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"Watching The Bad Movies So That You Don't Have To"

davisfreeberg's movie tags

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  • The Dark Side Of Finance

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    Wall Street  (1987)

    Wall St. has been a cult classic for finance types for well over 20 years and is still relevant today.  It's a classic tale of the pitfalls of greed and a refreshing look at how slipperly that slope can be.  The movie produces a number of really good quotes including, lunch is for whimps, money never sleeps and of course Gordon Gekko's famous greed is good speach.  While the final message of the movie is a warning against the excesses of success, it also does a good job of highlighting the struggles of those who play by the rules.


  • Paranoia Meet The Internet

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    The Net  (1995)

    I wouldn't consider this one of the best movies about technology, but it was still pretty good.  Sandra Bullock plays a character who ends up sideways with a shadowy government and ends up having her identity stolen in a big way.  While the plot is fairly predictable and the acting is a little on the weak side, the fast pace action makes it easy to look past it's flaws.  The key to enjoying the film is to not take it too seriously.  Not recommended for those of you who've had your credit hijacked by Nigerian scammers.


  • Virtual Reality Meets Science Fiction

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    Virtuosity  (1995)

    I tend to like anything with Denzel Washington in it, so I'm probably biased on this one, but I really enjoyed this film.  Sure it had it's cheesy moments, but the special effects were fantastic and the plot was intriguing.  Basically, it's about a psycho computer program that connects with cutting edge nanotechnology to produce the world's worst serial killer.  The movie was predictible, but there were also a few surprises.  I don't know that I'd pay to see it a second time, but if you enjoy sci-fi, it's worth checking out.


  • So Good It Made Me Depressed

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    Chinatown  (1974)

    I was never really all that interested in seeing Chinatown until Netflix recommended it to me as something I would like.  After recording the movie on my TiVo, I went to watch it, but immedietely I saw it was a Roman Polanski film.

    Polanski is a bit of a controversial figure for me because he's been accused of doing some pretty bad stuff.  In the past I've intentionally refused to see his films, so when I went to watch the film and saw it was a Polanski film I almost turned it off.

    Like most of the Polanski films I've seen, the movie was great.  The character development was especially well done.  The storyline gripping.  During the entire film, I couldn't bring myself to turn it off.  

    Like most of the Polanski films I've seen, it also included some pretty weird stuff, including a character who had an incestuous relationship with her father.  

    While overall, the film is very well done, it was depressing for me to see such a great movie made by such a morally questionable man.  Perhaps I should be judging each film based on the quality of it's work, but I can't help but feel a little guilty that I may have helped to support someone who is still considered on the lam.  

    If the moral objections don't bother you, then my advice is to check it out, but personally, I wish I would have stuck with my ethics and avoided this one, even though it turned out to be one of the better films that I've seen over the last year.


  • I'll Take CIA Assassians For $1,000

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    I'm a huge gameshow fan, so when I saw that there was a movie about Chuck Barris (the buy behind the dating game and the Gong show), I was pretty excited to see it. 

    I didn't know a lot about the film when I scheduled my TiVo to record it, but I figured CIA + Chuck Barris = Exciting Film.

    Was I ever wrong about this one.   This film wasn't exciting at all, it was boring and confusing.  The limited CIA scenes had limited action and almost no background.  One moment you were watching Barris on a date, the next you were trying to figure out who he was killing and why.  In the end, the movie's only strength was the character development throughout the film and even that was pretty limited.  I especially didn't understand why Julia Roberts or George Cloney was in the film as their performance seemed pretty weak. 

    Overall, I've got to recommend avoiding this one.  It's not the worst film ever, but it's pretty bad.


  • When There Is No More Room In Hell

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    Dawn of the Dead  (1979)

    After being a little disappointed with the first film of this franchise, I came in with low expectations for this film, but was pleasantly surprised at how great this film turned out to be.  Filmed nearly a decade after the original Night of the Living Dead, the Dawn of The Dead takes up where the last one left off.  Being made a generation later really added a lot to the film.  It's images are more disturbing, the plot more engaging and the film more sophisticated.

    Unlike the first film that took place pretty much in a farm house, this film takes place at a mall populated by a group of bandits and a gazillion zombies that want to eat their flesh.  The film takes the viewer from the first week of the zombie uprising to several months later.

