Showing posts with label trains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trains. Show all posts

Friday, 4 May 2012

Water for Elephants - Film Love

Water for Elephants is a gorgeous film starring
Robert Pattinson and Reese Witherspoon. 


I fell instantly in love with their characters and of course, Rosie the Elephant, 


and even the despicable villain, a crucial element for an unforgettable story.


I love the colours of the circus, the iconic red and white stripes, and in this case the era, the 1930s.



Reese Witherspoon wore the most gorgeous dresses in the film, and her hair had the perfect curls!



If you fell in love with Robert Pattinson in the Twilight movies, you will fall for him all over again in this one, as his character is another kind-hearted romantic.


I also loved the music - so mellow and vintagey.
I was swept away into another era.

Here are some pics from a photo shoot of a wedding with a Water for Elephants theme. If you have even a slight love of vintage these beautiful pics will warm your heart.  

The engagement:





 The invites (sigh!):


The wedding ceremony:



and the reception:












Isn't it just beautiful?
(All images and details about this wedding shoot can be found at 
Green Wedding Shoes.)

xx

Saturday, 21 April 2012

Hugo - Film Love

Hugo is a beautiful film, with its sweeping views of 1930's Paris from a train station clock, adventures amongst the cogs and gears of the clock's interior, passing glimpses of passengers adorned in the fashions of the day, libraries with soaring ceilings, charming Parisian shops, quirky film-making sequences from the early 1900s, art deco theatres, and the heartwarming interactions of the young and the old.  












The orphaned Hugo lives in the clock of a train station in Paris. His father left him a magician's automaton to finish building, but the toymaker from the shop in the station takes his notebook of instructions when he catches Hugo stealing from him. Hugo appeals to the toymaker's goddaughter to help him get the notebook back, and thus ensues an adventure where they find out the toymaker is the infamous George Melies, who made fanciful movies at the turn of the 20th century.

The film is a tad too long, making it not one I think small children would sit through easily, however I think it will appeal to an audience of 12 and over. My son, at 13, sat through it happily, and I think it helped that our family has a great interest in films and their history. The sequences from the 1900s may be too old-fashioned and drawn-out for many viewers. I think the movie would have benefitted by being about 20 minutes shorter.

However, the characters were beautifully constructed and portrayed, making the film a sentimental story that brought a tear to my eye. Definitely worth watching!

As an addition, many years ago, a band called Smashing Pumpkins released a song called Tonight, Tonight, and the accompanying video was created in the style of George Melies films. I find it difficult to listen to the singer's voice these days (showing my age) but the drums and strings are fabulous and the video is a gorgeous, amusing, and clever reference to Melie.



xx