‘Blue Moon’ Review: Another Precious Pearl In Richard Linklater’s Chronicles Of The Human Condition [Berlin]
The best line in “Casablanca”? If you had asked Broadway lyricist Lorenz Hart that question on the evening of March 31, 1943, he would have recited back to you the following confession: “Nobody’s loved me that much.” This phrase makes at least three appearances in director Richard Linklater’s “Blue Moon,” setting a tone of yearning and compliance on behalf of the film’s main character, Hart, portrayed by usual suspect Ethan Hawke, this time full of tenderness and contradictions. Continue reading ‘Blue Moon’ Review: Another Precious Pearl In Richard Linklater’s Chronicles Of The Human Condition [Berlin] at The Playlist.
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The best line in “Casablanca”? If you had asked Broadway lyricist Lorenz Hart that question on the evening of March 31, 1943, he would have recited back to you the following confession: “Nobody’s loved me that much.” This phrase makes at least three appearances in director Richard Linklater’s “Blue Moon,” setting a tone of yearning and compliance on behalf of the film’s main character, Hart, portrayed by usual suspect Ethan Hawke, this time full of tenderness and contradictions.