    One of the things I really enjoyed about the film was the fact that it was made in the 1970's.  While there wasn't any references to disco, the culture of the 70's really came through on the film.  I also liked that Romero left the ending of the film more open ended for his follow up film a decade later.  Overall, I felt like this was a stronger film in the franchise.


  • Mmmmmm Brains . . .

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    As a horror movie afficianado, I knew that sooner or later I would not only need to see this film, but the whole series as well.  When it was first released, Night of the Living Dead was actually a pretty controversial film, but over the years, as movies have gotten more graphic, the film has lost a little bit of it's edge.  Since it's initial production we've seen a number of remakes/extensions to this franchise with varying degrees of success.

    After watching the film, I wasn't really all that impressed with the movie itself, but it was neat to go back and see the start of the zombie genre.  The most disturbing scenes are when the zombies eat the flesh right off of their victims, but even at some of it's more intense moments, this film would likely get a pg-13 rating today.  If you are planning on watching other films in the franchise, you don't necessarily need to see this film in order to know what's going on, but given it's influence on other horror movies, it's still worth checking out, even if it's just to see how other film makers were impacted by the film.  


  • Queen Of The Straight To DVD

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    I was a big fan of the Interview with the Vampire movie and actually read the book Queen of the Damned before seeing the film.  I think that the whole franchise is pretty good, but they didn't do a very good job with the film.  Anne Rice does a good job of using Queen of the Damned to help continue the story of Lestat's life after Interview, but they went cheapo on the sequel and instead of hiring Tom Cruise had another actor play Lestat.  There were also a lot of holes that never got filled in from the first movie.  Overall, the movie was entertaining and a good way to spend 2 hours, but it really didn't have the same bite that the first one had.

  • Movie By Numbers

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    This movie definetely had it's weak spots, but overall it was actually decent in the teenager horror genre.  The movie is about two high school kids who try and get away with the perfect crime.  They try and plant forensic evidence, but Sandra Bullock plays a super cop who figures it out.  The movie is well cast, although one of the killers is a bit creepy.  The plot is a little obvious and really won't keep you guessing, but it tells an interesting story and throws a little danger and adventure at you along the way.  I'm not sure that I'd go rent this one, but if it was on TV, it might be worth checking out.

  • The Whole 19 Yards

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    It's hard for me to look at movies seperately when they are sequels.  I always want to see the all picture and tend to judge the whoe franchise by it's overall quality.  Normally, I won't see a film, if I'm not prepared to see it's sequel too, but for this pair of dark comedies, my advice is check out The Whole Nine Yards, but skip the tenth yard.

    The first movie is dark, witty, very funny.  A lot of sophisticated humor mixed in with it's moments of slapstick.  The second movie is just as dark and at times witty, but the plot makes no sense and it fails at ever being funny.  This is a case of sequels gone bad.  The first one made so much money, that they had to jump in and try to make too much out of it.  In the end the sequel has the same cast of characters, but it feels much more forced and the humor too dependent upon what happened in the first movie.

  • Any Given Movie

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    Any Given Sunday  (1999)

    I wanted to like this film, I really did.  It was about pro football, had Camereon Diaz in it and Al Pacino, but at the end of it, I still felt like I was the one that got juked by a head fake.  The story unfolds around an emerging star quarterback and a coach trying to control him.  Unfortunately, Diaz's character just seems to get in the way.  Her insatiable quest for power feels fake and made me feel like she was just reciting lines.  Pacino brings his usually intensity, but doesn't have any break out moments like he does in most of his films.  While normally I'm not a huge fan of Oliver Stone's to begin with, I do think he had much better films then this.  The movie leaves some loose ends and puts too much focus on one game instead of the dark sub-plots.  For a serious look at the NFL, it  was an OK film, but overall a pretty average experience.

  • Even A Solo Would Have Been Bad

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    Duets  (2000)

    I walked into this film knowing absolutely nothing about it, except that Gwenth Paltrow was in it.  I left very disappointed.  The story follows a set of characters around the midwest as they all eventually head towards a Karaoke competition in Nevada.  The movie relies heavily on character interaction in the film and during the film you explore a midlife crisis, an absent dad reunited with his daughter and an ex-con on a karaoke crime spree.

    The movie tried to take itself too serious and at the end you feel like you invested a lot of emotional energy into the movie, but with very little payoff.  The setting for the film could have inspired a sitcom, but it doesn't go off well as a drama.  While the whole time I wanted to like the characters, at the end of the day their neverending quest for the next karaoke bar seemed like the wrong motivators.  I'd stay away from this one unless it's just you, a bunch of your girlfriends and a half gallon of Hagan Daaz.

