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Finding Forrester
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All reviews for Finding Forrester

    KarinaKarina MILK Review
    by Karina in Karina on SpoutBlog
    hasn't rated it.
    1 out of 2 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
    "Gus Van Sant’s best-known films (which are not the same as his best films) have historically involved a certain grappling with What Hollywood Does. Hollywood saves a poor-but-smart kid from his environment (and himself) with the help of a bearded, platitude-spouting Robin Williams. Hollywood saves a poor-but-smart kid from his environment (and himself) with the help of a bearded, laughable slang-spouting Sean Connery. Hollywood flatters its flavors of the month by shoe-horning them into paint-by-numbers remakes of aged cinematic game changers. Etc. Anyone cognizant of Van Sant’s turn-of-the-century Hollywood period shouldn’t be surprised by his willing ability to play it straight. To say that Van Sant continues to “play it straight” with Milk isn’t meant as a pun regarding sexuality, exactly, but said pun wouldn’t be entirely off the mark. If his Hollywood trilogy was what Van Sant needed to get from his early meditations on the emotional lives of low-lifes to his much-vaunted Deat ... " [More]
    SpoutBlogSpoutBlog MILK Review
    by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
    hasn't rated it.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "Gus Van Sant’s best-known films (which are not the same as his best films) have historically involved a certain grappling with What Hollywood Does. Hollywood saves a poor-but-smart kid from his environment (and himself) with the help of a bearded, platitude-spouting Robin Williams. Hollywood saves a poor-but-smart kid from his environment (and himself) with the help of a bearded, laughable slang-spouting Sean Connery. Hollywood flatters its flavors of the month by shoe-horning them into paint-by-numbers remakes of aged cinematic game changers. Etc. Anyone cognizant of Van Sant’s turn-of-the-century Hollywood period shouldn’t be surprised by his willing ability to play it straight. To say that Van Sant continues to “play it straight” with Milk isn’t meant as a pun regarding sexuality, exactly, but said pun wouldn’t be entirely off the mark. If his Hollywood trilogy was what Van Sant needed to get from his early meditations on the emotional lives of low-lifes to his much-vaunted Deat ... " [More]
    SpoutBlogSpoutBlog 10 Small Roles for Big Stars
    by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
    hasn't rated it.
    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
    "We’re less than a week away from the release of Tropic Thunder, and as the reviews and puff pieces make their way onto the web, there’s one thing clearly uniting the media’s coverage: talk of Tom Cruise’s appearance in a small role as a Hollywood studio boss. Everyone seems to agree that he steals the show and that his performance — or the joke surrounding it — is one of the comedy’s major highlights, if not the actual best part. Of course, we can expect a good cameo from Cruise every now and then. He showed up for a bit part in Young Guns and played himself as playing “Austin Powers” in Austin Powers in Goldmember. But from what it sounds like, his role in Tropic Thunder is featured for longer than might qualify as a cameo. Some are regardless referring to the performance as an “extended cameo”, and in theory it certainly fits in with the huge crop of so-called “ironic cameos” that have become popular in movies and TV in the last ten years. Still, despite my not having yet seen th ... " [More]
    tadivtadiv [REVIEW] Evil hidden within gre ...
    by tadiv in tadiv Blog
    loved it.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "City Lights Pictures, in association with Whitest Pouring Films and Kilo Films, presents Manda Bala (Send a Bullet), a film by Jason Kohn. The film runs 85 minutes and is not rated by the MPAA. Based upon some of the hostage video content, this film would likely be rated NC-17 by the MPAA. Manda Bala is a documentary film covering several social and economic issues in modern Brazil. These issues include political corruption, the kidnapping of the wealthy by the poor, and resulting industries such as frog farming, specialized plastic surgery, Helicopter taxi service, and the retrofitting of automobiles to make them more or less bullet-proof.Very well photographed and cleanly edited, Manda Bala, to a great extent, lacks a central theme. This picture has a good, complimenting soundtrack. Because of a mixture of translation and subtitles, the presentation is at times awkward for the viewer. Manda Bala greatly benefits from stunning cinematography. However, while watching this film ... " [More]
    JimBellJimBell Finding Forerster
    by JimBell in JimBell Blog
    liked it.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "I saw Finding Forester (2000) again, this time on television. It is the story of a famous, reclusive old writer (Sean Connery) who mentors a young black kid (Rob Brown). The movie has excellent acting all around and a touching happy ending. But the event that gets the young Jamal into trouble at his prep school is ludicrous. The teacher/professor belittles a kid for not knowing the author of a quotation. This goes on far longer than it would in real life and far longer than necessary for the story. When Jamal challenges the teacher, the teacher challenges the 16-year old with a series of quotations, some of which I’d never heard before, and the kid rattles off the authors, sometimes before the quotation is finished, sometimes finishing the quotation. I know that Ph.D. students in English cannot do this, so a talented ghetto teenager is unlikely to be able to do it. [More]
    SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Plot vs. Prestige - ‘Paranoid P ...
    by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
    hasn't rated it.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "What if this movie were not directed by acclaimed filmmaker Gus Van Sant? What if it had not been honored with a special prize at last year’s Cannes Film Festival? What if it had not been an official selection of the Toronto and New York Film Festivals? What if it wasn’t nominated for three (Independent) Spirit Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Producer? What if Manohla Dargis didn’t consider it, “one of the most moving and delicately felt films of Gus Van Sant’s career”? Would Paranoid Park still seem that appealing? Not to me, but then I’ve seen enough films involving teens covering up an intentional or accidental murder. And that’s despite having enjoyed most of them, including Mean Creek, Bully, George Washington and even (though much, much less so) [More]
 
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