, baignĂ© de religiositĂ©, qui identifie en partie ces films. Cet indice visuel suffit-il Ă en faire lâĂ©quivalent ? Sans doute pas, mais en cela comme en dâautres choses, Abrams retrouve tout de mĂȘme quelque chose de ses modĂšles, en renouvelant la formule juste ce quâil faut.La bande de gamins quâil a trouvĂ©s est trĂšs bien, et il les a Ă©videmment dirigĂ©s de façon Ă ce que lâĂ©cueil dont je parlais plus haut soit soigneusement Ă©vitĂ©. Il fallait ne pas trop tenir les spectateurs Ă distance tout en cherchant Ă se les mettre dans la poche, par les trop nombreux clins dâĆil notamment, et pouvoir croire aux sentiments des personnages. De ce point de vue, comptent non seulement la façon dont Abrams a dirigĂ© les jeunes acteurs mais aussi le casting lui-mĂȘme, pas loin du coup de gĂ©nie, en tout cas pour les deux acteurs principaux. On croit tout de suite Ă Joel Courtney en double Ă peine fantasmĂ© dâAbrams et il incarne idĂ©alement le mĂ©lange de candeur et de âgeekerieâ qui dĂ©finit ce type de personnage. Face Ă ce nouveau venu, une enfant de la balle qui Ă douze ans avait dĂ©jĂ une relativement longue carriĂšre derriĂšre elle et qui depuis lâa continuĂ©e, comme on le sait : Elle Fanning. Elle illuminait dĂ©jĂ de sa prĂ©sence les quelques minutes oĂč elle apparaissait dans le Benjamin Button de David Fincher (2008), et en lâespace dâun an elle jouait chez les Coppola fille et pĂšre (Somewhere ; Twixt) et dans Super 8. Elle y est remarquable, comme elle le sera, Ă plusieurs reprises et trĂšs diffĂ©remment, lors de la suite de sa carriĂšre dans les annĂ©es 2010. Sâil y a une actrice rĂ©vĂ©lĂ©e enfant que lâon souhaite voir longtemps sur les Ă©crans, câest bien Elle !*AprĂšs avoir rĂ©digĂ© ce commentaire, jâai jetĂ© un coup dâĆil aux Cahiers du cinĂ©ma de lâĂ©poque de la sortie du film (n°669, juillet-aoĂ»t 2011), qui lui avaient consacrĂ© un dossier relativement Ă©pais. Jâavais oubliĂ© que StĂ©phane Delorme avait Ă©crit un article prĂ©cisĂ©ment intitulĂ© « Le Rayon bleu ». Jâai dĂ©cidĂ© de conserver tel quel mon titre, mais je voulais tout de mĂȘme rendre Ă CĂ©sar ce qui lui appartient.**Et, dans un autre ordre dâidĂ©es, ou en tout cas sur des mode et ton assez diffĂ©rents, ma prĂ©fĂ©rence irait assez nettement au plus subtil et mystĂ©rieux Midnight Special de Jeff Nichols (2016). Lui aussi enfant de Steven Spielberg (et de John Carpenter, entre autres), Nichols est adepte dâun cinĂ©ma de genre empruntant moins de passages obligĂ©s, moins explicatif et plus elliptique, plus mĂ©taphorique aussi â moins Ă©videmment grand public donc, mĂȘme sâil ne cherche en aucun cas Ă laisser le public sur le bord de la route. Sâil me fallait choisir câest bien ce film-lĂ qui aurait mes faveurs en prioritĂ©, mais comme rien ne me force Ă choisir...***Dans le commentaire audio, Abrams explique quâil a un goĂ»t immodĂ©rĂ© pour les âlens flaresâ, qui nâest apparemment pas complĂštement partagĂ© par son chef opĂ©rateur. Etant donnĂ© le nombre considĂ©rable de tels âflaresâ que lâon peut repĂ©rer dans Super 8, on voit qui esthĂ©tiquement a eu le dernier mot.EDITION FRANCAISE STEELBOOK DVD + BLU-RAY PARAMOUNT (2011)Il existe dĂ©jĂ n Ă©ditions de ce film, aussi bien en dvd quâen blu-ray. A ceux qui nâont rien et voudraient en acquĂ©rir une de voir sâils comptent attendre fin mai 2021 pour acquĂ©rir lâĂ©dition du 10Ăšme anniversaire (avec un blu-ray 4K UHD en plus du blu-ray, donc). Aucun problĂšme pour le blu-ray existant en tout cas, aussi bien pour les langues proposĂ©es (pour le film autant que pour les supplĂ©ments) que pour la qualitĂ© du master. Lâimage est parfaitement dĂ©finie, sans pour autant trahir les grands choix photographiques. La musique et les effets sonores sont restituĂ©s de façon assez Ă©quilibrĂ©e.Les supplĂ©ments raviront les fans du film. La bonne heure et demie que dure le making-of couvre Ă peu prĂšs tout le terrain, du projet dâAbrams au rĂŽle des collaborateurs de crĂ©ation (le chef opĂ©rateur Larry Fong, le musicien Michael Giacchino), du producteur (Steven Spielberg lui-mĂȘme) et de responsables des effets spĂ©ciaux, en passant Ă©videmment par le casting des jeunes acteurs et les scĂšnes de tournage sur le mode « on est tous devenus bien potes pendant le tournage ». Le commentaire audio rĂ©unit Abrams et Fong, et sâavĂšre modĂ©rĂ©ment pertinent mĂȘme sâil contient tout de mĂȘme quelques anecdotes bonnes Ă prendre. Il y a Ă peu prĂšs 13â de scĂšnes coupĂ©es, ou plus exactement environ une moitiĂ© de scĂšnes coupĂ©es et une autre moitiĂ© de scĂšnes alternatives, gĂ©nĂ©ralement un peu plus longues. Le tout forme un ensemble qui nâa rien de fracassant mais assez copieux et plutĂŽt plaisant.
