Sunday, July 13, 2014

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Original fdoc title: Hatfields & McCoys Genre: Western / Drama / Action Director: Kevin Raynolds Screenplay: fdoc Bill Kirby, Ted Mann, Ronald Parker Starring: fdoc Kevin Costner, Bill Paxton, Matt Barr, Tom Berenger, Powers Boothe, Andrew Howard fdoc ...
After William Anderson Hatfield and Randolph McCoy comes home from the Civil War goes misunderstandings and disagreements to new and extreme heights. In just a few years, every family member part of the great feud and it all becomes a sad and bloody affair.
Kevin Costner plays Hatfield father and Bill Paxton is in the role of Randolph McCoy. Both parties are playing with sound intensity and quiet. It does not take long before you get the impression that Paxton is a run-down and depressed figure out for revenge and Costner is transformed into a ferocious and fearsome leader William Hatfield. They live in the environment and in particular Costner fdoc plays on many klisjétrisk from the Western genre but make it their own. It's hard to really describe how well these two main characters play, and especially in the last episode marked this.
The war between the two families is brutal and full of intrigue. The only thing that was a bit boring in the mini-series was Romeo & Juliet-box relationship fdoc between a Hatfield-McCoy son and two daughters. But even if it gets in the boring side, all the central character well developed. And there's one thing I rarely look in the TV series and even less in the mini-series. That series dry to stasis entirely on character development is stunning and they know when a character is not essential to the story anymore. There are in fact a couple of characters that disappear between fdoc episodes, although they were part of the final confrontation, fdoc but their history is simply not as interesting as those we see here in Hatfields & McCoys.
I said as far as the acting is especially good in the last episode and this is almost an understatement. With a script that really brings out the depressed and fearful fdoc of this feud is easy to be moved to tears when every person plays his role out of the park. In the last episode - which lasts 90 minutes - I was moved to tears four times and I could not put me in mind when the credits came.
It's hard to really put into words something like the Hatfields fdoc & McCoys. It is a stunning family drama that is strong in all aspects. You feel involved in the conflict and it is difficult to choose sides, the surroundings are authentic and the dialogue makes it all extra strong. I can not recommend you Hatfields fdoc & McCoys strong enough, but if you are only going to listen to my tips even once, let it be now!
I am a movie fanatic from Bergen using (virtually) all my time on film and television. I was not a movie saved until the end of 2010, but now it's my passion. I do not like just watching movies / TV, but also to work with it. I write my own script and will soon be directing my first proper short film.
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