After a creative spring break with his feelings of “Finding Neverland” director Marc Forster heads of state back to the dark side of the subconscious and the “stay.” A carefully thought out the top thriller novels, “Stay” is antiseptic cinema that flashes in front of your eyes, yet doesn’t contain any filmmaking elements that penetrate the senses. The film is a visual Foster marathon, he operated enthusiasm, endless staging spectacular shiny smooth transition and under. It feels, though, that Forster is only making this film for himself. “Stay” as a top thriller is immensely tepid, leaning on known genre elements (paranoia, unexplained weirdness) to get by, never cracking the door open for the audience to get caught up in the mystery, which should be the first priority for a film of this nature.
Frustratingly, the screenplay by David Benioff is deliberately obscure, placing random, useless clues along the way, purposefully mucking with coherency in an effort to keep the audience from guessing the ending. Sam found that only lead to more problems, and the line between madness and reason will never be reached. The film commits right away to Sam’s delusions, letting the air right out of the mystery angle the film holds dear. “Stay” to a lot of details to sort through the film, but considering there is no reason to disturb the homework.
To get to the climax, Forster and Benioff spend a lot of time arranging their characters in ways that suggest a bigger resolution than what actually comes. “Stay” is a significant cold (mood will only deepen the suspense), so long, the story twists and turns can be a drag, especially when the movie ended, the audience has to consider the number of Foster ending his work, and it is still no resonance. Unfortunately, “Stay” has the aura of a straight-to-video best thriller blessed with a well-known cast. No accident and was excited to choose the style of Foster often become monotonous film rather than the construction of a special journey to the dreamlike confusion and to imagine the fate. I believe that this initiative, D

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About the Owner: Jeff Mills is a former Youth Pastor who is now a full time internet information entrepreneur, book author, speaker, marketer, and also an avid traveler. To get more free money saving travel tips, read more at his blog, Resorts 360 and learn how the Resorts360 Sales and Call Center will help you earn money with your own Resorts360 travel club business. Jeff will teach you "My Story Marketing and Branding", online marketing, outsourcing and Web 2.0 Media Marketing, and invites you to call his home office at 651-769-2189 or his R360 Future Sales Hotline at 1-866-220-9389 with ID 1302. |



































