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By Robert Scucci
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Revenge is a dish that is best served with a tall glass, ice cool from milk in Leon: the professionalAnd if you haven’t had the pleasure of watching this excitement movie during your lifetime, it’s high time you fired the old tube and gave it a spin. Tell a story with no fat on her, Leon: the professional Cleverly, directly, leaves a little space for the imagination to unpack any kind of lower -text (read: no), all to pack brisk, quick but credible character development, and some pretty gnarly action sequences that will be violent and clever parts.
What’s more, Natalie Portman, who saw his first role in this film at the age of 12, acts with a wise-heyond-years-years of emotional intelligence that will make you wish you to pursue your own talents at a much younger age because it completely crushed it in Leon: The Professional.
Leon: the professional In one of those films with such a simple story that by virtue of its compact narrative is forced to press its strong characterization.
Leon (Jean Reno) is a man hitting off the boat (or as he calls, a cleaner) from Italy who spends his nights sleeping with one eye open, he seems to eat nothing but milk, and devotes his entire life to his work, his workstations, and cleans his guns. Working for the crowd, Leon keeps a low profile and only when he is about to hit out that Mafioso Old Tony (Danny Aiello) actually shows himself in public. As luck could have it, Leon has run in with Mathilda Lando (Natalie Portman), the young and turbulent girl living in the apartment down the hall, and realizes that her father (Michael Badalucco) has attracted some poor company in the form of Norman Stansfield Gary Oldman, a corrupted dea agent that illuminates a moon in the drug trading trade.
Learning that her whole family is murdered by Stansfield and his goons, Mathilda is looking for Leon with the intention of learning her ways when she puts two and two together and realizes that he is a striking man. Unlikely at first, Leon likes Mathilda when she makes a proposal that he cannot reject her in the form of caring for domestic duties such as shopping and cleaning, as well as teaching him how to read.
Through a series of Montage’s sequences Leon: the professionalLeon and Mathilda form an indivisible bond that equal parts are healthy and troublesome. Although Leon is a gentleman who focuses entirely on his work, Mathilda professes her boyfriend, making the whole situation awkward to both sides in question. Although Leon has obviously fatherly feelings towards Mathilda, he focuses on the task in question, who trains his protein to become cleaner without a romantic intention.
But what makes Leon: the professional How healthy in a strange way is how good they work together when we all know that their relationship is likely to end in some sort of tragedy given how high the poles are. At least I was reminded of teaching my own daughter how to roll a skating safely when Leon was teaching best practices to Mathilda while capturing targets of a roof-as-you-as-you-weeping virtues to my daughter, Leon emphasizes the importance of not giving your location to Mathemathilda firmly.
Leon: the professional In one of those films with zero fat in his explanation so that his audience can enjoy the dynamics between them Natalie Portman and Jean Reno, the ultimate murderer couple. Although Leon clearly lives in a moral territory of gray, it is adulterable because it only takes bad people, and when you get a full scope who he and Mathilda fight against, there is no ambiguity about who is in the right or in the wrong in this context.
You simply need to pour a tall glass of complete milk for yourself, throw your feet up on the Ottoman, and a stream Leon: the professional On a tubi to enjoy its value as the funny dark thriller it is.