8.4
I, too, would love to see Cate Blanchett try to psychoanalyze me into submission.
Originally a novel and a 1947 black-and-white film, Nightmare Alley already had a special place in the canon of American cinema. Then came Guillermo del Toro, who rewrote the book. The Mexican director's fantastical touch not only updated the film so it fits more modern sensibilities (like giving women bigger roles), but it also brought to the surface qualms of the human psyche that lay latent in previous versions of the story. A richer, more textured screenplay let the characters explore the darkest corners of their soul, and as a direct consequence, the carnival and the 'freaks' were no longer simply monstrous. Del Toro made a new, more substantial film out of the source material, one where Cooper and Blanchett can reign supreme.
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