10 February 2010
Iran to Enrich Uranium Despite Global Opposition
 ENG   RUS   PT   ITA   
Photo Forum Articles Feedback Advertising
Search the site:
Example: Yushchenko, Putin, Bush

The front page   
 Russia   World   Society   Science   Hotspots and Incidents   Opinion   Business 

Login:
@pravda.ru
Password:
Forgot?
  Register Now!
Photo galleries
Russia Begins to Celebrate Pancake Week
Russia Begins to Celebrate Pancake Week
Porsche 911 Turbo S Gets Ready To Be Unveiled Valentine's Day Premiers in LA









News

Zac Efron is Good at Historical Novel Adaptation

11/25/2009 04:34 Source: Pravda.Ru
Increase font size
  Derease font size    

Critics took on the film adaptation of the historical fiction and found few flaws in "Me and Orson Welles".

"Me and Orson Welles" — In Richard Linklater's adaptation of novel by Robert Kaplow, starring Christian McKay and Zac Efron.

BREAKING NEWS
Ukrainian Election Ends with Tymoshenko's Defeat
Yulia Tymoshenko In and Out Politics
More...

Welles (Christian McKay) is seen from the perspective of an aspiring teenager, Richard Samuels (Zac Efron), who lands a bit part in Welles' 1937 production of Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" at the Mercury Theatre in New York.

Fame is imminent for Welles, and he knows it. Richard passionately wants to be around theater, movies and music: It's a picture of the artist as a young heartthrob.

Though Efron's fly on-the-wall performance is effortless and confident, it also lacks heft.

Zachary David Alexander "Zac" Efron (born October 18, 1987) is an American actor and singer. He began acting professionally in the early 2000s, and became known to young audiences after his roles in the Disney Channel Original Movie High School Musical, the WB series Summerland, and the 2007 film version of the Broadway musical Hairspray.

McKay, a previously unknown British-born theater actor, has Welles down pat: the ever-shifting eyebrows, the sonorous, arch baritone, the "old man."

Back to the movie review. Though this brisk, amiable film revels in the backstage banter and ramshackle rehearsals of a theater company coming to life, it fails to heed Welles' own advice: "Make 'em sweat."

PG-13 for sexual references and smoking. 114 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four, according to The Associated Press' review.

Read more news


print version e-mail







All news About Pravda.Ru Site map Export news News partners STATISTICS
© 1999-2009. «PRAVDA.Ru». When reproducing our materials in whole or in part, hyperlink to PRAVDA.Ru should be made. The opinions and views of the authors do not always coincide with the point of view of PRAVDA.Ru's editors..
Rambler's Top100
Ðåéòèíã@Mail.ru