Hail, Caesar! Comments

  • Christina 2022-04-21 09:01:53

    It is more like Woody Allen's work in style. The nesting of scenes with frequently changing frame ratios satirizes various types of Hollywood films in the golden age [although it is overly parody and overly entertaining], and the plot is drawn from the new wave. A little loose is excusable. Hollywood is not art, it's an immoral industrial system from above, and at the same time these two existential directors also reveal the absurdity of XXism and...

  • Trisha 2022-04-21 09:01:53

    brilliantly funny, extremely enjoyable. genius. it's almost structureless, but I absolutely loved holby's scene and the sailor dancing and Scarlett Johansson's scene. what a tribute to golden age of Hollywood. and the overlap with trumbo makes me understand it much more and...

  • Rusty 2022-04-21 09:01:53

    Overall, it's actually not bad, but it's still worse than the Coen brothers themselves, and it's a bit...

  • Nyasia 2022-04-21 09:01:53

    it was fun, but the half baked script and the...

  • Brett 2022-04-21 09:01:53

    The Coen brothers are playing a lot of money this time, but they are still very happy to watch the parody of the golden age of Hollywood. There are nostalgic and ridiculed displays of many aspects of the film industry under the studio system. Both parties with the surname and the surname made a good mockery [Scarlett and Little Brother Cowboy opened their mouths with accents and laughed, and Boss Qian looked back and smiled twice. Bai Meisheng didn't see...

  • Arnold 2022-04-20 09:01:40

    I was tortured by embarrassment from beginning to end, and some bad taste stalks are indeed amusing, but that's...

  • Tyrel 2022-04-20 09:01:40

    When the Coen brothers are making comedies, they usually find big names to play off, and the fragmented narrative makes people unable to concentrate and immerse themselves in the plot. But the re-enactment of Hollywood's bustling city in the '30s is charming and interesting. Several songs and dances are the finishing touch, especially Chunning Tatum, the gay sailor dance is...

  • Jaclyn 2022-04-20 09:01:40

    Although I laughed, but I think I'm very uncultured (can't feel a good stew without core characters, core events and climax..) I can only feel that this movie wants to express more than it expresses or that the whole is generally lacking in excitement no sense of...

  • Layla 2022-04-20 09:01:40

    It seems that I don't know enough about the golden age of Hollywood, and some stalks are still indigestible. The part of Boss Qian corresponding to Gene Kelly is the best! The rest of the time feels a little boring, and Clooney's paragraphs are really...

  • Esmeralda 2022-04-20 09:01:40

    The George Clooney part is funny, and the part where the money boss money goes into the water...

Extended Reading
  • Maia 2021-11-26 08:01:42

    The Coen Brothers Start Watching the Year of the Monkey-Talking about the New North American Film "Long Live Caesar"

    I remember that in 2015, when the first trailer for "Long Live Caesar" was announced, there was news that the Coen brothers admitted that the new film they had shot was actually not a comedy. However, seeing the trailer of the movie, we really didn't believe it. It wasn't until the film was...

  • Elinore 2021-11-26 08:01:42

    I believe in movies

           When Clooney was beaten by Eddie, he showed an extremely natural expression of fear (I was afraid of Jesus before the scene was not well filmed), and then I realized that Eddie was the Jesus, that is, God. Eddie's punch is punishment and redemption.
           [Clony's lines] He saw my...

Hail, Caesar! quotes

  • Eddie Mannix: Baird Whitlock has been kidnapped.

    Hobie Doyle: This is bad. Bad for movie stars everywhere.

  • Protestant Clergyman: Who plays Christ?

    Eddie Mannix: A kid we're all very excited about, Todd Hocheiser, a wonderful young actor we found in Akron, Ohio, after a nationwide talent hunt. But Hocheiser is seen only fleetingly and with extreme taste. Our story is told through the eyes of a Roman tribune, Autochlus Antonius, an ordinary man, skeptical at first, but who comes to a grudging respect for this swell figure from the East.