LINA LEANDERSSON Zlín Film Festival 2014


Re: LINA LEANDERSSON Zlín Film Festival 2014
What a find! Thanks, johnlord.johnlord wrote:
We never stop reading, although every book comes to an end, just as we never stop living, although death is certain. (Roberto Bolaño)
- a_contemplative_life
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Re: LINA LEANDERSSON Zlín Film Festival 2014
Fascinating to hear Lina pronounce her own name. It sounds so different from how an American would pronounce it.

Re: LINA LEANDERSSON Zlín Film Festival 2014
Yeah, I noticed it, too. Her last name sounded more like "lan-chan" rather than "lee-ander-son". Anyway, it was a fun interview. Both of them were in that 15 short films for SVT.a_contemplative_life wrote:Fascinating to hear Lina pronounce her own name. It sounds so different from how an American would pronounce it.
Re: LINA LEANDERSSON Zlín Film Festival 2014
Yeh, I say her name like you guys hear'em. Sweden is right next door to norway so I kinda know what it is supposed to sound like. It is hallerious though when any non-scandinavians try to say her name. Or even better, try to say john ajvide lindqvist's name.
Lina is soo pretty.
Lina is soo pretty.
Bulleri bulleri buck, hur många horn står upp
Re: LINA LEANDERSSON Zlín Film Festival 2014
Her surname is a patronym - Leanders-son. The male name Leander is pronounced with the stress on the a, while the preceding e almost disappears. The combined sound of the unstressed e and the stressed a is similar to what is heard in English "young", without the "ng" part. Furthermore, in most of Sweden the combination "rs" is pronounced "sh", like in English "she". Thus, Leandersson would be pronounced something like Lyan-duh-shon.Tom wrote:Yeah, I noticed it, too. Her last name sounded more like "lan-chan" rather than "lee-ander-son". Anyway, it was a fun interview. Both of them were in that 15 short films for SVT.a_contemplative_life wrote:Fascinating to hear Lina pronounce her own name. It sounds so different from how an American would pronounce it.
But from the beginning Eli was just Eli. Nothing. Anything. And he is still a mystery to me. John Ajvide Lindqvist
Re: LINA LEANDERSSON Zlín Film Festival 2014
For all those of you pining for a sequel: Eli is gone. Lina is so familiar, since we have followed her growing up, but I don't see Eli in her at all. There may be some brief little flashes here and there that remind me of Eli, but that may be more of my imagination than anything real. She has none of the same mannerisms, and very few of the same facial expressions. Maybe this just a measure of 12 year old Lina's talent: That she created Eli as a character that she wore onscreen. Either way, if I walked out of a cinema having just seen LTROI for the first time ran into Lina today, I doubt that I would realize that she had played Eli.intrige wrote:Lina is soo pretty.
...the story derives a lot of its appeal from its sense of despair and a darkness in which the love of Eli and Oskar seems to shine with a strange and disturbing light.
-Lacenaire
Visit My LTROI fan page.
-Lacenaire
Visit My LTROI fan page.
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Re: LINA LEANDERSSON Zlín Film Festival 2014
Eli isn't gone, she's happily living with Oskar, tucked in celluloid. I don't pine for a sequel and I really even avoid fanfiction these days because I really can't stand the idea of Oskar or Eli in some kind of conflict. Their story is done, it's for them to enjoy their "happily ever after." I'm satisfied with brief cameo appearances, for JAL to drop in on the every few years or so.For all those of you pining for a sequel: Eli is gone.
They're with each other, happy, free. I can't ask for a better ending. All credit to Lina for being Eli, at least for a little while.
"When is a monster not a monster? Oh, when you love it."
Re: LINA LEANDERSSON Zlín Film Festival 2014
I agree. I watched Broken Hill Blues last year and saw very little of Eli in Lina's performance. What is still intact, though, is her ability to communicate through body language and facial expression. This ability served her well in this case; although Lina had a decent amount of screen time, the IMDB is accurate when it says she only has around 9 lines. She was still a facinating presence onscreen, and I'd like to think I would have taken note of her even if I'd never seen LTROI.Wolfchild wrote:For all those of you pining for a sequel: Eli is gone. Lina is so familiar, since we have followed her growing up, but I don't see Eli in her at all. There may be some brief little flashes here and there that remind me of Eli, but that may be more of my imagination than anything real. She has none of the same mannerisms, and very few of the same facial expressions. Maybe this just a measure of 12 year old Lina's talent: That she created Eli as a character that she wore onscreen. Either way, if I walked out of a cinema having just seen LTROI for the first time ran into Lina today, I doubt that I would realize that she had played Eli.intrige wrote:Lina is soo pretty.
