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But here is a counter-argument: That is the point. Susie is 14. Her heaven looks like a teenage girl’s diary—beautiful, naive, and desperately trying to avoid the darkness below. The contrast between the vibrant sky and the grey, rainy suburbia is jarring. It is meant to be. You cannot talk about The Lovely Bones without praising Stanley Tucci .
His Oscar nomination was well-deserved. He doesn’t play a monster; he plays the banality of evil.
★★★☆☆ (3.5/5) Watch it for Saoirse Ronan’s eyes and Stanley Tucci’s quiet terror. Bring tissues. Have you seen the Vietnamese dub or sub of The Lovely Bones ? Does the visual beauty translate, or does it distract from the story? Let me know in the comments below.
If you haven’t watched it recently—or if you’ve only read the book—here is why this strange, beautiful, and flawed film still lingers in the memory. Susie Salmon (Saoirse Ronan) is a typical teenager in 1970s Pennsylvania. She dreams of being a photographer, fights with her little sister, and crushes on a boy at school. But on a snowy December afternoon, she takes a shortcut through a cornfield.
Tucci, a man known for charming roles in The Devil Wears Prada and Julie & Julia , transforms into Mr. Harvey. With thick-rimmed glasses, a receding hairline, and a soft, whispery voice, he is terrifying precisely because he looks like nobody. He looks like the quiet neighbor you hold the door for.
Some critics hated this. They argued that a story about child abduction should feel gritty and real, not like a fantasy video game.
When Peter Jackson announced he was adapting Alice Sebold’s bestselling novel The Lovely Bones for the big screen, the literary world held its breath. How do you visualize heaven? How do you film the unspeakable?
But here is a counter-argument: That is the point. Susie is 14. Her heaven looks like a teenage girl’s diary—beautiful, naive, and desperately trying to avoid the darkness below. The contrast between the vibrant sky and the grey, rainy suburbia is jarring. It is meant to be. You cannot talk about The Lovely Bones without praising Stanley Tucci .
His Oscar nomination was well-deserved. He doesn’t play a monster; he plays the banality of evil.
★★★☆☆ (3.5/5) Watch it for Saoirse Ronan’s eyes and Stanley Tucci’s quiet terror. Bring tissues. Have you seen the Vietnamese dub or sub of The Lovely Bones ? Does the visual beauty translate, or does it distract from the story? Let me know in the comments below.
If you haven’t watched it recently—or if you’ve only read the book—here is why this strange, beautiful, and flawed film still lingers in the memory. Susie Salmon (Saoirse Ronan) is a typical teenager in 1970s Pennsylvania. She dreams of being a photographer, fights with her little sister, and crushes on a boy at school. But on a snowy December afternoon, she takes a shortcut through a cornfield.
Tucci, a man known for charming roles in The Devil Wears Prada and Julie & Julia , transforms into Mr. Harvey. With thick-rimmed glasses, a receding hairline, and a soft, whispery voice, he is terrifying precisely because he looks like nobody. He looks like the quiet neighbor you hold the door for.
Some critics hated this. They argued that a story about child abduction should feel gritty and real, not like a fantasy video game.
When Peter Jackson announced he was adapting Alice Sebold’s bestselling novel The Lovely Bones for the big screen, the literary world held its breath. How do you visualize heaven? How do you film the unspeakable?