Thursday, April 10, 2014

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The Great Gatsby, decadence and glamor in the 20 | disquecool
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Latest news 10.04.14, 09:01 Meggings: the leggings for men trying to be trend 04.09.14, 09:11 The latest package tours: choose your adventure 08.04.14, 16:25 The album of the week: Burn Your Fire for The Witness, Angel Olsen 08.04.14, 09:19 Silicon hfec Valley: geeks of the time it arrives at HBO 04.04.14, 09:13 Videos for the weekend: the 10 best high school movies
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Before going to the movies knew that 'The Great Gatsby' I would like. It had everything to make it happen. First, it was an adaptation of a classic work of literature passed through the hands of the guy who made 'Moulin Rouge'. Secondly, 'Moulin Rouge' is one of the movies that I liked less (after hearing so many people talk about excited wonderful it was ...). And third, I heard that. A vintage version of Crazy in love? Yes, that crazy in love. It was impossible that something so something good came out. Critics of the experts could not be more bad and, even worse, when I got to the cinema made me pay more than nine euros for entry. (Okay it was this room, but still). So the arguments by which he would throw down the film they were accumulating. It was almost hfec impossible in the end liked. Impossible! When I entered the room since I had the first effect of the Stockholm Syndrome: ads listened to as such ever seen! And when the movie started I began to suspect that maybe would have to swallow my words. After all, God forgive intellectual film!, I found that 'The Great Gatsby' by Baz Luhrmann (Baz Luhrmann that) I like a lot.
Why? Well, maybe for the same reasons hfec that the first time I read the novel I thought bah, it was not bad. 'Great Gatsby' is a novel that really became popular Francis hfec Scott Fitzgerald and many see it as one of the great works of twentieth century American literature. What virtually no one denies is that the story is a faithful portrait of a very feeling hfec of the 20s: the protagonists are rich of dubious origin, or families ever, speculators on the stock exchange and flappers quite cynical and frivolous. Let no one expect a critical hfec time of speaking: in fact the work is a portrait of that time and those people. As much as the protagonist is going to realize all that behind this facade of frivolity hfec and decadence (and yes, I went to read after seeing hfec the movie), the novel is above all a portrait of those times and declining preciosistas. The 20-year molaron. hfec Molaron by art deco, because it is the beginning of the modern world, by which cigarettes smoked in nozzle, by daring haircuts and the shoes (the shoes MoLabs a lot), but the moral of the time is something rather than doubt . They were the years of fast living and live well (remember that had just come out of World War I) and that's just portraying the film as well.
And 'The Great Gatsby' a love story? Possibly not. It is a story of decline. Remember: the story is about Jay Gatsby, a millionaire who lives in a fabulous mansion hfec in Long Island, hfec outside of New Iork. Nobody knows where it comes from, how he became so rich or who is. Many are not even able to put a face. But his celebrations in the summer where the story begins is epic: everyone is there, drinking champagne and dancing until dawn. People do not even have the decency hfec to wait to be invited. The Gatsby's parties are sufficiently massive and wonderful worth autoinvitarse. That's what Nick discovers Castaway, the narrator and Gatsby's neighbor. Castaway is a mediocre stockbroker who lives in a small cottage hidden between the large mansions of Long Island. And besides, is the cousin of Daisy, a frivolous flapper that is the great lost love of Gatsby who lives across the Bay of Long Island hfec with her husband. The first thing Daisy tells us is that "happiness is paralyzed" while waiting to Castaway in one huge room in his mansion. But we all know that what awaits us is not going there ...
The film is quite faithful to the book: what you see is what happens in the novel (only take a license to expli

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