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生活,动画

生活,动画

主演:
欧文·萨斯金德,罗恩·萨斯金德,乔纳森·弗里曼,吉尔伯特·戈特弗雷德
备注:
动画人生,蓬勃的生活,動畫醫神,欧文的动漫人生 正片
类型:
爱情片 剧情,爱情,动画,纪录片,家庭
导演:
罗杰·罗斯·威廉姆斯
年代:
2016
地区:
美国
语言:
英语
更新:
2023-06-18 22:49
简介:
影片讲的是一个美若天使的小男孩儿Owen,活泼可爱,每天叽叽喳喳说个不停,大人和小朋友都喜欢他。可是就在他三岁的某一天,小Owen突然不说话了,大人们无论如何与他沟通,他都像没听见,好像进了自己的......详细
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生活,动画剧情简介
爱情片《生活,动画》由欧文·萨斯金德,罗恩·萨斯金德,乔纳森·弗里曼,吉尔伯特·戈特弗雷德 主演,2016年美国地区发行,欢迎点播。
影片讲的是一个美若天使的小男孩儿Owen,活泼可爱,每天叽叽喳喳说个不停,大人和小朋友都喜欢他。可是就在他三岁的某一天,小Owen突然不说话了,大人们无论如何与他沟通,他都像没听见,好像进了自己的...
生活,动画相关影评
{if:"

A life-affirming documentary of a singular autism case, American journalist Ron Suskind’s second son Owen, diagnosed with autism at the age of 3, finds a unique way to communicate the outside world through Disney animation films, whose children-friendly, all-encompassing contents colorfully condense then magnify life vagaries and emotional spectra which should be too scattershot and overwhelming for autistic patients, so Owen finds him a key to enter our prosaic world with which he aspires to grapple on the cusp of adulthood.

Family video footage and photos are deployed to tell the story from the beginning through the candid recollections of Ron and his wife Cornelia, but cutting to present where a seemingly rather gregarious Owen presides over a Disney Club screening with other patients prefigures that the kid will be alright, thus tickles us to the family’s wondrous discovery of the therapeutic function of Disney cartoon corpus, yet, for a more scientific oriented mind, the film is conspicuously skimpy in including expert opinions on it, and opts for a more closer and secluded eye on Owen’s rite of passage to live on his own for the very first time, as the filmmakers are fully aware of Owen’s unfeigned charisma in front of the camera, it is an earnest, fulfilling journey we are vicariously experiencing with him, larded with those iconic cartoon characters to signpost any particular mood or situation that befits Owen’s.

Director Roger Ross Williams also vivifies Owen’s fantasy through Mac Gaff’s original animation, portraying Owen’s instinct connection with sidekick characters (rather than those obvious heroes) and his own demon (when a break-up hits him hard), all can be projected to a more professional ground to examine its cause-and-effect. But as an infotainment, LIFE, ANIMATED is aiming for something far broader and more generic.

Apart from cameos from voice actors Freeman and Gottfried (Jafar and Iago respectively), this Oscar-nominated documentary doesn’t resorts to named celebrities to hawk attention, by focusing on Owen and Owen alone (the only other patient gets several glimpses is Owen’s girlfriend), it is a heartfelt monograph of an uncharacteristic case study, but if one is whetted to know more about autism in a larger picture, that is a mission LIFE, ANIMATED has neither intention nor faculty to accomplish.

referential entries: Tim Wardle’s THREE IDENTICAL STRANGERS (2018, 6.6/10); Linda Bloodworth-Thomason’s BRIDEGROOM (2013, 8.5/10).

"<>"" && "

A life-affirming documentary of a singular autism case, American journalist Ron Suskind’s second son Owen, diagnosed with autism at the age of 3, finds a unique way to communicate the outside world through Disney animation films, whose children-friendly, all-encompassing contents colorfully condense then magnify life vagaries and emotional spectra which should be too scattershot and overwhelming for autistic patients, so Owen finds him a key to enter our prosaic world with which he aspires to grapple on the cusp of adulthood.

