Sunday, April 19, 2009

Lindsay Lohan Monologue Snl

Review:


Disney Nature is ready to join hands, and immerse yourself in nature and views covering areas (to us) of the planet. Invigorating and incredible experience that's voice Bonolis Paul tells us, a vision that, though, also throws us meet our responsibilities. The position of dominance that our species has led us naturally assumed, always of course, to destroy the Earth our host in many different ways as possible to fill the mouth, mostly in moments of relaxation, of words and designs' for the Environment ever made or heavily pursued by the international community. The documentary that Disney and the BBC pack relies on a visual power that is, by itself, the vision. Animal stories struggling to survive, a 'family' of polar bears, an elephant and two humpback whales will be the protagonists of hard odisea, looking for quell'habitat that global warming and pollution have taken from them. The Pole, the desert and the ocean then become the real stars of the documentary film, the actors are not accredited by a unanimous cry of pain coming from the heart of the Earth. All decoded through the human perception of the concept of family and love towards their children, whom "Earth" will be perhaps a little 'too hung over its duration. We would have preferred total emancipation from the desire to humanize all expressions of nature, particularly Disney, preferring the environmental message that a dip in the stark nature would be able to cope better. There remains the technical quality of the film to do justice, nature lovers will be speechless in the face of so and so many virtues of our planet, so rarely captured by the human eye. Stand by the divine perfection of an ecosystem in crisis will be the task of the beholder, begin to take steps in their small, with all that un'assennata household can make the task of who, besides looking at, he can also think about . A good experiment, both in terms of pure entertainment, from that of the overall message, that of "Earth," which, while seems a bit 'too demagogic and generalized, the other puts us in front of a beauty that we ignore, for the presence of a majesty that we should, intimidated, bowing his head (recent events we teach it), and not to pursue the false illusion a short-range well-being, without being able to look at (after) tomorrow.

VOTE 71/100


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