8º – Love and Death (Woody Allen, 1975)Nurturing a plot full of exacerbations, the film will focus on the nuances of the life of a troubling and troubled Russian soldier. Always guided in the construction of exaggerated scenes, Woody Allen gives us a very dynamic work, achieving, in just 85 minutes, walking on several layers of history, without great presumptions and in a simple way.
7º – Another Woman (Woody Allen, 1988)Finding trouble writing her book, a writer decides to rent an apartment to try to find a balance to work. However, the woman ends up seeing herself in an existential crisis when she periodically listens to the conversations between a psychiatrist and her clients in the next apartment. Allocating completely in the genre of drama, ‘Another Woman’ follows a rather cool atmosphere to conduct its story, always choosing for resolutions well constructed by the script for the story. The film still brings us a great conjunction of actors to guide the story, such as Mia Farrow, Gena Rowlands, Ian Holm and Gene Hackman.
6º – Sleeper (Woody Allen, 1973)A man frozen in 1973 is brought back to life hundreds of years later, coming to discover a completely altered world and trying to survive it. Completely unpretentious, ‘Sleeper’ ends up entertaining the viewer in all his scenes, always using good performances from his duo of actors (Woody Allen and Diane Keaton) and his script full of good plays.
5º – Manhattan Murder Mystery (Woody Allen, 1993)A middle-aged couple begins to suspect that the death of their neighbor’s wife hides more macabre secrets than was revealed before. In one of the most entertaining films of the career of Woody Allen, we will see the plot alternating between comedy and mystery, knowing to vary between the genres and taking advantage of the paranoid performances of its protagonists.
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