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Big Eyes
In a dramatic atmosphere, Margaret Keane, who's a good painter and achieves success in 1950s, although the obstacles and difficulties she faces to make her own; especially when she leaves her husband, Walter, in San Francisco, who sells her paintings as his own.
25 February 1958, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
6 March 1955, Los Angeles, California, USA
25 November 1977, Macroom, County Cork, Ireland
6 March 1968, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
26 June 1980, Los Angeles, California, USA
April 10, 2016
Big Eyes is Tim Burton's second foray into strange but true stories of American termite art culture... a story about the pain behind the façade of happiness and success.
April 06, 2016
A bitter feminist fairy tale about a woman betrayed by love and trust and crafted by culture to be vulnerable to the charms of a con-artist husband.
December 29, 2014
Adams is lovely and tremulous, but Big Eyes would be even better if Waltz was in the same key.
May 31, 2016
Burton's uninspired made-for-cable vibe and Christoph Waltz's overly manic performance always feel at odds with each other.
March 07, 2016
Bright yet disturbing, Big Eyes is both an indicator of just how far women have come in the past 60 years and a comment on the commercialisation of pop culture.
January 12, 2015
A feminist psycho-melodrama made without insight or dramatic excitement.
April 09, 2016
A lovingly crafted, uncommonly astute look at gender roles in American families.
June 21, 2016
The 106-minute drama is always watchable, and works no less and no more than a two-dimensional portrait that catches the eye and suggests deeper meaning than is actually present.
January 02, 2015
Amy Adams and Christoph Waltz are charismatic in the lead roles; occasionally they distract from the movie's overall smugness.
May 23, 2016
Burton had a chance to make a powerful statement on the struggle for a woman to achieve artistic recognition and instead settled for another childlike fairy tale.
December 30, 2014
For all its tonal shifts and erratic pacing, the film is Burton's heartfelt tribute to the yearning that drives even the most marginalized artist to self expression no matter what the hell anyone thinks.

