Ratatouille Movie Review
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Rats
are one of the most disgusting animal to some of us. Rats are usually found in
dirty places, mostly in the dustbin, drainage, and back of the restaurants. But
Ratatouille movie just changed the whole perception about rats. Literally a rat
will cook in one of the famous restaurant!!! How ridiculous it is. In the
beginning of the movie, they portrait the usual rats stealing foods from house
except Remy, the earnest little rat who is its hero, is such a lovable,
determined, gifted rodent that I want to know happens to him next, now that he
has conquered the summit of French cuisine and that’s what I love about this
movie.
One
day when Remy and his family was chased from a cottage house, Remy somehow
escaped but he got separated from his family. Linguini found poor Remy and
saved him. Little did he know that Remy a rat is about to change his life.
Later, Linguini brought Remy to his house and to his restaurant. Little by
little Remy thought Linguini how to cook and serve the customer. Remy
burrows into Linguini's hair, is concealed by his toque, can see through its
transparent sides and controls Linguini by pulling on his hair as if each tuft
were a joystick. Together, they astonish Paris with their genius.
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All
of this begins as a dubious premise and ends as a triumph of animation, comedy,
imagination and, yes, humanity. What is most lovable about Remy is his modesty
and shyness, even for a rat. He has body language so expressive than many
humans would trade for it. Many animated characters seem to communicate with
semaphores, but Remy has a repertory of tiny French hand gestures, shrugs and
physical expressiveness. Does any other nationality have more ways of moving a
finger and an eyebrow less than an inch while signaling something as complex
as, "I would do anything for you, monsieur, but as you
see, I have only two hands, and these times we live in do not permit me the
luxury of fulfilling such requests."
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