Charlie Brown has always been the lead character of Peanuts , but since virtually the beginning of the strip, and especially so after the edges of his design were rounded off and he became more cute, Snoopy has been the breakout star. In the world of comics only Garfield could rival Snoopy for popularity (and Jim Davis was way more cynical about pursuing that for his character than Charles Schulz). Everybody loves Snoopy, the hyper-imaginative, romantic, intellectual, and sarcastic beagle, and it seemed only natural that for a second Peanuts movie, especially when A Boy Named Charlie Brown was so fixated on its title character, the focus would be on Snoopy. Snoopy Come Home is primarily based on a storyline from 1968 in which Snoopy receives a letter from a mysterious girl called Lila and leaves Charlie Brown without explanation -puzzling his owner and the other kids. The purpose of Snoopy’s journey we come to find is to visit his previous owner in the hospital, ...
There are several significant time jumps in the movie Christy , some of which are hard to appreciate given how little seems to change in how the characters look and behave -a twenty-one year time span might seem like only five. But what is implicitly happening through the long interims is very important. Each leap is rough for how it emphasizes just how deep and inescapable a situation Christy Martin is in. The claustrophobia is very aptly felt. And none of it has to do with her boxing career. It is a sports biopic in which the sport is almost incidental -merely the anchor and backdrop for a harrowing story of abuse and manipulation. In fact it is treated as a downright thriller in some instances by director David Michôd -unsurprisingly for the man behind Animal Kingdom . But then it is an appropriate approach in light of the unique nature of its subject’s story -at least unique in a public sense and her particular region of celebrity. What Christy Martin went through i...