Family video footage and photos are deployed to tell the story from the beginning through the candid recollections of Ron and his wife Cornelia, but cutting to present where a seemingly rather gregarious Owen presides over a Disney Club screening with other patients prefigures that the kid will be alright, thus tickles us to the family’s wondrous discovery of the therapeutic function of Disney cartoon corpus, yet, for a more scientific oriented mind, the film is conspicuously skimpy in including expert opinions on it, and opts for a more closer and secluded eye on Owen’s rite of passage to live on his own for the very first time, as the filmmakers are fully aware of Owen’s unfeigned charisma in front of the camera, it is an earnest, fulfilling journey we are vicariously experiencing with him, larded with those iconic cartoon characters to signpost any particular mood or situation that befits Owen’s.

Director Roger Ross Williams also vivifies Owen’s fantasy through Mac Gaff’s original animation, portraying Owen’s instinct connection with sidekick characters (rather than those obvious heroes) and his own demon (when a break-up hits him hard), all can be projected to a more professional ground to examine its cause-and-effect. But as an infotainment, LIFE, ANIMATED is aiming for something far broader and more generic.

Apart from cameos from voice actors Freeman and Gottfried (Jafar and Iago respectively), this Oscar-nominated documentary doesn’t resorts to named celebrities to hawk attention, by focusing on Owen and Owen alone (the only other patient gets several glimpses is Owen’s girlfriend), it is a heartfelt monograph of an uncharacteristic case study, but if one is whetted to know more about autism in a larger picture, that is a mission LIFE, ANIMATED has neither intention nor faculty to accomplish.

referential entries: Tim Wardle’s THREE IDENTICAL STRANGERS (2018, 6.6/10); Linda Bloodworth-Thomason’s BRIDEGROOM (2013, 8.5/10).

"<>"暂时没有网友评论该影片"}
@豆瓣短评

A life-affirming documentary of a singular autism case, American journalist Ron Suskind’s second son Owen, diagnosed with autism at the age of 3, finds a unique way to communicate the outside world through Disney animation films, whose children-friendly, all-encompassing contents colorfully condense then magnify life vagaries and emotional spectra which should be too scattershot and overwhelming for autistic patients, so Owen finds him a key to enter our prosaic world with which he aspires to grapple on the cusp of adulthood.

Family video footage and photos are deployed to tell the story from the beginning through the candid recollections of Ron and his wife Cornelia, but cutting to present where a seemingly rather gregarious Owen presides over a Disney Club screening with other patients prefigures that the kid will be alright, thus tickles us to the family’s wondrous discovery of the therapeutic function of Disney cartoon corpus, yet, for a more scientific oriented mind, the film is conspicuously skimpy in including expert opinions on it, and opts for a more closer and secluded eye on Owen’s rite of passage to live on his own for the very first time, as the filmmakers are fully aware of Owen’s unfeigned charisma in front of the camera, it is an earnest, fulfilling journey we are vicariously experiencing with him, larded with those iconic cartoon characters to signpost any particular mood or situation that befits Owen’s.

Director Roger Ross Williams also vivifies Owen’s fantasy through Mac Gaff’s original animation, portraying Owen’s instinct connection with sidekick characters (rather than those obvious heroes) and his own demon (when a break-up hits him hard), all can be projected to a more professional ground to examine its cause-and-effect. But as an infotainment, LIFE, ANIMATED is aiming for something far broader and more generic.

Apart from cameos from voice actors Freeman and Gottfried (Jafar and Iago respectively), this Oscar-nominated documentary doesn’t resorts to named celebrities to hawk attention, by focusing on Owen and Owen alone (the only other patient gets several glimpses is Owen’s girlfriend), it is a heartfelt monograph of an uncharacteristic case study, but if one is whetted to know more about autism in a larger picture, that is a mission LIFE, ANIMATED has neither intention nor faculty to accomplish.

referential entries: Tim Wardle’s THREE IDENTICAL STRANGERS (2018, 6.6/10); Linda Bloodworth-Thomason’s BRIDEGROOM (2013, 8.5/10).

{end if}