Steven Spielberg directs this adaptation of Roald Dahl's novel starring Mark Rylance as the Big Friendly Giant. The film follows Sophie (Ruby Barnhill) as she is whisked away from her orphanage by the BFG and taken to Giant Country where she is immediately at risk of being eaten by the other, larger giants, including Fleshlumpeater (Jemaine Clement) and Bloodbottler (Bill Hader). Together, Sophie and the BFG go on an adventure to Dream Country where they capture dreams for the BFG to give to all of the human world's sleeping children. After coming up with a cunning plan, the pair head back to London to see if the Queen (Penelope Wilton) can help them tackle the problem of the bullying, child-eating giants.
G**Y
Great 3d tale.
Great 3d tale
L**1
Just gorgeous
We've watched this so many times, and it is just a feast for the eyes. The grandchildren love it and so do I. Truly a film for all ages.
A**R
Very entertaining
It was very entertaining and funny and cool👍
M**.
Mark Rylance was again exceptional !!
We originally bought the movie for our 5 year old but decided to view it first. I am glad we did as we did feel parts of the movie were dark and scary for a 5 year old. We will wait until he is 6 or 7.Personally as an adult I was keen to watch this movie not only because I loved the book as a youngster but because if the casting of Mark Rylance as BFG - one of the greatest artists , actors alive - I would almost say geniuse he is that good. Those who dont believe me watch one of his productions or watch him live on stage or the movie "Bridge of Spies" !He did not let me down - he was exceptional and made BFG worth a watch.the BFG is symbolic of an author, of Roald Dahl himself:The BFG was of course always an author, even before he was literate; his medium was the dream, and he used dreams to tell stories to bring joy to children. He gave these dreams as protest, resistance, and counterattack to the consuming violence of his nine awful brothers.The BFG’s nine awful brothers are symbolic of all the threats to our children that exist in this dark world and its crowded halls of terrors and sharp-toothed nightmares:Our love and care for our children is shaded and intensified by an understanding of their fragility, their mortality, their susceptibility to disease, accident, chaos, the carelessness of others…factors easily metaphorized into child-eating giants. Our love for our own children precludes an equal love for children who are not our own, despite whatever ethical systems we claim to practice and subscribe to.Turner notes how deeply profound and personal, especially if you’re a parent, “The BFG” becomes when you read it (or watch Spielberg’s version) through this lens:And this is what I find so moving about The BFG: Dahl converts the personal (and infinite) loss of his own daughter into a loving gift he seeks to share with all children. He shared that gift with me when I was a child, when I never imagined that I would grow up to be an adult with a child of my own to whom I would read that gift again, in a new, strange, sad, dark, joyous way.Maybe all I am trying to say here, in this long, long-winded way, is Thank you.For this reason, and because “The BFG” is helmed by one of the greatest on-screen storytellers of our time, “The BFG” will not only entertain you to no end, it might even move you to “strange, sad, dark, joyous” tears.And I think Roald Dahl would have wanted it that way.For those disappointed on the first viewing I recommend you give it a second glance and you will discover another dimension
M**E
Enjoyable
Enjoyable film for the kids, worth watching.
V**I
BFG dvd
My kids and my family love watching this film. Good value for money and it arrived very quickly
T**E
a great way to enjoy an evening with a family
Extra credit for Mark Rylance, an impressive work. The kids really enjoyed it.
W**N
Scrumdiddlyumptious Family Film For All Ages
It's always a struggle keeping the kids amused in the run up to Christmas and, after putting up with bickering from my two for most of the day, I suggested we could all sit down and watch a film. My eldest is 11 and my youngest is 6, so it can be a struggle to find a film they both want to watch...and The BFG wasn't one of them. After a little persuasion and much grumbling, we settled down to watch, and they were both enthralled from start to finish (ask them now, however and they'll deny they enjoyed it all!)The film is extremely well acted; Ruby Barnhill makes a wonderfully feisty Sophie, Mark Rylance really brings the CGI BFG to life, and the film, particularly the dream catching scene, is a phizz-whizzing joy to behold. I did wonder whether the other giants might be a bit scary for a 6-year-old but, whilst suitably grizzling and horrigust, they're so ridiculously stupid that most of the laughs in the film are generated by them.All told, this is probably the most enjoyable family film we've seen for a while, and my one minor gripe with it is that, with a run time of nigh on 2 hours it's a tad too long for little chidlers. We had an intermission half-way through; toilet break and snacks for the kids, cup of tea for me and the missus and that seemed to restore any attention spans that may have been flagging.
Trustpilot
Hace 1 semana
Hace 3 semanas