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The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants
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Directed by Ken Kwapis.
Ann Brashares' best-selling novel for young adults comes to the big screen in this engaging comedy drama. Carmen (America Ferrera), Bridget (Blake Lively), Lena (Alexis Bledel), and Tibby (Amber Tamblyn) are four teenage girls who have been close friends since they were babies (and even before -- their mothers all knew each other from attending the same prenatal exercise class). However, fate has dictated that for the first time ever the young women will be spending their summer apart -- Carmen will be visiting her father, whom she hasn't seen in years, Lena will be visiting her grandparents in Greece, Bridget is attending a soccer camp in Mexico, while Tibby is stuck working at a discount store. A few days before Carmen, Lena, and Bridget leave, the four go shopping, and while at a thrift shop they discover an unusual pair of blue jeans that, despite the fact they're all of different height and weight, fits all four women perfectly. The girls buy the jeans and pledge to each look after them for a week at a time, hoping they'll bring one another good luck as the girls deal with a variety of new life experiences, both good and bad. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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mercurialmercurial Re:Recasting THE BREAKFAST CLUB ...
by mercurial in Recasting couch
disliked it.
"The Breakfast Club Brady Corbet - Andrew Clark (The Athlete) Jay Baruchel - Brian Ralph Johnson (The Brain) Mark Webber - John Bender (The Criminal) Blake Lively - Claire Standish (The Princess) Nora Zehetner - Allison Reynolds (The Basket Case) Paul Giamatti - Richard Vernon (The Principal) Scott Bakula - Carl (The Janitor) Brady Corbet (Funny Games) fits perfectly in the All-American Jock stereotype. Jay Baruchel (Almost Famous) plays the geek better than most. Mark Webber (Stroytelling) is a genuinely disaffected youth. Blake Lively (The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants) looks like a prom queen. Nora Zehetner (Brick) could definitely pull off the fragile, awkward loner. Paul Giamatti (Sideways) will bring a touch of class to the production as the irksome school principal. Scott Bakula (American Beauty) has that wisdom-spouting man with a mop quality that would be perfect for the janitor. " [More]
unemployedwaifunemployedwaif Best Movie Ever!
by unemployedwaif in unemployedwaif Blog
disliked it.
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"It was a hot summer afternoon and we needed a place to rest. Fortunately for myself and a friend, there were still tickets available to see The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants. After grabbing a couple of sodas and making our way to the last two seats in the middle of the auditorium we knew we were in for a treat (decidedly, I was the one thinking this as I came to realize that I was the only man in the entire theater). Lights down, movie starts. And . . . we're speechless (at least until the 'climax'). Melodramatic, trite fluff with an array of haphazard production values and some of the worst acting . . . ever. Now I'd like to go ahead and add this film to my list of "Films I never want to see again" but alas, I'm more than happy to watch it. Not only were my friend and I thoroughly amused throughout the entire film thanks to the aforementioned criteria, but were led to hysterics when our outbursts of laughter were chided by the soccer moms, sewing ... " [More]
PammyKPammyK The Brotherhood of the Travelin ...
by PammyK in Movies I do not want to see
is neutral about it.
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"Alright spoutgirl I know you have this movie...can you convince the guys to see it? " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
The bar for teen melodramas may be set very, very low, but by any benchmark, this multi-character summer-vacation saga is a warm, winning, unusually savvy pubescent-chick flick anchored by four talented young actresses. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants takes a potentially saccharine premise -- four best friends make a summer pact to keep in touch via a pair of jeans that magically fits each of them -- and leavens it with healthy doses of humor, wit, and realism. Director Ken Kwapis may not exactly break the mold, but he has a deft sense of pacing and setting that keeps each of the girls' four summer adventures distinctly her own. Better still, he realizes that in order to keep his audience equally interested in each storyline, he needs to create a palpable camaraderie among the foursome at the beginning of the film; it's rare to see a girl-buddy movie where the girls in question actually seem like well-matched friends. The movie strays into mawkish "life lessons" territory near its (overlong) ending, but even here, the performers -- in particular the natural, unforced America Ferrera -- save the movie from any potential histrionics. And while this PG-rated Sisterhood isn't afraid to confront such issues as divorce, death, and sexual curiosity, it does so subtly, in a manner that won't necessarily raise the eyebrows of any preteens in the audience. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
 



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