It took Scorsese to make 3D relevant, and man, did he do it in grand style with "Hugo," a dazzling, beautiful film that is certainly among the best of a weak 2011. "Hugo" is the story of Hugo Cabret (Asa Butterfield), a young orphan living in a train station in Paris in the 1930s. His father (Jude Law) died in a fire, and his uncle (Ray Winstone), a drunk who takes him in, has disappeared, leaving him alone to care for the station and his one remaining link to his father — a mysterious "automaton," a robotic boy who doesn't work.
Hugo
Hugo
Hugo
It took Scorsese to make 3D relevant, and man, did he do it in grand style with "Hugo," a dazzling, beautiful film that is certainly among the best of a weak 2011. "Hugo" is the story of Hugo Cabret (Asa Butterfield), a young orphan living in a train station in Paris in the 1930s. His father (Jude Law) died in a fire, and his uncle (Ray Winstone), a drunk who takes him in, has disappeared, leaving him alone to care for the station and his one remaining link to his father — a mysterious "automaton," a robotic boy who doesn't work.