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  • Third Breaker's Sweet Smell of Hellboy Science

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    Under discussion:

    Breaker Morant  (1980)

    The Third Man  (1949)

    Rocket Science  (2007)

    The internet keeps crashing on me. Making me crazy. Please be advised.

    Breaker Morant is based on the actual events during the Boer War, and subsequent court marshalling of three Australian officers. The government has set them up for a fall, providing them with an inexperienced defense attorney and allowing him little time to prepare his case. The trial scenes are tense and the flashbacks to what the men actually did in the field are also engaging. But I was really fascinated with how the men held up in their cells, preparing to face their verdict, and the politics of it all. Very good.

    Ah, the Sweet Smell of Success, good in so many ways. Burt Lancaster ("Field of Dreams") is a gossip columnist and Tony Curtis ("Reflections of Evil") is a PR agent trying to get his clients some publicity. Only Lancaster's shutting him out because he wants Curtis to break up his sister's relationship with a musician. Then the plot gets twisty. Curtis is fast talking and sleazy and grasping for fame. The dialogue is so quick you have to sit up and take notice. Two of my favorite lines: "The cat's in the bag and the bag's in the river." and "That fish is four days old. I'm not buying it." I thoroughly enjoyed this.

    Rocket Science reminded me of Thumbsucker. Mostly because the main kid is shy and then suddenly inspired to join the school debate team. The style of this is different though, less dreamy than Thumb. It was funny, but not too funny. The best bits being with the younger kid who lives across the street from the love interest. The soundtrack has some really cool instrumental covers of classic Violent Femmes songs. I'm lukewarm on this.

    Hellboy II: The Golden Army i
    s just a whole lotta fun. Ron Perlman ("In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale") just eats up this character and loves every minute of his screen time. Director Guillermo del Toro ("Pan's Labyrinth" lets his imagination run wild with all the creatures and sets in this story. And the story starts strong and just keeps on going, quickly re-establishing the Team and introducing a very worthy villain in Luke Goss ("The Dead Undead"), an elf who wants to destroy the human race. Go see it.

    A classic noirish thriller, The Third Man, stars Joseph Cotten ("The Survivor") as a writer who goes to visit a friend in post WWII Berlin, only to discover the friend has been killed just before he arrived. Cotten then sets out to solve the mystery of his friend's death. It's fast paced and intriguing, asking which loyalty a man should follow. There's a femme fatale love interest. And Orson Welles ("Moby Dick") is awesome. Very good.


  • Absence of Sunrise in the Killing Fields Shampoo Mutiny

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
    Under discussion:

    Shampoo  (1975)

    Sunrise  (1927)

    Well, I was almost caught up on my reviews. Then I slacked off again. It never ends.

    Directed by F.W. Murnau ("Tabu: A Story of the South Seas"), Sunrise is a silent film following a cheating husband whose mistress urges him to kill his wife. I sometimes have difficulty with silent films, but this one is so gorgeous and heartbreaking. The wife, Janet Gaynor ("Bernadine"), has a face like a luminous moon. And every emotion is conveyed perfectly without the use of words. The cinematography is also very good. Dare I say...masterpiece?

    Absence of Malice is a tight little thriller with Sally Field ("Two Weeks") as a journalist investigating and becoming involved with Paul Newman ("Cars"), who the FBI suspect of murder. Director Sydney Pollack ("Sketches of Frank Gehry") explores the power of the press and what really constituents news. Very enjoyable.

    Based on actual events, Mutiny on the Bounty chronicles one crews voyage from England to Tahiti under the reign of an abusive captain. When pushed too far, the crew mutinies, taking control of the vessel. The story then follows through to the Navy's punishment of the men who were caught. Compelling story. Good acting. Clark Gable ("The Misfits") is particularly entertaining. This is also an interesting look at history. Events would not go down like that today. At least, I don't think they would.

    So, I watched Shampoo, and I didn't get it. I still don't. Warren Beatty ("Town & Country") stars as a hairdresser juggling a bunch of women. To me, he didn't seem likable, nor did he seem to have any feelings. So when he has an emotional moment, I didn't believe it. I don't understand why this was nominated for a Best Screenplay Oscar.

    The Killing Fields is based on the actual relationship between New York Times reporter Sydney Schanberg and his Cambodian liaison, Dith Pran, as they attempt to cover the civil war in Cambodia. The first half of the film is sort of about the dangers they face as investigative journalists and the friendship they form. The second half follows Pran as he tries to escape from a work camp and his friend endeavors to find him. Good social commentary without being too preachy. The bombing scenes are especially disturbing. Also, examines where will one go to get a story and how far should you take it.


