| Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman |
| |

|
| |
| "When poor, solitary, unappreciated Selina comes home from another lousy day at work, she switches on the neon sign by her door: HELLO THERE, it reads. Then she transforms into the sexy, snarky, immensely powerful Catwoman, and a couple of letters short on the sign, which now reads HELL HERE. That, in a phrase, is the difference between the drab, disenfranchised majority and the unleashed supervillain. In Tim Burton's marvelous comic-book fantasy, Catwoman has an underworld ally in the Penguin (Danny DeVito) but is drawn to an impossible romance with stalwart Bruce Wayne (Michael Keaton). It can't be, of course; she's too malevolent for him, and way too complicated. Pfeiffer is superb in the role, simultaneously catty and caring, erotic and poignant. A perfect scratch-and-match." |
| says - DanRight82 (11:48 Mar. 24, 2010 ) |
| |
| Join the Discussion! |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman Comments
Comments (1)
1 - 1 of 1
another lousy day at work, she switches on the neon sign by
her door: HELLO THERE, it reads. Then she transforms into
the sexy, snarky, immensely powerful Catwoman, and a couple
of letters short on the sign, which now reads HELL HERE.
That, in a phrase, is the difference between the drab,
disenfranchised majority and the unleashed supervillain. In
Tim Burton's marvelous comic-book fantasy, Catwoman has an
underworld ally in the Penguin (Danny DeVito) but is drawn
to an impossible romance with stalwart Bruce Wayne (Michael
Keaton). It can't be, of course; she's too malevolent for
him, and way too complicated. Pfeiffer is superb in the
role, simultaneously catty and caring, erotic and poignant.
A perfect scratch-and-match.
1 | 1 - 1 | Last- 1
Post a Comment