Lasvegas Com Reviews

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Oh, this movie is so sad! It is sad not because of the tragic lives of its characters, but because of their goodness and their charity.

  1. Where The Locals Eat In Vegas
Las vegas hotels downtown

The team at Total Property Management, LLC operates with a focus on maximizing tenant convenience and satisfaction with their Las Vegas, Nevada rentals. 1,355 likes 1 talking about this. The all-new LasVegas.com, your go-to for all things Las Vegas travel: hotels, shows, tours and attractions. Visit Vegas.com to get the best rate on Las Vegas hotels guaranteed, find deals and save on Las Vegas show tickets, tours, clubs, attractions & more. Being able to work with one person on all of our needs while in Las Vegas was something that goes a long way for me! From booking the room, the rental car, shows and dining, I just had to agree to days/times and Debbie did the rest! Overview Vegas.com has a consumer rating of 1.49 stars from 143 reviews indicating that most customers are generally dissatisfied with their purchases. Consumers complaining about Vegas.com most frequently mention customer service, show tickets and credit card problems. Vegas.com ranks 95th among Travel Deals sites.

What moves me the most in movies is not when something bad happens, but when characters act unselfishly. In 'Leaving Las Vegas,' a man loses his family and begins to drink himself to death. He goes to Vegas, and there on the street he meets a prostitute, who takes him in and cares for him, and he calls her his angel. But he doesn't stop drinking.

Where The Locals Eat In Vegas

The man's name is Ben (Nicholas Cage). The woman's name is Sera (Elisabeth Shue). You will not see two better performances this year. Midway in the film someone offers Ben the insight that his drinking is a way of killing himself. He smiles lopsidedly and offers a correction: 'Killing myself is a way of drinking.' At one point, after it is clear that Sera really cares for him, he tells her, 'You can never, ever, ask me to stop drinking.' She replies in a little voice: 'I know.' The movie is not really about alcoholism. It is about great sad passion, of the sort celebrated in operas like 'La Boheme.' It takes place in bars and dreary rented rooms and the kind of Vegas poverty that includes a parking space and the use of the pool. The practical details are not quite realistic - it would be hard to drink as much as Ben drinks and remain conscious, and it is unlikely an intelligent prostitute would allow him into her life. We brush those objections aside, because they have nothing to do with the real subject of this movie, which is that we must pity one another, and be gentle.





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