Trouble with the Curve.
Trouble with the Curve is a nice story. It situates a complicated familial dynamic within a competitive professional atmosphere which is adorned with collegial and asinine interactions that polarize the continuum established between youth and age.
Relationships and ethnocentric tendencies are examined as well, and after an explanation is provided, the resultant synergies mobilize the disenfranchised.
And the multidimensional nature of experiential competencies collaboratively contends with electronically generated statistics to offer an holistic approach to the practice of forecasting.
It's presented in an easy-to-follow and understand format, potentially photosynthesizing a modest kernel of truth.
All of these things, are good.
Clint Eastwood's character could have been more diversely differentiated from that whom he played in Gran Torino however.
Not that I don't love the old curmudgeon, but not enough time has elapsed between the two films.
And it's tough to find shelter from the narrative's after-school-special-like style, which, while cultivating a strong inclusive yet combative framework, lacks the creative virtuosities needed to motivate a wide-ranging reception.
Not that it's trying to do that.
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