Pre-teens especially should thrill to the pic's
relatively young cast and brisk pacing.
The characters are so well drawn (and
the relatively young cast steps up to the plate) that combined with the material's natural tension you'll find yourself riveted to the proceedings.
Not exact matches
The Reds have previously done well with signings of
relatively unproven
young players, or
cast - offs from other top clubs.
Hirsch's McCandless never
casts judgment on those who lead lives he finds empty, a remarkable job of acting for a
young relatively - unknown talent and an interesting choice, as the headstrong lad was likely riding on a bit of hubris and contempt for the sham from which he was escaping.
The rest of the
cast does mostly fine work with Ewan McGregor a
relatively weak point and Abigail Breslin,
younger than nearly everyone in the
cast by about twenty years (or much more in many cases), simply unable to hold her own against such towering thespians.
From its
relatively unknown and
young cast, to its slow and purposeful narrative, The Florida Project has a lot in common with last year's Best Picture winner.