The Kid Stays in the Picture

The Kid Stays in the Picture (2002)

1h 33m | Documentary, Biography | USA
7.4IMDb
7.7DouBan

Plot: legendary producer Robert Evans has made more twists and turns than movies in his life. In 1956, Golden Picture Queen NormaShearer invited him to co-star in a new film to start his Hollywood career. After a brief and dazzling celebrity, Robert Evans wanted to challenge production when he planned a number of classic films such as "the Godfather", "Martyrdom" and "Chinatown". In the 1980s, Robert Evans divorced his wife Ellie, followed by a drug scandal and involvement in the "Cotton Club" murder. In the 1990s, when he returned to the supervisory production industry, his autobiography became a hit and was put on the screen to make a budget film, proving that Robert Evans was destined to stay in the film industry. Comments: you can say that this is a documentary, but you can also say that it is a legendary film, because the story of the protagonist Robert Evans, a famous Hollywood producer, is completely worth annotating with the word legendary. The film is adapted from Robert Evans' best-selling autobiography. Brett Morgan reproduces the legendary story of Robert Evans on the screen in a down-to-earth way. Robert Evans's own narration makes the film look both real and interesting.

Plot: legendary producer Robert Evans has made more twists and turns than movies in his life. In 1956, Golden Picture Queen NormaShearer invited him to co-star in a new film to start his Hollywood career. After a brief and dazzling celebrity, Robert Evans wanted to challenge production when he planned a number of classic films such as "the Godfather", "Martyrdom" and "Chinatown". In the 1980s, Robert Evans divorced his wife Ellie, followed by a drug scandal and involvement in the "Cotton Club" murder. In the 1990s, when he returned to the supervisory production industry, his autobiography became a hit and was put on the screen to make a budget film, proving that Robert Evans was destined to stay in the film industry. Comments: you can say that this is a documentary, but you can also say that it is a legendary film, because the story of the protagonist Robert Evans, a famous Hollywood producer, is completely worth annotating with the word legendary. The film is adapted from Robert Evans' best-selling autobiography. Brett Morgan reproduces the legendary story of Robert Evans on the screen in a down-to-earth way. Robert Evans's own narration makes the film look both real and interesting.