Until Gisele falls into a well and lands in New York

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The main factors that make an enchantment work well are powerful scripts and compelling acting. As Giselle

In 2001, DreamWorks caught the hearts of foreign film fans when they talked about the adorable demon Shrek in a way that enjoyed the fairy tale genre and its stereotypes enchanted review . In a way, it was a way for the DreamWorks Animation team to attack Disney, and the end result was smart and cheerful. After Shrek's three movies, Disney is kicking his ass in Enchanted. Enchanted is a wonderful fish story that brings its naive and fantastic qualities to the real world and borders on genius.

The main factors that make an enchantment work well are powerful scripts and compelling acting. As Giselle, Amy Adams takes the usual fairy tale princess Naive into a live-action human form with a passion and dedication to the characters that help the format work well. James Marsden, as Prince Edward, is barely recognizable by the Laser Eye Cyclops in the X-Men trilogy. He fills his character with a very affectionately exaggerated, almost unpleasantly proud charm that fits his role. To conclude the inspirational core cast, Patrick Dempsey will star as Robert, a New York-based single father lawyer. Robert discovers Gisele after she arrives in our world. Dempsey is a wonderful foil to Giselle's fantastic life, and his reaction as a straight man to her approach to unnatural life is that if you are placed in such a strange situation Exactly what you would expect. All great fairy tales need to have a source of evil to contrast with our heroes, and Susan Sarandon beautifully embodies the Queen's evil real-life stepmother. She brings your usual Disney villains to life, completes storybook formulas, and makes enchantments work amazingly well.

Until Gisele falls into a well and lands in New York, something quickly leads to something else, and her portrayal suddenly comes back to life. There, in the hustle and bustle, she finds a shelter with her protected single father, Robert (Patrick Dempsey), and his lonely daughter, Morgan (Rachel Covey). Melodyrama is almost unfair because of another woman (Idina Menzel), but director Kevin Lima has two musical numbers, one soulful song, and a complex one. The choreography keeps the tone bright and playful while scaling the fun and flashy heights. One dances like the whole Broadway cold ballet in Central Park, and the other dances in stunning surreal numbers with Giselle and some urban creatures. You may never see athlete's foot again.
For those who can't, or just choose not to give up? An "enchantment" can be an unpleasantly long and embarrassing event.

"Haunted House" is a kind of movie that Hollywood no longer makes. It emphasizes characters more than CGI, and in fact dares not to swear at young target audiences. Most of them are girls, just like Morgan, who grows too fast.

Few of today's actresses were able to draw a character like Giselle as well as the seemingly innocent Adams. Adams exudes the pure and simple goodness of Giselle. She is a young woman who still believes in true love, happy endings, and true love kisses. Many actresses would have played Giselle with a bit of irony and a clear sense of self-awareness, but Adams did not. Adams gives Disney and Hollywood one of their most child-friendly, genuine, and certainly marketable characters, as Julie Andrews brought Mary Poppins to life. Despite Gisele's further roots in the New York City environment, Adam finds her ability to balance her true self with her new self, for example she is angry for the first time. The scenes still make me laugh.

If all other aspects of the "enchantment" fail, the movie is worth watching with Adams' performance alone. Thankfully, the performance is uniformly strong even if the plot grows too much.

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