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Solo Mio


A plot of Solo Mio is about a protagonist, in the performance of Kevin James, who was left at the altar in Rome alone, but he soon meets a beautiful Italian woman, it didn’t seem that I’d see something inventive. I wanted to watch, but I forgot about this movie then. More than a month later, I noticed it again and decided to see for the humor, because that could be a wonderful part, and the lead actor knows a comedy.

 

I guessed how it ends, who that character actually is, the flick used a standard conflict between the heroes at that point, but none of that matters because it is originally narrated and makes inventive with stereotype places. I’ve seen a story. Furthermore, Solo Mio amazes by showing beautiful things, which are discussions about relationship and it makes to understand that bad things that happened with you could be to the best. All these elements blend with comedy, which a little, but it is elegant (except the last part of the party roof episode where there was a sudden coming of slapstick) and smoothly fuses with dialogs about reality–as in the incredible episode with Alyson Hannigan and Julee Cerda in their talk with Kevin James on a sofa.

 

It doesn’t matter that many scenes are at historical landmarks that you see on postcards. As well, I don’t ask about bums, cultureless drivers and that Trevi fountain isn’t so much overcrowded as it should be. I disagree that embedding some music, which isn’t always to my preference, turns Solo Mio into a music video, but it is vision of authors. My one rejection is to a political correctness clause that scratches my eyes while watching this execution in a big company of people and that is always has in the background where this unusual one was in a Roman restaurant.

 

Some shots of camera are creative, but the job of entire filming crew was done on good. There are no depths in that. It has in personages of excellent cast and the showing of Italian culture and customs. Kevin James presents himself as funny and demonstrates a genuine American who arrived in Rome. I love his pronunciation of “sugar” in Italian from an English language perspective and how he says name “Claudia”. Kim Coates, with him look and personality of his character, makes an extraordinary great one. I love this hero and his experience. Nicole Grimaudo couldn’t do anything other than charm and mesmerize as a true Italian. Her gestures, her emotions and saying what is on her mind, as criticizing the protagonist, but also encouraging him to try in his wishes and open an unknown. Additionally, I loved that she doesn’t speak as a native speaker.

 

This is the beautiful movie that leaves with a smile and high mood in that nothing can be over.

 
 

© 2018 by Lukaschik Gleb

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