Movie Review, “Hook”
Peter Pan and Hook both have their share of arrogant strength in terms of reality although the movie’s fiction makes their personalities neat, humorous, and terrifically awful. Of course, I don’t recommend acting like them in real life. Stage plays and theater drama often function against what’s real due to our boredom and tears with real-life happenings. But Hollywood usually does speak through tampered visions like what we see in Peter Pan’s psychology and Captain Hook’s psychology- both men exhibit their ways of common sense greatly and magnificently because of their high-end philosophies for world destruction and timely peace. Disjointed viewpoints become apparent in “Hook” from the very nature of competition among heroes and villains alike as far as Hollywood and other movie-production geographies are concerned; drama is lit in “Hook” to an exotic presentation kindled more for comedy than sheer life. I’d like to remind critics and reviewers out there that great movies give us something to think about while being relatively safe due to acting and pure fiction. Very rarely is a movie absolutely real. Real life, as we’re in it right now, demands so much patience that artists can’t help but give special ideas since vision and power are leaking into each other on a fantastic whim rather than normal, everyday behavior. Besides all this there’s plenty to remark on with “Hook”. Graphics and light get tangled into overextended reality for the actors on stage until pure fiction comes into existence and melts into kindness even on the bad guy’s side. That’s not what we can say of our true colors of mortality; survival instincts kick in from time to time in our real Earth when nations proceed with security and means of dominance, but any and all offense and defense in reality has to do with luck and sanity artists could never really handle. Robin Williams would roll over in his grave if another critic happened to dismiss all movie productions to the point of disinterest and boredom when Hollywood and other places were helping humanity more and more to make us reach equality and justice for all, bit by bit, as history permitted it. “Hook” is really funny and provides us with a good education on right and wrong. Is that what Rotten Tomatoes is calling “syrup”? Peter Pain in the movie has been living a life up to the point where his livelihood is fixed by Earth’s mortality of love, hate, corruption, and drama, where pieces to life in “Hook” seem to fit the puzzle according to random vivacity. Think about how our minds, our common sense, our special interests and more, can be glued into an approved product under our scrutiny for pretension and extended feelings. Captain Hook can seem so logical on coveting and senseless childhood however he approaches the decorated, massed ship with poetry in motion and philosophy on life, in spite of poor judgement. Peter Pan has his share of problems, too. He didn’t like or believe fairies before heading to Neverland, a fantasy world with no freedom or trustworthy permissions. Movie scripts don’t always have a greatly mixed nature of right and wrong to prove that both bad guys and good guys can be on similar, equal terms.
https://youtu.be/LxnR9e7M8Vw
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