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Tootsie
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All reviews for Tootsie

    pippin06pippin06 Viewing Tootsie for the AFI Pro ...
    by pippin06 in Reel Thoughts
    liked it.
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    "What's the AFI project, you ask? For more information, or if you just enjoy my bemused ramblings, read here:http://www.spout.com/blog s/pippin06/archive/2008/3/1/25 756.aspx Tootsie is on the following AFI lists:

    [More]

    JimBellJimBell Tootsie review
    by JimBell in JimBell Blog
    liked it.
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    "Tootsie (2008) is a wonderful comedy, but it is dated. Sydney Pollock does a great directing job, and the cast is superb. But the one joke gets a bit tiresome. An unemployed, idealistic, and obnoxious actor (Dustin Hoffman) gets a job on a soap opera by pretending to be a woman. Then it is one awkward situation after another. Although the actor, Michael, does grow, we don’t see it until the final scene where he says he was a better man as a woman than he was as a man. This wraps up the dated theme: So many men are sexist pigs, and they need to get in touch with their feminine side to become better. Michael is a womanizer (we hear), the TV producer is a sexist, and the star of the soap opera comes on to all the women. The kindly old gent who falls for Michael[More]
    SpoutBlogSpoutBlog 10 Movies, 10 Years: NYC in the ...
    by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
    hasn't rated it.
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    "Jonathan Levine’s crowd-pleasing (in terms of audience awards at festivals, not in terms of uplifting Hollywood endings) film The Wackness opens in limited release tomorrow. In case you haven’t noticed from the ads and the soundtrack, it takes place in the New York City of 1994, a special time for the place because Rudy Giuliani had just become mayor and was beginning to clean up the city, Goldie Wilson-stylee (OK, not really Goldie Wilson-stylee, but who doesn’t love a good BTTF reference?). NYC in the ’90s was quite special for me. It’s when I moved here. And moved here a second time (I’ve since moved here a third time), and watching The Wackness made me nostalgic for the decade. It also made me think of some of the other films from or set in that period, a number of which kind of define my experience with the city.
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  • SpoutBlogSpoutBlog 10 Movie Romances That Probably ...
    by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
    hasn't rated it.
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    "It took me awhile, but last week I finally saw Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. And to agree with many others, I think it features a few too many ludicrous moments. Yet the most outlandish, in my opinion, is the scene in which Indy and Marion seem to reenact His Girl Friday in about four seconds while riding in the back of a truck. I know it’d been awhile, both for them and for us, but I prefer a little more bickering, a little more holding back in comedy of remarriage plots. Anyway, we knew a long time ago, thanks to Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, that Indy and Marion didn’t last long together after the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark. So, I didn’t really care if they ended up together at the end of Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, either. It’s probable they still wouldn’t last. And I think the same often with other unlikely movie couples at the end of their respective films. Fortunately, a number of sequels tell us outright that the romance of the first film f ... " [More]
    minerwerksminerwerks Sydney Pollack, RIP
    by minerwerks in minerwerks Blog
    liked it.
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    "Nothing like a tragic loss in the film world to remind me how broad the art of film can be and how many worthy films are out there that I have yet to view. Earlier this year, when reviewing the Oscar nominees for Best Picture, I singled out Sydney Pollack's performance in 'Michael Clayton' as being particularly good. In the later part of his career - the part most familar to myself as a relative youngster - Pollack was best known as a producer and actor. While I knew of him as a director, it turns out I have been ridiculously neglectful of the man's filmography. Of course, most people have seen 'Tootsie,' the 1982 comedy that starred a cross-dressing Dustin Hoffman. But other than this blockbuster, the only Pollack-directred film I've actually seen is 'The Firm' (not a bad film, if I may say). But Pollack, we should not forget, was an Oscar-winner. He directed 'Out of Africa,' starring Meryl Streep and Robert Redford, two of the cinema's most likable performers. And though Redford ... " [More]
 
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