Bridge to Teribithia (2007) child actor Josh Hutcherson is
a chiseled piece of work. Just as much as Dakota Fanning, they do not
waste screen time simply because they are as efficient as actors as
effective as their good looks. Ideally what Hollywood should be.
Hutcherson is Robert Pattinson of The Twilight Saga in The Hunger Games Trilogy. But with a lot more weight, credibility that truly sparkle from his prior stellar performances. Little Manhattan (2005), that which started it all, Russovoir's, say, interest of him. From tolerable films like Journey to the Center of the Earth (2008) to Academy Award-winning The Kids Are All Right (2010), he is inescapable. Josh has a specialty, you see; a sort of typecast in his roles. Arguably
the world-on-shoulders character rests comfortably on his well-built body frame, thrown to his taut face, altogether responding an emotion, a performance, curious of his real life. He must've experienced struggle and pain at some point in his previous life to carry out such convincing staging. One of which is The Forger.
"First kiss the hand, then kiss the girl." |
Joshua (Hutcherson) would do anything to be in Detention (2012) because that must mean he's in school. Expelled and repelled by his own mother, the gifted painter wanders the world equipped with only a paintbrush and a canvas board, that which technically are still supplies, from which are his sword and shield. Like a wet painting, and a beautiful one to boot, waiting to be framed, he doesn't know how much his worth and, people as they are, want him at the cheapest. Meanwhile, all he wanted was an eraser to start over. To doodle hearts on ripped sheets with his own Girl with a Pearl Earring (click it).
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