Not exact matches
Simien — who also wrote and produced the film — has set the
story on an Ivy League campus, where the white kids and the students of color supposedly ebony - and - ivory together
in perfect harmony.
Related Reviews: New: Solitary Man • $ 5 a Day • Skellig: The Owl Man • Cemetery Junction • The Middle: Season 1 Featuring Hal Holbrook: Into the Wild • Wall Street (20th Anniversary Edition) • Hercules Mia Wasikowska: Alice
in Wonderland (2010) • Amelia Walton Goggins: Miracle at St. Anna Carrie Preston: Doubt Barry Corbin: No Country for Old Men (Collector's Edition) • In the Valley of Elah Dixie Carter: Desperate Housewives: Season 3 The Road • An Unfinished Life • Where the Red Fern Grows • Perfect Harmony • The Wendell Baker Story The Straight Story • The Last Station • Up • Australia • It's a Wonderful Li
in Wonderland (2010) • Amelia Walton Goggins: Miracle at St. Anna Carrie Preston: Doubt Barry Corbin: No Country for Old Men (Collector's Edition) •
In the Valley of Elah Dixie Carter: Desperate Housewives: Season 3 The Road • An Unfinished Life • Where the Red Fern Grows • Perfect Harmony • The Wendell Baker Story The Straight Story • The Last Station • Up • Australia • It's a Wonderful Li
In the Valley of Elah Dixie Carter: Desperate Housewives: Season 3 The Road • An Unfinished Life • Where the Red Fern Grows •
Perfect Harmony • The Wendell Baker
Story The Straight
Story • The Last Station • Up • Australia • It's a Wonderful Life
With the
story narrated against the backdrop of a Tuscan summer landscape, the scenery and the
story develop
in perfect harmony and the viewer is presented a timely tale about love, real heartache, and learning how to deal with loss.
This film doesn't have any flaws, it's
perfect, from the soundtrack to the cinematography, the performances, the costumes / production design, the direction, the
story, everything works
in harmony.
Like most great «translit» fiction — David Mitchell's The Bone Clocks (2014), Haruki Murakami's 1Q84 (2011), and Nick Harkaway's Angelmaker (2012)-- Pears» genre - bending, time - collapsing tour - de-force dazzles us with world building, but, beyond that, it reminds us that the people
in those worlds survive by their
stories and by the way those
stories reverberate backward and forward, achieving, if only now and again, the
perfect harmony we all crave.