Armie Hammer
Review Of Death On The Nile: Is A Triumph Of Stylized Filmmaking
Death On The Nile Starring Hercule Poirot, along with Tom Bateman (also returning from the first film), Annette Bening, Russell Brand, Ali Fazal, Dawn French, Gal Gadot, Armie Hammer, Rose Leslie, Emma Mackey, Sophie Okonedo, Jennifer Saunders, and Letitia Wright Directed by Kenneth Branagh Rating: *** ½ Disclaimer: This review does not judge Armie Hammer It is astonishing how personal some supposedly dispassionate reviewers get when it comes to sexual transgressions. Armie Hammer has been accused of lurid activities on his phone and that was one o | Click Here...
Doing A Harvey Weinstein On Armie Hammer Is Ridiculous
Let’s get one fact straight. Armie Hammer who was till a month ago the most promising rising star of Hollywood, is no cannibal. He hasn’t eaten anyone. Not that we know of. Armie is supposed to have sent texts where he suggests a gourmet-like delight in the woman’s physicality. I don’t think any woman actually felt threatened by these messages, or that he ever meant to cut them up and eat them for lunch. More importantly, not one of these text messages is from a verified account. Only accusations, no proof. Why hasn’t a single woman come forward to take Armie to court? Why | Click Here...
Armie Hammer: From Icon To Cannibal?
Among the new breed of stars who have come into American cinema Armie Hammer stood out. He was that rarity in present-times, the all-American crewcut wholesome handsome boy whom every mother wanted to be her son-in-law and every father wanted to be his son’s sports coach. I first noticed Armie playing the Winklevoss twins in David Fincher’s The Social Network. Call Me By Your Name where he had a gay affair with Timothee Chalamet made Hammer a global star. In all his interviews he came across as sorted, practical, sensitive , gallant and very articulate. Last | Click Here...
Review Of Rebecca: A Dazzling Showcase Of Literary Populism
Rebecca(Netflix) Starring Lily James, Armie Hammer Rating: *** ½ Call me a sucker for good looking adaptations, but I preferred Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Devdas to Bimal Roy’s adaptation of the literary classic by Sarachandra Chatterjee. Why? Because Bimal Roy was slavishly faithful to the source material. Bhansali took wild operatic liberties and emerged with a work that blended the epic and the operatic. This bright shiny new adaptation of Rebecca follows none of the rules of Daphne de Maurier’s original the way Alfred Hitchcock did in his 1940 a | Click Here...
Review of Netflix film Wounds: Is a horrific tale of cellphone abuse
Starring Armie Hammer, Dakota Johnson, Zazie Beetz Directed by Babak Anvari Rating: ** (2 stars) Cockroaches are not the only creepy creatures crawling all over the frames of this subversive horror drama that takes the genre by its shoulder and shakes it hard. The end results are less stirring than imagined. Creepier than the insects is the sheer hollowness of the protagonist, played by one of my favourite contemporary American actors. Like every goodlooking artiste Armie Hammer wants to create a world of mortal repugnance and intrinsic ugliness around his physic | Click Here...