and excentric Italian hitman "Leon", who unwillingly ends up taking care of Mathilda when she has nowhere else to go. Leon is emotionally immature, while Mathilda developed far beyond her own age. The circumstances lead them into a strange relationship, while Mathilda aspires to become a "clea...
director when they would read the part, and Besson would avoid the question. Not being able to read the scene helped Besson and his cast genuinely capture the awkwardness the characters felt at that moment. “[Léon and Mathilda’s] relationship was very connected and very strange,” Reno ...
now, They can not live without each other. The relationship between them is subtle. It is basically a father-daughter or mentor -apprentice relationship. When I watched the movie for the first time,I hated the ending. Doubting that Why the director arranged such a sorrowful ending. With the...
The character development between Leon and Mathilda was the very essence of the film and everything is meshed together perfectly in that fateful 25 minutes that were cut from the original film in order to make American audiences more comfortable. In spite of her age, I am hard pressed to com...
Leon is an Italian American immigrant.[2] Leon likely helped inspireDante's creation sinceDevil May Cry 1was originally the pre-developedResident Evil 4before Capcom shifted the concepts and theDevil May Crybecame its own franchise. Leon seems to have metKevin Ryman, but their relationship is ...
There are echoes ofPygmalionandLolita, as Mathilda is schooled in the ways of the “cleaner” while repeatedly confessing her love to her much-older protector. In one scene, she dresses like Marilyn Monroe and performs a seductive “Happy Birthday, Mr. President” routine; in another, that ...