This article contains spoilers for "Roofman".
A critical thing to remember about trailers and other marketing materials is that it is not a reflection of the quality of the real film. Distributors need to promote their titles in a way that reaches the widest possible audience, and Roofman is a great example of how the track campaign can blur one of the biggest surprises of the year. The new film by Derek Fianfrans is based on a crazy true story of effe Manchester (Channing Tatum), a former US Army soldier who has become known as a roof robber, after entering restaurants like McDonald's from above. After escaping from prison, Effeefrey created a secret a little corner for himself in the "r" toys for months, unknown to the employees. The trailers reflect this angle of the story by presenting the film as a wild crimes comedy. Even the posters highlight Tatum as playing with children's luxury at the store. Similar to the secretly brilliant marketing campaign of "one battle after another", It is easy for ordinary movies, just to hit them with a much more emotionally tinted movie.
"Roofman" is not as spiritually exhausting unusual as other works of Janfrans, like "Blue Valentine" and "the place outside of the pine". In fact, sometimes it can be quite funny. But I really wouldn't classify this as a comedy. It is a moving and painful sad drama about the systemic factors that maintain a kind of Serb criminal captured in a cycle of self-destruction. Tatum gives the best career performance here that makes you take root for effe (under alias Johnon Zorn) even when he continues to make decisions that worsen his condition. We are witnessing that he has lost access to his three young children before he even brings them to the "R" toys.
Derek Fianfrans's roof is a moving and surprising melancholic drama
Tatum is truly phenomenal in "Roofman" because we become intimately aware of the process of EFFEFri to stay on the fingers. He is an incredibly smart and charming person who is able to exploit things that no one else can see and make his moves appropriately. The entire "Big Child in the toy Store" approach offers a nuance of hope when Effeefrey begins to fall for Lii Waynesk (Kirsten Dunst), a "R" employee in the United States, who must juggle her working duties, despite being a single mother who has virtually no time to spend with her children. Dunst gives evenly warm, but still heart performance as a tatum. This is a character that could be so easily come out as a light cartoon, as it is also a passionate church church that runs a charity toy, but Dunst provides her so emotional grounding.
Lee's central connection and EFFEFRY hurt much more when you look at the fatalist outcome, it is naturally destined to come. The script, written by Fianfrans and Kitr Gun, skillfully inflicts impermeable melancholy that is always present during their courtship. There is a moment between Tatum and Dunst in a church that makes me just think about it.
"Roofman" was filmed by cinematographer Andriy Parek on a 35mm film, so the film not only retains the naturalism of the Janfrans trademark, also looks great. I have nothing against the recording of digital, but it is always astonishing to see a movie from the main studio with a real texture to the faces of the actors. All of these effective long shots illustrate the paranoia of EFFEFRI. Filming of the film also gives extra weight on the early periods of the 2000s and many recognizable brands within.
The cover brilliantly arms nostalgic iconographs
It is almost impossible to tell this story without directly recognizing the corporate entities in which the real effe was penetrated. He hit everything from KFCS to Burger Kings. The Roofman crew took painstaking accuracy of what these places would look like if they were extracted from the 2004 time capsule, which helps sell its authenticity. Furthermore, effe is inserted into LI's life, as well as in the welcome community, the more its nostalgic toys "r" the organization becomes a prison with any other name.
One of the saddest moments in Roofman is being held at the Judicial Effeefrey for McDonald's robberies, where, despite his nessation and non -violent actions, he has been sentenced to 45 years in prison. He becomes a very different prisoner of these corporations. Effeefrey is stuck in a cycle always trying to buy/give things from the brands that robs them as a way to get closer to the Wine family when his presence is considered more than enough. Even the climate robbery within the toy "R" is really sad and disturbing. That comedy wins Mitch's trailer for Peter Dinklage to blow up in the face with a color package, not very funny in his correct context.
While Roofman will make you laugh, he never loses his view of the heart and the tragedy in the center of the individual who played his hand the best he could with the cards he set. It is undoubtedly one of the best of the year ever.
Roofman is now playing in cinemas all over the country.
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