Listen Up, Boys: Break Fizzy and Fake Insouciance
di A. O. Scott The New York Times
In the good old days, around 1925, according to “Leatherheads,” professional football was a lot more fun, a rough, ragged enterprise, untrammeled by corporate influence and unconstrained by rules and regulations. And in the slightly more recent old days — the ’30s and ’40s, more or less — movies were also more fun. They had zip, pep, moxie, trains, hats and double-entendres.
“Leatherheads” makes the second case as strongly as it does the first, but mainly by showcasing its own dullness and timidity. [...]
di A. O. Scott, articolo completo (4038 caratteri spazi inclusi) su The New York Times 4 aprile 2008