Big (Marshall, 1988): Prince Charles Cinema, 6pm
This 35mm presentation is part of the Penny Marshall season at the Prince Charles Cinema. You can find the full details here.
Time Out review:
'It's no fun being in your early teens,
especially if you're none too tall. So thinks Josh Baskin, having been
denied a ride on a fairyground superloop. But neither is being a kid in a
grown-up body so hot, as Josh discovers after a carnival
wishing-machine grants the change overnight. What do you do when Mom
doesn't recognise you, and thinks you're your own abductor? How do you
get a job when you can't drive and have no social security number? And
when you do find work with a toy-design company, how do you cope with
board meetings, office rivalries, and swish staff parties? Penny Marshall's
movie may be a mite predictable, but it's genuinely funny, thanks partly
to Tom Hanks' engagingly gauche and gangly performance as the overgrown
Josh, and partly to a script that steers admirably clear of gross
innuendo. Much of the humour derives from Josh's inability to comprehend
adult life; much of its charm from the way his forthright innocence
steadily revitalises those around him. Admittedly, this latter theme
makes for an ending oozing with saccharine sentiment; but until then
Marshall, Hanks, and his co-stars seldom put a foot wrong.'
Geoff Andrew
Here (and above) is the trailer.
No comments:
Post a Comment