HUGO - WINNER 5 ACADEMY - BLU-RAY DISC BEST ENGLISH MOVIE + BONUS - 1 CD GAMES + 5 eBooks WORTH $60
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The film has been sold as a “family-friendly adventure†full of whimsy and spectacle, and for the first act of Hugo’s two-hour runtime, this is absolutely true. The story opens on 1930s Paris, where we meet young Hugo Cabret (Asa Butterfield), the orphaned son of a clock maker, living in the walls of a train station where he fixes and maintains the many clocks that need attendance. Hugo’s father perished in a fire, leaving behind the mystery of a strange automaton that Hugo obsessively tries to fix, as was his father’s wish. The boy’s unfaltering quest brings him into contact with many colorful characters around the station, including the orphan-hunting inspector (Sacha Baron Cohen), a curmudgeonly old toy maker (Ben Kingsley), and eventually the toy maker’s bookworm goddaughter, Isabelle (Chloe Moretz). However, the quest to fix the automaton is only the first piece in a much larger mystery – one that involves a long-lost filmmaker, and a convergence of lives and destinies that will bring together all those who encounter young Hugo Cabret.
As stated, Hugo may at first seem like it is simply ‘Martin Scorsese making a 3D kids movie,’ but once the automaton is completed and the larger mystery revealed, it quickly becomes apparent what drew Scorsese to this film (based on the 2007 historical fiction book, The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick). But Hugo is not a kid’s film. Hugo is not even really a film for mainstream audiences. Hugo is, in large part, a celebration of the early era of cinema, centered around real-life pioneer filmmaker, Georges Méliés. It is this unabashed joy and celebration of movie magic that elevates Hugo as one of Scorsese’s most lovingly-crafted and imaginative films. It is also what will make Hugo a bit too heady and artistic for those hoping for a more mainstream adventure.
Screenwriter John Logan (Gladiator, The Last Samurai) skillfully adapts Selznick’s novel into a film that works on a multitude of levels, offering one of the richest, most rewarding cinematic experiences I’ve had in a while. There is something for everyone to grasp onto and be moved by in this film – be it the idea of adventure and destiny (kids); the exploration of that in life which “breaks†us, and in turn, “fixes†us again (adults); or simply the meditation on what makes movies truly wondrous and transcendent (cinephilles). It’s all there in the story of Hugo’s journey – a journey that the script steers the viewer through with careful control and near perfect synergy of its respective parts.
The genius of what Scorsese has done, from a directing standpoint, is to craft a love letter to cinema’s past in the form of cinema’s present (and arguably its future): digital 3D. Hugo is the most accomplished and worthwhile 3D film I have seen – and yes, that includes James Cameron’s Avatar, the film which resurrected the 3D trend. Where Cameron used 3D as a highly effective and captivating tool of spectacle, Scorsese is the one who as officially elevated the technique to the level of high art.
From the onset, it is clear (in the choices of scene construction, set pieces, and photography) that Hugo is the work of a master filmmaker embracing a modern trend in filmmaking. Instead of using 3D as a gimmick, or even an augmentation of his already considerable skills, Scorsese boldly explores the new and unique filming possibilities offered by the medium. At times this movie is simply beautiful to behold (early scenes in the train station come to mind), while at other times, the filming choices Scorsese makes are stimulating and provocative in their originality and creativity (later scenes set during the early days of silent filmmaking are, ironically, some of the best modern 3D scenes ever shot).
In short: with Hugo, Scorsese single-handedly makes a case for why 3D is worthy of living beyond the lifespan of a trend, as well as setting a new bar for what filmmakers should endeavor to accomplish with the format.
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FREE BONUS
IF YOU PURCHASE THIS ORIGINAL, BRANDNEW, SEALED BLU-RAY MOVIE DISC TODAY, YOU WILL RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING PRDOUCTS FOR FREE TOWARDS BONUS:
1) ONE PC DVD ROM GAMES WORTH $13 WILL BE AIRMAILED TO YOU ALONG WITH THE MOVIE CD FOR FREE WITH NO ADDITIONAL SHIPPING CHARGES.
2) YOU’LL RECEIVE 5 LATEST, HIGHLY VALUABLE, & INTERNET MARKETING RELATED eBOOKS WITH RESALE RIGHTS & PRIVATE LABEL RIGHTS WORTH $47 FOR FREE BY eMAIL.
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