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Gigli
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Directed by Martin Brest.
Larry Gigli (Ben Affleck) is a low-level Los Angeles mob enforcer. His volatile boss, Louis (Lenny Venito), hires Gigli to kidnap Brian (newcomer Justin Bartha), the mentally handicapped younger brother of a federal prosecutor who's about to bring Louis' boss to trial in New York. Gigli gets the kid home without a hitch. Then a beautiful woman (Jennifer Lopez) shows up at his door. She says her name is Ricki, and Gigli soon learns that the nervous Louis has hired her to keep an eye on him. "In every relationship," Gigli soon finds himself expounding to his unwanted partner, "there's a bull and a cow." His efforts to maintain control of the situation are further hampered by the brief appearance of the insane Detective Stanley Jacobellis (Christopher Walken) and a forced visit to his overbearing mother's (Lainie Kazan) house. To make matters worse, when Gigli expresses his attraction to Ricki, he learns that she's a lesbian. She, meanwhile, proves herself considerably more capable than the lunkheaded Gigli, winning their war of words and even scaring off a rowdy group of high school kids. As Gigli and Ricki continue to look after the young, innocent Brian, they find themselves increasingly attracted to one another. But their potential budding romance is put on hold when Starkman (Al Pacino) arrives from New York, angry about how his affairs are being handled. Director Martin Brest, in his first film since 1998's Meet Joe Black, returns to the crime comedy genre that made his reputation. Brest also wrote the script for Gigli, his first since 1979's Going in Style. Stars Affleck and Lopez began a well-publicized romantic relationship on the set of the film. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Gigli (2003, USA, Martin Brest) ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
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"The legend continues. Sometimes you want to see a movie that has the reputation as being really, really bad to just to see if that reputation is correct. And it is-unfortanley. Gigli was both spat upon by critics, recieving only 6% on the tomato meter, and a box office megabomb, becoming an instant show bussiness legend and all purpose punchline. The movie is so bad it's hard to beleive, becoming only the second movie ever to recieve zero stars from me. I have never seen another film from Martin Brest, who wrote and directed this one as well as making the minor classic Scent of a Woman. Brest is generally considred to be good second class director. I now feel a deep need to see Scent of a Woman to understand how someone who is supposedly talented could make something this bad. Gigli is, without exageration, the worst screenplay ever written. Let's go straight to the plot summery to illistrate my point. Ben Affleck plays Gigli, a hitman who assigned to kidnap Brian (Justin B ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:Recasting THE PRINCESS BRIDE ...
by Risselada in Filmgaming
hasn't rated it.
"Remember, he was in Gigli. And I've heard delightfully infamous things about McBain. " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Trailer of the Day: 88 Minutes
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
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"I know star power isn’t what it used to be, but doesn’t it seem like we still give Al Pacino more credit than he’s worth? Despite his receiving an Oscar fifteen years ago, the guy hasn’t been a completely dependable actor in more than two decades. And yet a lot of people write about his upcoming movies as if they could maybe, possibly, hopefully be on par with the actor’s ’70s work. I’m not denying that he’s excellent in a few films of even the past ten years (particularly The Insider), but let’s not forget he was also in Gigli, so it isn’t like he’s making the same smart choices he was making as a younger man. And now here’s 88 Minutes, another movie that attempts to give us a thrilling plot in real time, a la 24. But despite such a gimmick working with old films like High Noon and 12 Angry Men, when it’s presented as a gimmick, and clearly as the only reason a movie is made (as in the cases of Nick of Time, Timecode and Phone Booth), it always comes off as forced and (obviously) ... " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Flickering Lights - Gigli
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
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"By Tricia Olszewski Danish filmmaker Anders Thomas Jensen, Oscar-recognized for his shorts and the writer of such Dogmatized fare as Mifune and Open Hearts, has turned to genre for his feature directorial debut. A hit in Denmark, Flickering Lights is a buddy-gangster film that's being promoted as a black comedy, though the designation will disorient those who approach the movie expecting a foreign Pulp Fiction. Torkild (Søren Pilmark) is a career criminal going through a midlife crisis. Before his surprise 40th-birthday party, he nearly shoots one of his partners when he hears rustling in his darkened home. Later, he laments the fact that his main present is an AK-47. ("I should get a golf bag," he muses.) Indebted to "the Eskimo" (Peter Andersson) for a job gone wrong, Torkild gathers his crew for an assignment involving a suitcase full of money. He soon decides, however, that he and the boys will run off with it to start a new life. On their way to Barcelona, Torkild, ... " [More]
 



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