La gran enfermedad del amor

  • México Un amor inseparable (más)
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La gran enfermedad del amor cuenta la historia real de Kumail y Emily, una pareja que se conoce en un espectáculo de comedia. Cuando parecía que todo iba a quedarse en un encuentro de una noche, su relación empieza a avanzar a pesar de las diferencias culturales, complicando las vidas de todos por las expectativas que tenían los padres de Kumail, unos musulmanes estrictos. (YouPlanet Pictures)

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POMO 

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español Otra gran pieza de conversación a lo Judd Apatow, con una visión maravillosamente desenfadada y educativamente positiva sobre el tema global más candente del momento, el musulmán. Y con una relación tradicionalmente humana y acertadamente desmontada. Emotiva, inteligente, con un guion (diálogos) dignos de una nominación al Oscar. Y Zoe Kazan supongo que también. ()

Filmmaniak 

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español Las respuestas entusiastas del Sundance anunciaron que podríamos tener la comedia del año aquí, pero el milagro no sucede. La gran enfermedad del amor es una comedia romántica independiente completamente estándar, de las cuales hay de decenas a cientos. Aunque podría decir que es moderadamente divertida. Sin embargo, se diferencia de las demás por los temas pakistaníes y sus graciosos orígenes, que ciertamente se le pueden atribuir, así como también por los motivos no del todo habituales de la madre que separa a su hijo de la familia por ignorar las tradiciones culturales, bromas sobre terroristas musulmanes y posibles interpretaciones metafóricas de las consecuencias mortales por una mentira entre dos socios. ()

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claudel 

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español Pěkně blbě je film, u kterého jsem se cítil velmi spokojeně, vychutnával si povedené komediální i dramatické scény a u nějž nemohu nadávat, že je to americká slátanina, protože se ten příběh opravdu stal. Nejlepší vtipy - vykonání potřeby v noci a 11. září. ()

Malarkey 

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inglés It took me a while to get used to Kumail. For about twenty minutes, I was even pretty uncertain whether this comedy was actually a comedy, or if it was simply an unusual drama. But once Zoe Kazan made an appearance on the scene (or rather in a coma), a whirlwind of great situational humor started that went so natural for Kumail that it really was a pleasure to watch him. For instance, his first encounter with Emily’s parents is really good fun. And there are plenty more similar scenes in the film. Eventually, the unusual drama turns into an unusual dramedy which managed to put me in a really good mood that didn’t disappear even after I finished the movie. The thing is, I read about the film that it was based on a true story and that the main character is the same Kumail as the one in the film. At that point, the movie reached a whole new dimension. ()

Matty 

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inglés Of course, there is nothing wrong with films that cater to the tastes of the masses. The fact they want to be liked (even though they may deal with rather painful issues) and do not arouse any antipathy in viewers only puts critics in a non-conformal position, as they are being manipulated. Therefore, I had a similar problem with The Big Sick as I did with last year’s Sundance hit Captain Fantastic. In a film that boldly combines observational comedy about the clash of different genders and cultures (with humour based on commenting on everyday situations in the manner of stand-up comedy) and melodrama, there is less banality and more truth. The first welcome disruption of the romantic-comedy formula is the unexpectedly early break-up, which is not the worst thing to happen in the central couple’s relationship. After the sudden genre shift, a relationship remains the focal point of the film, but it’s not the relationship between the guy and the girl, but between one of the partners and the other partner’s parents. Considerations as to whether the solution is original or cowardly and rather insensitive toward one of the characters are not very relevant, given the knowledge that this is how it actually happened. Though the film does not completely lose its humour after a change of tone, which may be reminiscent of some of James L. Brooks’s comedy-dramas, it is more serious, more moving and less egocentric than other romantic comedies by young filmmakers. The parents are given almost as much attention as the children, whose self-centredness and unreadiness for life are that much more apparent. The unexpected change of perspective, which Aziz Ansari also works with brilliantly in Master of None, leads us, just like the protagonists, to reassess what is really important in life. Emily and Kumail’s inability or unwillingness to perceive the situation that has arisen from the other’s perspective is more thoroughly elaborated in the slightly repetitive final act of this somewhat drawn-out film (which is, however, a shortcoming of most of the films made or produced by Judd Apatow). The filmmakers like to spend time with their characters and let them carry on dialogue often lasting a few minutes longer than is necessary. Most of the time, however, they adhere to the central theme of "love in spite of” and never deviate from the main storyline for so long that the narrative loses traction and starts to be boring. Besides that, they succeed in utilising most of the plot detours in an emotionally powerful climax, where the alternating perspectives make you care not only about the fortunes of the central couple, but also about the many characters around them. 75% ()

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