This play is a tribute to Andy Kaufman, which is equivalent to a biography, but people who don't know Kaufman can't understand or even hate it as an amateur. This movie is the period when Andy started comedy and got lung cancer. Maybe it's not long enough, Kaufman didn't have a special performance at his peak, Saturday Night Live, so there is always a feeling of unfinished business after watching it. From the stage performance to the Andy in life, it presents a colorful Andy. In the stage performance, Andy's humor is generally incomprehensible. He is good at surprising and irritating the audience, and the audience appears the most during the performance. There is no need to portray Andy's too many acting skills. The performance of the actor can be seen from the behavior of the audience alone. (I have to say that the audience's acting skills are also yours (⊙o⊙)...) Andy's performance is true and false, the audience doesn't understand, until the end of the cancer, the closest people don't even believe it. All stage performances are equipped with optical fibers and props that are in line with the era at that time. Many shots are used to portray the audience through the back of the actors, and when Tony first appeared, he used the over-the-shoulder shots to talk with the bald man backstage. Draw characters. I have to say that the starring's acting skills are really good, as if he is Andy, and the big eyes are also Andy's symbol. The eyes express a lot of things. When Andy knew that he was about to die, it was very touching. It can be seen that Andy is unwilling to die and the hard work and suffering of being a comedian. Last but not least, if you can't read it once, watch it twice, and pay tribute to the great comedian Andy Kaufman.
View more about
Man on the Moon reviews