Wigs, sideburns, from flashy sunglasses and gaudy shirts: yes, we are in the seventies and more precisely in the locations of American Hustle - The Closet, the film by David O. Russell's masterpiece airs first TV to date in clear Thursday, February 25 at 21.10 on RAI-3. After the positive side the director in 2013 still meets once stellar trio Bradley Cooper, Robert De Niro and Jennifer Lawrence, but adds to these big guns of the caliber of Christian Bale, Amy Adams and Jeremy Renner, all offering an interpretation capital.
All candidates for an Oscar in 2014, all at lunch before the money
The story mixes fact and fiction, is about scammers wig stand, FBI agents, mobsters and politicians not to mention sentimental intrigue. We are on the East Coast of the USA in the late seventies. Irving Rosenfeld (Christian Bale) is a small con man trapped in an unhappy marriage until he meets a wily former stripper, Sydney (Amy Adams), you accomplice and lover gives a big boost to his business. At some point it happens that the two are discovered by FBI Richie dimaso (Bradley Cooper) that forces them, in exchange for the freedom to work on a plan to trap corrupt government representatives as Carmine Polito (Jeremy Renner). A endangered, the successful incumbent, however, the presence of Rosalyn (Jennifer Lawrence), the unstable wife of Irving ...
Three Golden Globes and 11 Oscar nominations for a film that the Academy has had the only demerit of having measured with another super film Dallas Buyers Club. David O. Russell here abandons the historical realism and throws himself headlong into the grotesque in caricature, in fumettesco: the costumes and wigs seventies are glitzy and overly flashy, giving the characters a sympathy that comes immediately to viewers. And the merry gang is an accumulation of frustrations
All candidates for an Oscar in 2014, all at lunch before the money
The story mixes fact and fiction, is about scammers wig stand, FBI agents, mobsters and politicians not to mention sentimental intrigue. We are on the East Coast of the USA in the late seventies. Irving Rosenfeld (Christian Bale) is a small con man trapped in an unhappy marriage until he meets a wily former stripper, Sydney (Amy Adams), you accomplice and lover gives a big boost to his business. At some point it happens that the two are discovered by FBI Richie dimaso (Bradley Cooper) that forces them, in exchange for the freedom to work on a plan to trap corrupt government representatives as Carmine Polito (Jeremy Renner). A endangered, the successful incumbent, however, the presence of Rosalyn (Jennifer Lawrence), the unstable wife of Irving ...
Three Golden Globes and 11 Oscar nominations for a film that the Academy has had the only demerit of having measured with another super film Dallas Buyers Club. David O. Russell here abandons the historical realism and throws himself headlong into the grotesque in caricature, in fumettesco: the costumes and wigs seventies are glitzy and overly flashy, giving the characters a sympathy that comes immediately to viewers. And the merry gang is an accumulation of frustrations