  • Screwed Out of 81 Minutes

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    Screwed  (2000)

    This film was so disappointing on so many levels.  It features an oddball crew of misfits who try to get away with a series of real and fake kidnappings.  It tries to be funny, but the humor is pretty slapstick.  The plot is really predictable and doesn't really make sense at times.  Overall, I wish I would have missed this one.  Normally I like Norm MacDonald, but even his performance couldn't prevent this film from hitting pure suckage.  In the end the viewer is the one screwed by this film.

  • Dead Men Shouldn't Make Movies

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    This movie is about a female CIA agent who gets kicked out of the CIA and decides to join an experimental female group of Rangers.  The first ten minutes are pretty good, but the movie quickly goes downhill from there.  After gaining Ranger status, she enters North Korea and somehow ends up at a nuclear power plant with her CIA boyfriend.  The whole movie tries to create emotional conflicts that just don't work because the characters lack any real emotional depth.  The scenes look like they were shot on a home camcorder and the overall plot is pretty slow.  On one level the film tried to be something that you'd find on the Lifetime network, but on another level it was all about action shoot em up.  The result was a formula that simply did not work regardless of the demographic it was playing too.

  • RedHeat Not Redhot

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    Red Heat  (1988)

    When I saw that Ah-nold was in this movie, I didn't really get my hopes up too high, but overall I left feeling a little lukewarm about this film.  It had it's funny moments, but it's constant stereotypes on Russia got a little old even if it was made during the cold war. 

    Belushi plays a fast and loose American cop and Schwarzenegger plays a Russian cop who will not stop at anything to extradite a criminal back to Russia.  A little dark, a little lighthearted, but a decent cop movie if you like seeing things blown up. 

  • Best To Go In With Low Expectations

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    Aeon Flux  (2005)

    Before I saw this film everybody told me how bad it was.  I almost didn't see it but I like comic book type movies so I saw it anyway.  While there were some problems with the plot and the movie did have a habit of not revealing enough information, I still thought it was a good flick.  The action scenes are heartstopping and the special effects are amazing.  The plot is at least thought provoking, although the acting could have used some improvement.  While it wasn't the best film I've seen, it all around really wasn't that bad either.  I can understand why it wouldn't win any academy awards, but in the sci-fi genre I've certainly seen films that were much worse.  Overall the film moves fast and it's well filmed.  If you can get past the funky outfits then you'll find it enjoyable.

  • Dream Lover Is Like Your Best & Worst Date Ever

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    Dream Lover  (1994)

    Dream Lover is really a love story, but not in the Norman Rockwell type of way.  It's a story of two people who meet and get married and eventually start a family together.  Everything seems normal enough, but beneath it all there is strange psychological battle that is looming.  It's hard to pin point until after the movie ends, but both characters are crazy in their own way.  Perhaps this is what makes them so perfect for each other and what fuels their passions, but instead of this being a love story about a happy family, it's about two dysfunctional people who love each other even after everything falls apart.

    The story is dark and twisted, yet at the same time tells the love story so well that it's hard to dismiss their love for each other.  The dialouge is fantastic and the acting was very well done.  It's fatal attraction meets Romeo and Juliet premise keeps the movie intriguing til the end.  It's a little scary to watch if you happen to be on the dating scene, but if you want to freak your spouse out, this movie offers some great ways to do it.

  • Land Rush Claim Your Film Blog Before I Do

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    Spout has added some cool new features with one of them being better communication with Technorati.  If you haven't registered for Technorati, you should go their and claim your digital stake in the Spout land rush.  You can see my Technorati Profile here.



  • Uncovered Is Undiscovered Hidden Gem

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    Uncovered  (1994)

    I never really know how some movies get into my Netflix queue.  It could just be that I saw a trailer and liked it or Netflix may have suggested this one to me, but Uncovered isn't a typical Davis film.  It's story line follows a young woman who has been commissioned to restore a fine work of art.  During the restoration she finds a mysterious expression that was covered shortly after the painting was completed.  The expression is essentially a murder mystery that is wrapped up within the painting itself.  After consulting various experts on the era and the game of chess itself, our heroine find herself wrapped up in her own chess game.  Whether it is a curse attributable to the painting or modern day greed, the viewer is left trying to decipher the mysterious painting.

