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Fantasy Island Movie Honest Review In English

Image credit : (filmfare.com)

 Fantasy Island reminds you of Zumanji. A group of strangers are subjected to fictional events to stay alive. It also includes Agatha Christie's classic, and there are no shades. Also lost. It should also be remembered that this is the official adaptation of a popular American series that goes by the same name from the 70s. The series has a secret host who invites a set number of guests. Each guest went through a personal fantasy that always took his life and gave a life lesson to the contestants and the audience. The proverb that stories are weird, dark, twisted and you have to be careful about what you want is always true.


Mr. Roorke (Michael Pena) once invited Gwen Olsen (Maggie Q), Melanie Cole (Lucy Hale), Patrick Sullivan (Austin Stowell), Brooks (Jimmy O. Yang) and JD (Ryan Hansen) to Fantasy Island. Lifetime experience. Each one cuts a different ination han, all this is a game. Brothers Breaks and Jedi need a good time, Gwen worries that no one is engaged and wants to change it, Melania also seeks a chance with childhood threats. Patrick wants to join the army like his father. Each will get what they want. But when things are out of control and the ination starts to come true, they all start to think they are good without that particular desire.


Things have been interesting for a while. Wants to know how desires are fulfilled. But as the film progresses and the story begins to merge, the writing declines. The director and his team of writers, not knowing what to do next, seem to have randomly picked chits from a hat. The thrill we promised to deliver was hypnotized as the deep, scary reboot of the original series, which is not currently on earth. In addition to the setting‌, the premise gives a lot of potential for all kinds of mayhem, but they are underestimated. And then a surprising twist is added to be extra clever, but it is appealing and does not give the intended punch.

 

 Not to mention how the mysterious powers perform their magic on the island. The place may be purging but the audience has nothing concrete. Random characters, some from video games, raise the illusion that none of them are true. Everyone has a backstory, but we are not given enough input to invest in the audience mentally. The cast demands the script, but no one performs.

Sometimes, even after eating a full meal you will feel unhappy because substance X is not there. The same problem applies to this film. No elusive x-factor ...


 A set of hopes - Gwen (Maggie Cue), Melania (Lucy Hale), Sonja (Portia Deadly), Bradley (Ryan Hansen), from different walks of life and with very different desires to fulfill. Brex (Bronx) Jimmy O. Yang) and Patrick (Austin Stowell) - set out on a trip to visit a resort that promises to give Han a great ination under the supervision of the manager's own skeptical character - Rourke (Michael Pena). . But, the catch is that each person has only one dream and no cycle stops until the ination ha comes to its end.

The concept of a modern genius ready to ease the burden of your sadness seems more than appealing in principle and for the first 15 minutes it feels like one of ‘Fantasy Island’. Hopeful thrillers are all made. Horror / adventure movie. But, of course, this initial curiosity (compiled by some funny works) soon fades and is quickly replaced by a sense of dynamism and disorientation - who was in the fantasy and why, among other questions, let’s start cropping up.

Producer-director Jeff Wadlow tries to combine the life stories and dreams and desires of his characters with each other, but the transition is creative, allowing for instability, which is shiny and often leaves one in a state of confusion; Contempt of logic even by the standards of Ination Ha. The plot begins as a terrifying mystery, the thriller navigates through the streets, rubbing your hands against the right of ination and turning into a false mix-mash of the three themes mentioned above.

Ryan Hansen and Jimmy O. Brother of Brotherhood is as hilarious as Yang and his bromance on screen feels real and highlights an image that is not clear. Lucy Hale looks attractive as a newly (unbassed) confident kid, but fails to look like a trapped soul in high school. Similarly, Maggie Cue, Portia Doubleday, Michael Pena and Austin Stowell do their part, but thanks to the half-baked script, combined with a weak direction and some weak backgrounds - without saving 'Fantasy Island'.

Fantasy Island has an optimistic story to tell, but it's an inexpensive context.

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