New York Times: "She’s nice on the eyes, no doubt, but she doesn’t have the tools to take this underwritten screen role and make it hurt, and you spend a lot of time watching her Groucho brows hold steady over her sunburst smiles. The Guardian: "Cara Delevingne doesn’t quite nail the spontaneous, centre-of-gravity figure that the movie sells her as." NPR: "She's played in the present day by model Cara Delevingne, whose take on the character is appropriately aloof - she seems to always be thinking of something (somewhere?) that no one else can see." The Globe and Mail: ".the charismatic Margo (played by model Cara Delevingne, who – sorry, haters – is, for all intents and purposes, Margo)." LA Times: "I can't blame Delevingne, a model who is transitioning to film acting, for Margo's troubles as a character - she delivers fortune cookie lines like, "You have to get lost before you find yourself," with conviction, and her raspy voice and power eyebrows communicate just the right amount of danger for Orlando." The Hollywood Reporter: "Delevingne delivers sufficient dynamics to carry the early going with her character's well-wrought sense of payback and mystery, but she remains largely offscreen most of the way." What often happened is that people would discover these fictional towns on the maps and then create actual towns in those locations. Climax: Quentin and his friends arrive in Agloe after a frantic twenty-one hour road trip, and find Margo living in an abandoned barn. The Wrap: "Fashion model Delevingne has relatively little screen time but makes an undeniable impression as a high school heartbreaker, with the smoky eyes and smokier voice destined to send young men into a frenzy there’s no question why Quentin would hijack his mom’s minivan and drive up I-95 to find her." A paper town is a town that was created by mapmakers so that their work couldn’t be stolen. Her flashing eyes and throaty voice indicate the star power to make it in pictures that move. Rolling Stone: Supermodel Delevigne wears down any resentment of yet another Brit playing an American teen. What ultimately happens to Margo may seem somewhat ambiguous by film’s end, but on the evidence of her work here, this striking actress is here to stay." Variety: "But the real find here is Delevingne, an English actress who, with her subtly smoky voice and piercing gaze, makes the girl of Quentin’s fantasies a singularly charismatic presence, all the more so due to her limited screen time. Have you seen it? Let us know what you think of her acting chops in the comments. See 10 reviews of Delevingne's first starring role in a film, organized roughly from positive to neutral to negative, below.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |