Hanks plays a
man forced into a terrifying
situation and he does the role so much justice, especially
in a specific scene
near the end of the film, he makes you want to cry.
However, this latest seems to borrow more from the unrelated universes of their films A Serious
Man (2009) and Burn After Reading (2008) in that it alternates tone by focusing first on one man's attempt to make sense of things, and then with a near slapstick approach to «urgent» situatio
Man (2009) and Burn After Reading (2008)
in that it alternates tone by focusing first on one
man's attempt to make sense of things, and then with a near slapstick approach to «urgent» situatio
man's attempt to make sense of things, and then with a
near slapstick approach to «urgent»
situations.
While Courbet may have begun his career as a rebel and ended it as an exile, he was never an alienated
man — that is,
in conflict with himself internally or distanced from his true social
situation externally, as were such
near - contemporaries as Flaubert, Baudelaire, and Manet.