  • Talk to Red Shoes Roman Syndrome in Grand Hotel

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    Under discussion:

    Grand Hotel  (1932)

    The Red Shoes  (1948)

    Roman Holiday  (1953)

    Talk to Her  (2002)

    The China Syndrome focuses on two journalists, Jane Fonda ("Georgia Rule") and Michael Douglas ("King of California"), who try to expose the dangers of a nuclear power plant in California. Jack Lemmon ("The Odd Couple II") works in the plant and helps them when he becomes convinced that safety standards are not being met. The film is a bit slow starting off, but when it gets going, the paranoia and cover-ups are easy to buy into. The ending is also very good. Definitely worth checking out.

    I haven't seen a film as moving as Talk to Her in quite awhile. Written and directed by Pedro Almodovar ("Volver"), the story follows two men who become friends while caring for the women they love, both of whom happen to be in comas. But it's so much more than that. There's love, of all kinds, morally questionable actions, beautiful cinematography, haunting music, crying, laughing, general amazement on my part. This is what movies are all about.

    Grand Hotel was the Best Picture Oscar winner in 1932, and thought it took me a bit to get involved in the story, once I did, I was thoroughly hooked. The film shows the events in The Grand Hotel in Berlin over the course of 24 hours. The intrigues, friendships, love affairs and agonies of the people staying in the hotel, give us plenty of drama. Also, according to the TCM guy, this was the first film with an all-star ensemble cast, composed of brothers John ("Playmates") and Lionel ("Lone Star") Barrymore, Greta Garbo ("Two-Faced Woman") and Joan Crawford ("Journey to Murder"). Very entertaining.

    Roman Holiday stars Audrey Hepburn ("Always") as a princess who just wants to have some fun. So, she shirks her duties for a day, and ends up touring Rome with Gregory Peck ("Cape Fear"). Only she doesn't know that he's a journalist planning to write a story about their adventures. But then they start to have feelings for each other, and Peck faces a moral dilemma. Very funny and sometimes heart-wrenching. Peck and Hepburn have great chemistry. I really enjoyed this.

    The Red Shoes is a film by director Michael Powell and writer Emeric Pressburger ("Ill Met by Moonlight"), whose names I have always heard, but work I had not seen. The story has a fairytale quality. It's about a ballerina who wants to be a great dancer. A director takes her under his wing, promising to make her a star, but when she falls in love with a composer, the director tries to crush both their careers. The film starts slow (I seem to be saying this alot. Maybe I'm the slow one.). There's also quite a bit of ballet, so be aware of that going in. I really enjoyed the use of color and the examinations of career versus life, art verses love. I'm not sure I'm sold on this duo's genius, but am definitely interested in seeing more of their films.


  • Enter Indiana Jones to Rescue Shapeshifter from Flower of My Secret

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    Shapeshifter has a group of people trapped in a jail with a man who can turn from human to beast at will. Poor acting, terrible dialogue, dumb editing, sub-par effects. Avoid.

    Rescue Dawn pairs Christian Bale ("The Dark Knight") with Steve Zahn ("Strange Wilderness"). It was like a little party just for me. Writer/director Werner Herzog ("Encounters at the End of the World") helms a narrative film based on his own documentary Little Dieter Needs to Fly, the story of a guy who wants to fly so badly, he joins the Air Force only to be shot down over Laos and taken prisoner, during his first mission. In the camp, he meets several men who have been there for years, and he tries to organize them in an escape. The really cool thing about this film is that Bale plays upbeat and quirky, and Zahn plays serious. Plus the compelling story and horrors of POW life. The lush jungle shots. A little cheesy at the end, but, all in all, very good.

    Written and directed by Pedro Almodovar ("Volver"), The Flower of My Secret, follows the emotional life of a writer, Marisa Paredes ("Ana's Way"), as she deals wit her crumbling marriage, a new love interest and an aging mother. The colors and music are gorgeous. I felt Paredes' pain, even when I didn't care for her that much. It's beautiful, humorous and mesmerizing.

    I don't have much experience in the martial arts genre, but Enter the Dragon seems to have influenced everything I have seen. Bruce Lee ("Game of Death") stars as an undercover agent infiltrating a martial arts contest on a private island owned by a crime lord. It's dubbed, so sometimes the voices are ridiculous. But the fighting is awesome. The story is a bit cheesy, and there are definite James Bond moments, but I see why this is considered a classic. And why Lee is revered.

