Although Luke Besson did not have the chance to be among the masters and was always ridiculed as a postcard film director, he obviously has a good foundation and loves movies, so he only belongs to ten movies of his own, which are also categories. Complete, always dangling on the edge of commerce and art. In the past few years, Luke has made several blockbuster films, although it is not painful or itchy, but fortunately, it is not difficult to see where they are.
"Arthur and the Invisible", Luke's closing work is an animated cartoon, which is really unbelievable. Whether it’s three years of preparations, the largest investment in French film history, or Robert De Niro, Mai Sister and the rock chameleon, all these gimmicks can’t explain that Luke will write the full stop on this CG movie.
I don't know if it was inspired by JK Rowling. Before the movie was released, Luke wrote four "Arthur" series of fantasy children's novels in one go, but it is clear that Luke's brushwork is not better than the former, and the novel itself is plain. As a film director, it is conceivable that he is full of shots while writing novels, so he runs counter to Harry Potter-movies are far more popular than novels.
The stories in these novels are quite old-fashioned. The fairy tale world in the back garden is strange if it is written as a text. But when making movies, Luke naturally has his own way. He may not have much attitude in movies, but he never Lack of imagination, the contradiction in reality was replaced by a real estate agent, and the CG with great effort was magnificent. Although the combination of real people and CG has long been tired of Disney, Arthur's animation image is still interesting. The CG scene The changes to the real scene of the garden are also quite vivid. The scene in the bar really made me suddenly think of "Subway". Although the story is quite simple, one line goes straight to the end, it is suitable for Luke Besson to create an atmosphere, from ghosts to innocent love, plus the realistic smiles of the CG characters, as a modern interpretation of the tradition The fairy tales are already in place. Moreover, the movie was deliberately pinched. There are four Luke novels, and there will obviously be more on the big screen.
For this reason alone, it is not realistic for Luke Besson to put down the guide tube, and I imagine that his final work can be without Natalie Portman or Milacholovich, and it should be old no matter what. Let Renault, buddy.
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