Runtime: 114 min Audio: 5.1 Language: English Subtitles: French Frame Rate: 29.9 fps Video Bitrate: 2924 Kb/sec Audio Bitrate: 384 kbps |
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Review: You know how sometimes you read these annoying feedback from people complaining about the way the film is nothing like the book? Well Im not going to do it. I'm going to say they're doing well enough to change a film as possible without anything important (other than the age of the recruits that they had to be done, of course, the history of film making bootable.) Enders game is much better than I expected and surprisingly so given the years in development hell with different names attached. As it turns out, Gavin Hood was director report it. Alive values ââof design and production are excellent and I particularly liked the animated sequences where Ender's computer game unique to him. The cast is nearly perfect and they all played with conviction. I was impressed from the start by the way the film is clear that Ender is developing as fast as he is a brilliant strategist and Asa Butterfield is a good enough actor to make, without resorting to over-acting shelter over it. The film is not far from Shy brutality of the lives of these young recruits lead, at least not within the confines of a 12A film, and the ending is so shocking and moving as it should be. My only real criticism of the film is that it is too short, not something you usually hear from me. Ender just seems to develop rapidly and we miss some of the nuances and actual problems encountered along the way. Unless the planned sequels, we can probably do without the Enders family environment and his relationship with his sister and brother, and dedicated to the Battle School.Overall However, this film is worth a long period of maturation. It delivers more than we had a right to expect. Orson Scott Card can be homophobic, but powerful message behind this film says a lot more than the average Hollywood film can provide.
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