ผู้ประกอบการรายใหญ่ช่วยรายเล็ก
https://www.dropbox.com/sc/7u6hsdoxslhkdyr/zDEWbh7cKM
http://pantip.com/topic/31126568
http://edition.cnn.com/SHOWBIZ/
http://edition.cnn.com/2013/11/01/showbiz/movies/enders-game-review-ew/index.html?hpt=en_bn1
(EW.com ) -- When it comes to adapting beloved novels, Hollywood has a lot of blood on its hands.
We all have our own personal laundry lists of books we spent our childhoods poring over that wound up getting sapped of their original spark and power on the way to the big screen. I could be wrong, but I suspect that diehard fans of Orson Scott Card's 1985 sci-fi allegory Ender's Game might walk out of Gavin Hood's lavish, eye-candy adaptation with a similar sensation — that they've spent more than two decades waiting for what ends up being an oddly lifeless and emotionally unaffecting film.
For the uninitiated, Ender's Game is the story of 12-year-old Ender Wiggin (Hugo's Asa Butterfield), a shy loner with a beautiful mind. His gift, if it can be called that, considering what happens in the last third of the film, is that he's a bit of savant when it comes to strategy and analyzing thorny no-win situations. He'd give Captain Kirk a serious run at Star Trek's Kobayashi Maru scenario. This is a particularly valuable skill set in the wake of a devastating attack on Earth years earlier by an alien insect race called the Formics. There are reports that these intergalactic praying mantises are about to launch a second assault and the military powers that be are scouring our planet, looking for the best and the brightest to outwit these blood-thirsty beasties.
http://movie.sanook.com/gallery/gallery/35902/152934/
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