Director:
Ridley ScottGuión:
William HjortsbergCámara:
Alex ThomsonReparto:
Tom Cruise, Mia Sara, Tim Curry, David Bennent, Billy Barty, Annabelle Lanyon, Robert Picardo, Peter O'Farrell, Kiran Shah, Cork Hubbert, Alice Playten (más)Streaming (2)
Sinopsis(1)
Lili es una bella princesa a la que le gusta pasear por el bosque encantado. Ella dice que va a ver a unos parientes, pero en realidad va a encontrarse con Jack, un extraño personaje verde. Mientras, una personificación del diablo intentará extender la noche eterna asesinando al unicornio de esas tierras. Aunque no parece que haya salvación, Jack y sus amigos se enfrentarán a él para salvar al mundo y a la princesa. (20th Century Fox España)
(más)Videos (2)
Reseñas (2)
A strange piece that is not helped by several visual effects from Ridley Scott's workshop. The worst thing is that this effort doesn't try to lean towards either fantasy or fairy tale. On one hand, it creates a dark and depressive mythology around unicorns and also borrows a purely Tolkien-inspired world from The Silmarillion, but on the other hand, it gets lost in a series of weirdness and deaf spots. It doesn't come together, and when you're racking up one of the few performances from Tom Cruise that really annoyed me, that makes this Scott's worst film. ()
After a Blu-ray screening, with a widescreen and perfectly polished image, I can safely say that Scott's Legend is the most visually beautiful fairytale ever to appear on cinema screens. It may not as sophisticated and thought-provoking as, say, The NeverEnding Story, but the form, my friends, the form is unique. It’s a pity that it’s not properly appreciated by a wider audience. Scott was in extraordinary form in the first half of the 1980s. And Goldsmith's beautiful music is a chapter on its own. ()
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