Wednesday 22 April 2015

The Vow

The Vow is not precisely a woman's picture. It's all the more about how a man becomes hopelessly in love, loses his affection and surrenders everything in life to concentrate on recapturing his love. One can say its a woman's picture from a male perspective.

"Moments of impact define who we are," says the etched Channing Tatum, who used to be a male stripper before he turned into a film star, and still looks it. That is the sort of sappy corn syrup that goes for narration, and Mr. Tatum is better playing combatants and hellfire raising officers than he is stating it. 
He's a fellow named Leo, who owns a recording studio.

The beautiful Rachel McAdams is Paige, a sculptress studying at the Chicago Art Institute. They meet adorably and get married even cuter after he spells "Move In" with blueberries. At that point, on a sentimental winter night under road lights that light the snow like candles, a truck that sends Paige through the windshield back hits their car. When she recovers in the hospital her brain harmed and wearing a Band-Aid, all she recollects is her life before Leo. When he goes to her room, she supposes he's her doctor. He pledges to floor her with adoration, yet she has a feeling that she's sharing space to a stranger. She doesn't even remember him at all, nothing they had, absolutely nothing. He moves to the lounge chair.
 At that point her parents (Sam Neill and Jessica Lange) try to take control , and her long-term memory includes a distinctive romance with an old boyfriend (Canadian heart throb Scott Speedman) who returns, needing his offer. She falls into old habits, old mixed drinks and cocktails, old most favourite meals (she overlooks she's a veggie lover). The most imperative thing she forgets about is the vow she made at her wedding: “Regardless of the challenges that might come between us, we’ll always find our way back to each other.” Leo gives his life to making Paige fall head over heels in love with him again.

The Vow appears to be extra moving in light of the fact that its sincerity is not devised. It's a real story and the real couple that experienced this tragedy are shown toward the end, rejoined after years of exertion and hard work.

Before the accident that happened to Paige we see how Leo and Paige met. How they stayed in love. How they stayed in affection. It feels real and it is amazing to watch what’s between these two youthful actors. At the point when Paige no more recalls what they once had, the story starts to become more interesting and more catchy.

I adore Rachel McAdams, and her acting felt so real. But what really grabbed my attention and kept me wanting to watch the movie even more was Leo's passion. He was sentimental, he was afraid, he felt anger, and mostly he was creative and passionate in trying to win back this lady and he desperately wanted it really bad. I really felt his agony and his pain.


Channing Tatum was the real actor here for me. He really played his role perfectly right.

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