    Overall I enjoyed this film because the mystery itself was well told, but it was also a film that gave out clues, but didn't make things obvious.  In retrospect there were many times during the movie that I could have figured out the final puzzle, but it was never so obvious that it ruined the film.  There were a few scenes that I could have lived without and one character who I felt was out of place, but overall this was a European film that I found surprisingly refreshing.

  • Too Violent For Even My Tastes

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    Essex Boys  (2000)

    Now normally I'm not at all squimish when it comes to a good fighting movie.  In fact I tend to like movies that don't mind a little bit of danger once in a while, but Essex Boys took violence to a new level.  Based upon a true story about a team of gangsters in Britain, the movie focuses on two main characters in a strange mentor/apprentice relationship.  Billy is the apprentice who gets sucked into a life of crime after driving the gangsters on a job.  The entire movie if filmed from his point of view and he provides a narrative explaining some of the scenes.  His mentor is a complete and total wreck who is liable to fly off the handle at any moment.  Whether it was his dousing someone in the face with acid or a brutal rape and murder scene, it was his violence that made the film a bit too much for even my tastes.  Throughout the whole movie it seemed like the film had violence just for violence sake instead of it adding something to the overall plot and character development.  While the film was well made and interesting, the ultra-violent scenes were enough to make me not want to see it again.

  • So Much Promise, So Much Disappointment

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    I had never heard of this movie, but it was recommended to me so I rented it without even looking at the description.  By the cover, I knew I would like the actors, but beyond that this was going to be a surprise for me.  After popping the DVD in, I was very pleased to find an engaging and powerful storyline about a small town guy who gets sucked in the high stakes world of professional gambling.  The movie was very captivating, but at some point it took a wrong turn.  I'm not sure exactly where it disingrated, but by the end of the film, I was left not caring.  The first half of the film had brillant glimpses of Wall St. and Boiler Room, but by the end the whole movie left me in a state of disbelief.  It was as if the director made the first half and then said OK how far from reality can I take this.  Whether it was Pacino tempting his wife or the final guarantee win on the Super Bowl, all reality was thrown out the window in favor of a typical Hollwyood ending. 

    While the movie didn't finish like I hoped, if you like movies about shady salespeople, I would still recommend checking it out, just be prepared when the whole film doesn't live up to the standards that it sets in the first half of the film.

  • Killing Me Slowly

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    To be honest, I'm not sure how this one ended up in my Netflix queue, but with Heather Graham in it I had high hopes for the film.  Heather is one of those actresses who has a certain charm that I've always found damn sexy and for those of you who were fans of Rollergirl in Boogie Nights won't be disappointed with her role in Killing Me Softly, but for those of us who were hoping for a good storyline, plot and acting to go with heavily sexualized themes, this film is a pure disappointment.

    In watching the film, I was really surprised in that the entire film was crammed full of nudity and sexual tension.  This in and of itself wouldn't normally make this film unique and there are a lot of guy flicks out there that use a little sex to spice things up for their core demographic, but this film was different.  If you listen to the dialogue and follow the plot, it's almost as if the target audience for the film was women, but then they felt like they needed to spice things up to bring in their dates.

    The film revolves around Graham's strange relationship with a guy that she meets.  You can never quite tell if she actually likes the guy or if it's a casual relationship, but at some point in the film, she gives up power to him and the rest of the film is about her being suspicious of her lover.  With a heavy dose of relationship advice and it's fair share of male bashing, it surprised me to see the film resort to T&A tactics.  It was as if they took the worst of both demographics and made a film that neither men nor woman will like. 

  • Why Can't We All Just Get Along

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    I've had Do The Right Thing in my Netflix queue for a long time, but because I randomize my list every few months, I hadn't gotten a chance to see it.  Well it finally arrived this weekend and I was a little suprised that the film received so much hype.  Going into the film I probably had the wrong expectations because I thought that this was a movie about gang violence, but really it's a movie that looks at the problem of racism and how all cultures have their own biases.  The clear overall theme of the movie was that love not hate is the answer to this problem, but the way the message was delivered made me feel like Spike Lee was beating the message into the viewer the entire time.  While the cast had some great actors and Samuel L. Jackson did a great job, I left the movie feeling like I didn't learn anything that I already knew.  While I understand why Lee made the film as well as it's historical significance, I fail to see why the movie was ever billed as "controversial" when the message seems so basic and obvious.

