Tuesday 8 January 2013

Download Les Misérables Movie | Watch Free

Download Les Misérables Movie | Watch Free

If you love musicals, “Les Misérables” is for you; If you don’t like musicals, you might watch it anyhow, as “Les Misérables” is a far beyond being yet another musical. It’s an honest and direct examination of social motivations at the time of great changes. Set in post-revolutionary Paris, against the background of the 1832 June Rebellion, “Les Misérables” brings Victor Hugo’s characters to life accurately. The astonishment begins at the beginning, when we witness Fantine (Anne Hathaway) walk the streets of Paris, forced to sell her body and body parts (hair and teeth) in order to pay her debt to the mean pub owner Thénardier (Sacha Baron Cohen) for supporting Fantine’s illegitimate daughter Cosette (Amanda Seyfried). Download Les Misérables Download Parental Guidance Download Jack Reacher It must be instantly stated that Anne Hathaway delivers the performance of her life as Fantine. Her performance of an injured soul, divested of tenderness and any sort of humane treatment, is honestly unforgettable. The shaved head, dirty skin, and the shiver from cold and fear are delivered by an actor who’s the master of her craft. Further more, Hathaway’s a great singer of musicals. Her unique combination of deliberateness and fundamental pain is echoed in her voice. Jean Valjean (Hugh Jackman), a convict in hiding, experiences redemption when he saves Cosette and becomes her father. Valjean feels responsible for Cosette. His actions towards Fantine forced Fnatine to give Cosette away. Hugh Jackman looks like he exactly knew what he was doing when he opted to incite profound compassion in his character, making Jean Valjean a complete person. The intertwining between Valjean and Javert (Russell Crowe) creates a cobweb of actions and reactions, spanning from persecution to redemption. Javert has chosen the hunt for Valjean to be the purpose of his existence, believing he’s executing justice. When the purpose turns out to be nothing more but egoistical revenge, Javert choses the whirlpools of the Seine over his life. The intertwining between Cosette and Marius (Eddie Redmayne) has a more positive tone to it. The chemistry between actors works out splendidly, creating a fine love story furnishing to the socio-political complex plot of “Les Misérables”. The socio-political background is the morale with which citizens who have and citizens who have not treat each other. “Les Misérables” shows us what it meant to be at the bottom and on the top of the social ladder in post-revolutionary France. The movie makers took this aspect to heart in everything they did, from costume and scenery designs, to the choice of the cast, making one of the most wonderful film adaptations of the decade. And still, they didn’t divest the audiences of comedy – the characters of Thénardier and his Madame, played by Sacha Baron Cohen and Helena Bonham Carter, are perfected evil laughs, whose oversized wire-like hair, street parleys, and criminal plotting tremendously add to making “Les Misérables” a self-gratifying experience.
 

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