Showing posts with label South America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South America. Show all posts

Review: Ode to Joy (2016 TV Series)

Monday, August 8, 2016
I have been scouting for a story from Mainland China, and I just happened to be craving something based on young women, and luckily a friend recommended this fabulous series that I couldn’t stop watching!

“Grit your teeth ‘til you make it through…
Dreams and love, they all belong to you… ”

The Rundown
Behind the name: The name of the apartment complex that brings the girls together
Country: China, 2016
Genre: Romantic Comedy, Metropolitan, Drama
Network: Dragon TV, Zhejiang TV
Director: Kong Sheng, Jian Chuan Su
Writer: Yuan Zi Dan
                  Cast: Liu Tao (as An Di), Jiang Xin (as Fang Sheng Mei), Wang Zi Wen (as Qu Xiao Xiao), Qiao Xin  (as Guan Ju Er), Yang Zi (as Qiu Ying Ying), Zu Feng 祖峰 (as Qi Dian), Wang Kai (as Doctor Zhao), Zhang Lu (as Wang Bai Chuan), Zhang Xiao Qian (as Yao Bin), Jin Dong (as Tan Zong Ming)
                   
                  Compare to: Age of Youth

                  Hate it or Love it?  Love it!

Synopsis in a Sentence: Five womens' lives cross paths on an apartment floor in the Ode to Joy building, and we watch them navigate work, love and life from the perspectives of a rich spoiled-brat turned business tycoon, a timid new-entrant employee, a (kind) social climber, a finance guru and math genius, and a clueless, happy-go-lucky small-town girl trying to make it in the big city—can they all get along?


On Writing: The Plot
The story is fun and didactic and entertaining and fabulous!  It gives us a unique, modern window into the lives of different young Chinese women working to make it in Shanghai and we don’t quite get this perspective often. It also offers different perspectives and the nuances into the lives of different people.
The plot is layered and we get to see the viewpoints of people from different walks of life—rich and poor, ambitious and unmotivated, privileged and not-so-privileged, and everything in between. It gives us a little think about the clashes between social class and age and opportunity. A great one!
(4.5/5)

On Acting: The Cast
The actresses and actors are very well cast! I hear some of them are some of the best from the Mainland so there’s no surprise here! So we have, from left to right:
L-R: Wang Zi Wen (as Qu Xiao Xiao), Liu Tao (as An Di), Jiang Xin (as Fang Sheng Mei), Yang Zi (as Qiu Ying Ying), Qiao Xin  (as Guan Ju Er)

(4/5)

On Production: The Creativity
Production is the weakest link n this one. It’s all right but needs to up its cliff-hanger game. These are some of the weakest cliff-hangers I’ve seen since I cannot even remember! Other than that the techniques are quite routine standard so they quite needed some creativity, and the opening music was… blah. The interesting thing is that I
(3.5/5)                                             

On Resolution: The Conclusion
The conclusion is quite the star! The first season ends wonderfully and we can’t wait to get more of these girls! By the ending, looks like production learned how to deliver—the end has the best cliff-hanger!
(4.5/5)

The Verdict: A fun, meaningful, entertaining watch!

Overall Score = 16.5/20


The Complete Main Cast




Maria Full of Grace (2004 Film)

Friday, February 24, 2012

I wasn’t quite sure what to expect from this one, but as I’d not seen a Columbian production, I picked it up. And I was surprised beyond my expectations.



María Álvarez: How many times have you done this?
Lucy Díaz: Two.
María Álvarez: How did it go?
Lucy Díaz: Still here.

The Rundown
Behind the name: Original Title—María llena eres de gracia. Title is a triple entendre- Reference to Mary, mother of Jesus, “grace” refers to slang for heroin, and may also be the name of the character’s unborn child.
Country: Columbia, USA, 2004
 Genre: Drama
Distributed by: Fine Line Features
Director: Joshua Marston
                  Cast: Catalina Sandino Moreno (as María Álvarez), Virginia Ariza (as Juana), Yenny Paola Vega (as Blanca), Guilied Lopez (as Lucy Díaz), Patricia Rae (as Carla), Rodrigo Sánchez Borhorquez (as the supervisor), Charles Albert Patiño (as Felipe), Wilson Guerrero (as Juan), John Álex Toro (as Franklin).
                  Compare to: Traffic (2000), Sweet Sixteen (2002), Sangre de Mi Sangre (2007)
Hate it or Love it?  Love it.

Synopsis in a Sentence: A 17 year-old girl gets pregnant and is under pressure from her family and work: she meets a guy who links her up with the drug trade, and she tries her luck by attempting to traffic illegal drugs to the US by swallowing pellets of drugs—how far will her luck go?
           
Winner of numerous well-deserved awards, Maria Full of Grace tells the story of an underage girl who gets involved in the drug-trade to support her family and deal with her pregnancy. The story was so well told, and received, that it grossed over four times its budget in the box office!

On Writing: The Plot
A really, really good plot. Very vivid, very interesting and insightful. The story progresses and gets better with every minute. You feel the characters, progress with the plot, and appreciate the narrative. It’s a really good story very well told. *Can’t go on for risk of gushing out on the whole story. Don’t be lazy. Watch it*
(4.5/5)

On Acting: The Cast 
A great cast. Simple, authentic and genuine.
Moreno
Vega 
Lopez
 Catalina Sandino Moreno plays María Álvarez as close to perfect as possible, and earned herself — one of only 3 Hispanic actresses to achieve one — a well-deserved Oscar® nomination in the process. 
Supporting actresses Yenny Paola Vega (Blanca) and Guilied Lopez (Lucy) also present notable performances. A great cast of characters skillfully played out.

 (4/5)





On Production: The Creativity
A good production: simple and stark. Its shots that relay the state of the movie and its characters quite well.  
(3.5/5)                                             

On Resolution: The Conclusion
The resolution. It is one to remember. It’s a good conclusion, wrapped with intelligence, realism, and meaning. A very good conclusion.
(4.5/5)


The Verdict: A gut-wrenching ride. A great movie. Do see!

Overall Score = 16.5/20