    The movie was shot in a style that really made it feel like you were watching a play and not a movie.  While I've seen this done nicely before, I felt like it took something from the film and impact the gritty realism that Lee was trying to create.  In the end, I was disappointed with the film because I didn't feel that it really showcased what life was like in these tough neighborhoods, but was rather a thinly veiled melodrama used to showcase Lee's own message.

  • A Dark and Disturbing Tale

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    I found Requiem for a Dream to be an extremely powerful, yet disturbing tale.  It's story focuses around the lives of three junkies whose lives are only driven by their next high.  The film paints a gritty and realistic portrayal of the life of a junkie.  The cinematography of the film is unbelievable.  It features a choppy and erractic experience, but it adds to the sense of entering and leaving sobriety throughout the film.  Overall, this was a well made film, but it's certainly not for everybody.  The issues the film addresses and the graphic way that it tells the tale made even me squimish at times.  Perhaps it was the intensity of the film or it could have been the dream like sequence, but after seeng the film I wasn't left feeling uplifted as much uneasy. 

  • Usual Suspects Anything but Usual

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    This has to be one of my all time favorite movies.  When it first came out I had a job as a projectionist and have seen the film at least 25 times.  There is so much depth to the acting, the filming and the entire cinematical piece that it's become a classic to me.  My only complaint is that we haven't seen a sequel.

  • Sing The Body Electric

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    I just found The Twilight Zone on the Spout.com and it looks like they are providing descriptions of the actual episodes on each volume.  This should keep me busy as I've seen every single Twilight Zone episode that they made (or at least I think I have)  I sing the Body Electric is a story of a lonely old man who replaces his wife with a robot that helps to takes care of his children.  I found this episode very disturbing for some reason because it raised the question of what traits are unique to humans and can't be replicated.  In the end the children end up loving their new grandmother, but the entire time the idea was very creepy for me.

  • Mr. & Mrs. Smith

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    Mr. & Mrs. Smith  (1941)

    A lot of times when I want to see a classic that been remade, I'll rent the original and then watch the remake afterwards.  I feel like this helps me to appreciate the initial vision of the filmaker without messing it up with Hollywood special effects.  When my Netflix randomizer hit the hot Mr. & Mrs. Smith with Angelina and Brad, I immedietely looked back and saw that Hitchcock had made a movie by the same name.

    It turns out that the movies actually don't have anything to do with each other and in fact Hitchcock's Mr. & Mrs. Smith represents a rare departure from his horror movies and is a love story instead.  It still had some of Hitchcock's unique signatures and I could recognize certain filming techniques, but it lacked the thrill of his murders.  Overall, it was a good movie if you are interested in a classic, but if you are looking for the guns and explosives then I'd stick to BradJolina.

  • Even After A Thousand Times It's Still Funny

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    The Cable Guy  (1996)

    When I first saw Cable Guy I was working projection at a movie theater and must have seen the film at least 100 times over that summer.  It's one of the few gems that no matter how many times I see it, I still can't help but laugh at the jokes.  The cable guy is about the ultimate stalker and how he basicially invades the life of nice guy Matthew Broderick.  Broderick's love interest is on the rocks and Jim Carrey's role of "chip douglas" is perfect at creating caos.  While some have found this film to be very annoying, I still can't stop laughing at all of the phone messages that Carrey leaves.  Normally, I'm not a big fan of the Pet Detective, but in this film he is spot on.  Definetely worth taking a chance on.

  • Kids Are Different Today

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    Kids  (1995)

    When I was in college Kids was one of the most popular films amoung the students.  The movie itself is a graphic portrayal of a group of friends and their quest to fulfll their unquenching thirst for sex, drugs and mayham as well as the consequences suffered by their excess.  The movie is very shocking at times and offers a sobering message of the dangers to the lifestyles portrayed, but also glamourizes them at the same time.  I know that a lot of parents will not identify with the message of the film, but the sad truth is that many of the films central themes are common experiences for many teens today.  It's a dangerous world out there and parents should be warned.  While not everything turns out to be a worst case scenario in life there are many lessons that young people shouldn't have to learn early in life.  Kids is shocking in the innocence that is missing and the grittiness of the film, but definetely worth checking out for the sobering view into a teenage sub-culture.