    I've heard alot of people say that Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull is ruining their childhood. I am not in that camp. I thoroughly enjoyed the time I spent watching Harrison Ford ("Firewall") chase the bad guys, be reunited with Karen Allen ("When Will I Be Loved") and discover he has a son (Shia LaBeouf, "Transformers"). The effects were mostly good, and though there were some cheese moments, a good time was had by both me and my mom.


  • Suddenly, Crazy Eights Shrooms Anatomy Around the Corner

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
    Under discussion:

    Shrooms  (2007)

    Crazy Eights  (2007)

    Shrooms was the big surprise of Friday the 13th. It was really good. The cover box looked terrible, the description - a group of kids go to Ireland just to eat Mushrooms and then don't know whether or not they are hallucinating ghosts - sounded pretty lame. But the effects were very creepy. The acting believable. And the story, especially the ghost part, was quite good up until the twist ending. And even that didn't ruin it. Very nice surprise.

    Crazy Eights was not such a good time. Frankly, I was bored. Old friends reunite when one of their group dies and then they end up following a map which leads to the corpse of a child. Then weird stuff happens. Ghosties and flashbacks. Confusion and no clear "good guy" for whom to root. I can't recommend it.

    Suddenly, Last Summer is based on a Tennessee Williams ("Night of the Iguana") play, so it's emotionally disturbing. Katharine Hepburn ("Love Affair") is trying to have a lobotomy performed on her niece, Elizabeth Taylor ("The Flintstones"), because the niece made some disturbing comments about the circumstances surrounding the death of Hepburn's son. Montgomery Clift ("The Defector") is the brain surgeon caught in between these women's monologues on relationships and human behavior. Very good.

    The Shop Around the Corner is a sweet little romantic comedy starring Jimmy Stewart ("The Magic of Lassie") and Margaret Sullavan ("No Sad Songs for Me"), who love each other through anonymous letters, but can't stand each other in person. The banter is good, and there are some excellent comedic moments. I really enjoyed it.

    Anatomy of a Murder started a bit slow for me. But once it got into the courtroom, I got really involved. Jimmy Stewart ("The Magic of Lassie") stars as a small town attorney defending a man who killed the man who raped his wife. There's some comedic moments between Stewart and his assistants, but mostly this is a tense back and forth between lawyers and witnesses. Director Otto Preminger ("The Human Factor") doesn't really go into the right and wrong, but just let's us think about the evidence and what the jury's decision means. Very good.


  • Prince Caspian's Flawless Coming Home to Adam's Rib in P2

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    Under discussion:

    Adam's Rib  (1949)

    Coming Home  (1978)

    P2  (2007)

    Flawless  (2007)

    I haven't read the Chronicles of Narnia, nor have I revisited the first film sine it came out. So, Prince Caspian seemed a little disjointed to me. But I did enjoy the story of a young prince trying to retake his kingdom from his evil uncle, with the help of those four kids from the first movie. The action was very good, as were the special effects. The message got a bit heavy-handed at the end, but I liked this better than the first, despite the special-needs bear. "For Aslan!"

    Coming Home stars Jane Fonda ("Georgia Rule") as the wife of an army captain who begins volunteering at the Veteran's hospital when her husband goes off to Vietnam. There she meets Jon Voight ("National Treasure: Book of Secrets"), who has returned from the war wounded and angry. He opens her eyes to the darkness and love. Voight is amazing, totally earning his Oscar with a couple of outbursts and an inspirational speech. All in all, I enjoyed the movie, but felt it moved a little slow. Good examination of how war affects people.

    Adam's Rib is worth seeing if only for the back-and-forth between Katharine Hepburn ("Love Affair") and Spencer Tracy ("Guess Who's Coming to Dinner"). The two star as married lawyers who end up on different sides of the same case. While much of it is amusing, the court case raises some interesting issues about morality and sexism. Tracy and Hepburn also explore how professional life can affect personal. Very good.

    I found Flawless to be quite boring. Demi Moore ("Mr. Brooks") plays an executive in a diamond company in the 1960s. She's bitter about getting passed over for promotions because she's a woman. So when the janitor, Michael Caine ("Sleuth"), proposes theft, she agrees. But the heist isn't that exciting and the puzzle of what happens to the diamonds isn't that interesting. Then there are the bookends with Moore in the future. Not really needed for the story and a bit cheesy.

    P2 was part of my Friday the 13th bad horror movie tradition and it was awful. A not-very-nice, nor very interesting woman gets trapped in the parking garage by a whiny, lonely, deranged parking attendant on Christmas Eve. He tries to teach her to be thankful while tormenting her, and she continually does stupid things. Just skip it.


 

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