M**A
Another great movie from Spielberg & Abrams.
A great movie which is a rollercoaster of an adventure which combines other movies like ET, The Goonies, Close Encounters etc. If you like Spielberg and JJ movies you will enjoy this. It has all of the hallmarks of a classic despite getting very average reviews.
J**H
Five Stars
What a splendid film, Elle Fanning is a star in waiting.
M**Y
Wonderful homage to the movies of the late 70's, early 80's
A Five Star movie. Absolutely - however I will be the first to acknowledge that this has it's own unique niche audience, and won't be for everyone. This is a love letter to the movies of the late 70's and 80's, the movie of Zemeckis, Dante and yes, most of all Spielberg. For in this feature J.J. Abrams has created a love letter to Spielberg's era of moviemaking, a movie that both celebrates and emulates the styles and tools, the moviemaking grammar, and particularly the tone of movies from that era.It's all that, but still wrapped in a story, one that has a set of familiar elements, but wrapped up in a new enough arrangement. A bunch of kids in 1979 bond while making home movies with their Super 8 camera. They are filming one night when they witness a terrible train crash.. but when the dust settles, there is something from the cargo of the train that has been released, and it is about to have a major impact on the town. Scratch beneath that relatively simple skin though, and you'll find elements of the Goonies (bunch of kids coming of age through shared adventure), Close Encounters (paranoia, alien contact affecting ordinary small town folk), Gremlins (the black humour), and E.T. (adolescents coming of age in damaged families). And if this is an homage to Spielberg, then it's earlier Spielberg - the guns, deaths and occasional mild swear words aren't airbrushed out. It is very much a story first and foremost about real kids, living real lifes, and much less about the fantastic events happening around them. Yes there is spectacle towards the end, but only as a pay off to the emotional journey of the characters.. if it's just the action or effects you want, you will likely be disappointed. In fact, if there is any off note in the movie, it is the appearance of cgi - a very modern tool to tell an old fashioned story, and taking you out of the nostalgia trip somewhat. But it's not enough to derail the journey.It's not just the director; the look, the feel of the movie, down through sets, period detail and even the musical score, also celebrate that early 80's feel. And let's not forget those lead roles - kids who actually come across as real, likeable, believable - the scenes where they have to emote, particularly Elle Fanning, are amazingly genuine, and the relationship between the leads is handled in a delicate way which uses visuals and acting more than it does clunky exposition or awkward dialogue.So yes, it is my own personal 5 stars.. Maybe it's too nostalgic to appeal to today's kids, maybe its too much about kids to appeal to today's adults. But for me, I am just at that age that when I was young and impressionable it was Spielberg and Dante and the rest that stirred my own passion for movies, that made that first mark, that created those moments that would be my first love of cinema.. and it is precisely that feeling that has been captured and celebrated here. This is what happens when movies about kids are made by mature filmmakers. Watching it, I felt like that young wide eyed kid in the cinema again, and it was a glorious feeling.
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