  • One Of The Saddest Movies Ever Made

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    My Life  (1993)

    So you have to create something pretty amazing to get under the tough exterior that I like to portray, but My Life was a film that hit me in a way that  I was never expecting.  It's a truly incredible tale of a father who is terminally ill and his relationship with his wife and unborn son.  Over the course of the movie the only thing that Keaton can focus on is surviving long enough to see his child and the film offers some intense emotional depth to the characters as well as a very touching plot line.  Normally, I'm not a big fan of dramas, but this movies seemed so real and the subject matter so sensitive that I couldn't help but feel like a big softie when watching this film.  I highly recommend this film to anyone, but be forewarned that you need to bring kleenex if you plan on seeing it.

  • Who Knew Cheerleaders Could Whine This Much?

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    Well to be honest, this movie basically had me at Cheerleader and ***, but I was actually hoping to get a little more from this then just another teen movie.  It turns out that the film is actually quite a bit intellectual compared to the American Pie genre of film.  Overall though, I was very disappointed with this film because of how "preachy" I found the film.

    The film follows the story of a young cheerleader who is sent to an anti-gay camp by her parents after she exhibits the classic signs of being a ***.  While at the camp, this innocent teen falls in love with another woman and her parents are forced to deal with their daughter becoming a ***.  The premise of the film is actually a little funny, but the church scenes were really over the top and I found that while the film tried to be serious, I couldn't get over how ridiculous the whole premise really was.  Everytime the film encountered religion or a straight viewpoint, it characterized it in hyper-dramatic fashion and one is left with the impression that all gays face severe homophobia when in reality this isn't the case.  I think overall they could have presented a balanced side to both issue, but I found the constant church bashing and the glorification of anything gay to be pretty annoying and couldn't help but feel that I was watching rainbow propaghanda as opposed to seeing a unique viewpoint of a filmaker who obviously has issues with the straight world.  Overall, the film didn't offer enough enjoyment for me to recommend it to anyone and unfortunately this was a case where I wished that I could get my 90 minutes back.

  • Stir Of Echoes Still Creeps Me Out

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    Stir of Echoes  (1999)

    I thought that Stir of Echoes was going to be a horror movie when I rented it, but it turned out to be a little more psychologically disturbing then most horror flicks.  Bacon plays a character who starts seeing visions after undergoing hypnosis.  Eventually, he deciphers what a ghost wants him to do and he uncovers a terrible crime.  Overall I felt it was a pretty good film although it did have it rough spots.  A central part of the story line is Bacon's son and the entire time I kept waiting for him to say I see dead people, but alas he never used the line.  Nonetheless the kid is pretty creepy, although I'm not sure that he was absolutely necessary.

  • Broken Flowers For Broken Hearts

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    Broken Flowers  (2005)

    Broken Flowers is a depressing movie about a life long bachelor who learns that he has a son 20 years later.  Bill Murray plays the lead character and while his performance is heart breaking, it's also pretty much the only character I've seen him play in the last five years.  Basically he is a pretty depressed guy through the whole film.  The film relies on a lot of heavy pauses and the movie is ultimately more about what isn't said then what is, but the story is told well despite some dull moments.  Ultimately, I would have liked to have seen a different ending.  I was left feeling confused with little closure.

  • Quirky and Unusual But Suprisingly Refreshing

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    Bottle Rocket  (1996)

    Bottle Rockets is the story of a "gang" of would be theives who are trying to pull off a heist while sorting through many of life's deeper issues.  It features a fantastic performance by Owen Wilson who plays a character that is truly over the top.  The film was split between the criminal hijinks and a well told love story of a drifter and a maid.  The movie was very funny, but the style of the humor did start to wear on by the end of the film.  While you couldn't help but feel sorry for Wilson's character, you also were ready to kill him after the film was over.  I would definetely recommend checking it out, but be fare warned that the movie is a little quirky.

  • How Could Something So Wrong Be Soooo Funny?

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    Under discussion:

    Say It Isn't So  (2001)

    This is one of the funniest movies I've ever seen in my life.  I highly recommend it to anyone who likes humor that can make you a little squimish.  There are times where the movie resorts to classic teenage gross out techniques, but the Farrelly brothers manage to make these scenes really work.  The premise of the movie is based on incest and part of what makes this movie so funny is that the whole movie is really very shocking, but because of the nervous tension you can't help but laugh all the way from beginning to end.  It's a natural release and there are so many funny parts that you can't help but enjoy yourself through the whole film.  I found the acting to be superb, although be prepared for one dimensional characters (and characters are really what they are).  The subject matter and the style may be crude at times, yet somehow this still turned out to be a brillantly made film.

 

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