Review: Sunshine Cleaning
Dry Cleaning
When a movie appears disguised as independent and gradually removing this assumption is in favor of a conventionality of the most recurrent produces a feeling of profound disappointment and just for questioning what we sell appearances at first and that is proving to be taken with caution.
"Sunshine Cleaning" comes in the wake of the prestigious "Sundance" to remind us that this is not a comedy or drama typical of the genre, but except for some originality in the initial argument, nothing to do with recent films such as "Fish Tank" or "The Silence of Lorna" by Andrea Arnold and the Dardenne brothers respectively to give an example significant.
The pair of sisters who struggle to survive the harshness of the labor market and transition to the crisis of social and emotional relationships is wrapped in a script that, while initially attractive, over-the-slow footage gradually becomes bland, lacking any kind of hook and the misdirection of who tries to provoke a minimum of interest without getting any results in virtually no time optimal. Everything is happening without that apparently nothing significant happens which causes a slow pace, and a finding of fact only concerned about what happens and what you will worry just get it the odd time but very specific.
The trouble is that they have wasted two more than decent performances both Amy Adams and Emily Blunt to take two people who still lack the necessary intensity achieved induce a slight bewilderment and dramatic tone that acquires an interest and leaves a good taste based on working two jobs well done and adequate strength, which may well have been an argument used to transfer them to focus on unconventional paths.
film that combines yawning long time with some other attractive but ultimately leaves the strange feeling of having made a promising script a real dry cleaning.
sergio_roma00@yahoo.es
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