I really enjoyed the trilogy that provides the basis for this first film. I liked this true-to-tale vision of the book. It’s very well done and very creepy indeed. Nicely acted. Very disturbing film. One difference from the book is in the ending as to why L and B leave things as they do. The…
Adaptation
I really enjoyed the first 2/3 of this interesting Spike Joynz/Charles Hoffman collaboration about trying to write a screenplay about Suzy Orlean’s The Orchid Thief. The last third degenerates into the Hollywood chase/murder stuff that the film is, in fact, a critique of. Nicholas Cage plays Hoffman and his “brother” Donald and does a fine…
Hugo
I really enjoyed and was moved by this Martin Scorcese homage to early filmmakers and French culture. Hugo is an orphan who lives in the interstices of a Paris train station where he minds the time and mends machines. He meets and is befriended by Isabelle, a lovely young orphan girl cared for by Papa…
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
I really disliked the first hour of this introduction to Peter Jackson’s latest New Zealand-shot Middle East trilogy. Too sweet and too much like a kid’s story with silly dwarves everywhere. Bilbo (Martin Freeman) is the complacent Hobbit lured from the Shire by Ian McKellan’s Gandolf and the 13 “dwarves without a country” led by…
Georgie Girl
I never saw this 1966 British comic trifle before, and Bronwen is on a Charlotte Rampling jag, so we watched and enjoyed this one as the period piece it is. It’s heavily influenced by the long history of Brit absurdist comedy that would, in just a couple of years, yield Monty Python. This one sits…
Iron Man
I missed the song. Oh well, Robert Downey, Jr, is good in this so-so comic book knockoff about the arms dealer who develops a heart when he loses his own. Jeff Bridges, Gwyneth Paltrow and Cuba Gooding are all wasted. Oh well. Very high tech, very glossy. First time I’ve ever seen anything in HD….
The Edge of Seventeen
I may be the wrong person to review this one, since I don’t watch teen coming of age films with great regularity. Still, I was lured by the praises on the DVD box touting its comedic brilliance Will I ever learn?. There are a few laughs in this, but the answer is clearly no. So,…
South Park: Bigger
I loved this vulgar romp from the creators of the TV show. The music is often funny and includes such wonderful anthems as “Blame Canada”. Yes, it’s not correct by any stretch of the imagination. Yes, Saddam Hussein is played as more evil than the devil. Satan, after all, is looking for real love. But…
Something About Mary
I loved this tasteless romp about love and lust. Wonderful work by Carmen Diaz, Ben Stiller, Chris Elliot, and Brad Dillon. Totally in bad taste and very funny. It is a complete Y-chromosome movie. I’ve not spoken to an adult woman who liked the film, although my students (male and female) did. Bronwen hated the…
The Club
I liked this very dark, Chilean drama from director Pablo Larrain (he directed the just-released film “Jackie”), about priests moved from their parishes for ‘bad deeds,’ (pedophilia, trading in babies, providing confession to criminal state actors during Pinochet’s junta and keeping records of their crimes). They’re cared for by a ‘nun’ with her own tale…
The Girl Who Played With Fire
I liked this true-to-the-story version of v2 of Stieg Larson’s “Girl” trilogy (Swedish-subtitled) but found it a little flat in affect Perhaps because this is the transition, but it just seemed emotionally distanced. Well acted. I’ve become more comfortable with Noomi Rapace’s Lisbeth, although I still don’t see her character as this beautiful. More problematic…
Before Midnight
I liked this third episode in the continuing saga of Celine (Julie Delpy) and Jesse (Ethan Hawke) from director Richard Linklater. It’s written by the three of them. It now finds them older, with twin daughters, living in Paris but vacationing in Greece. They’re trying to deal with the real stresses of being older, being…
Private Parts
I liked this self-congratulatory Howard Stern autobiography despite myself. It’s funny and crude and pokes fun at the right people. Still, I don’t trust him.
The Cooler
I liked this quirky William H Macy vehicle from 2003. He’s the unluckiest man in Vegas, where he’s employed as a cooler, whose mere presence lowers the boom on winners. Alex Baldwin shines in this as the mobster-manager of the Shangri-La, an old-style casino faced with significant competition from newer houses in the new ‘family-friendly’…
Little Shop of Horrors
I liked this piece of mindless fluff, although B didn’t and I’m not sure what b- thought about it. Steve Martin all but steals the show in the role of a crazy sadistic dentist, and the plant otherwise stars It’s not Nicholson or Corman, but this tale of a race of carnivorous plants from outer…
Master and Commander
I liked this one, and Bronwen slept through it. Based on a 20 volume saga of the Napoleonic wars. With Russell Crowe in a good role. Presaging Darwinism, it gives a sense of how wars were fought at sea, how children fought those wars, and how small these ships really were. A good film
Zodiac
I liked this older film with Jake Gyllenhall and Robert Downey. Very atmospheric and right for the times about the serial killer who terrorized San Francisco in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s. Never caught, the film makes a good case for who he really was. Based on the book
Pleasantville
I liked this movie despite its flaws. Twins, one the school slut (Reese Witherspoon, great in Election), the other a geek (Toby Maguire) who lives for (in) a 1950s sitcom about a place too white and perfect for words, get zapped into the episodes in the 1950s. There are no words in the books, there…
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
I liked this Julian Schnabel look at the final years of Jean-Dominique Bauby, the editor of Elle who suffers a massive stroke and loses all ability to move but is fully there inside. It’s a story of will and determination as he learns to write a book by blinking each letter to an amazingly patient…
A Mighty Wind
I liked this gentle send-up of the folk scene and the culture of musical reunions as perpetrated for and by TV. Bronwen found it boring, irrelevant, and flaccid (perhaps like the scene itself as portrayed here, white, treacley-sincere, in some cases, just plain plastic and overproduced). I found that to be part of its sly…
Last Chance Harvey
I liked this Dustin Hoffman-Emma Thompson vehicle for its fine acting through ¾ of the film. Its last quarter becomes happy melodrama where all is neatly resolved. Blech. Hoffman and Thompson really shine, the former as Harry Shine, a failing jingle writer from NYC. ET is the now older Kate Walker, a single woman caring…
Kill Your Darlings
I liked this disturbing “based on a true story” look at the origin of The Beats at Columbia University in 1943-44. Allen Ginsburg (Daniel Radcliffe) leaves Patterson, NJ, his poet father and very disturbed mother, and goes to college where he encounters William Burroughs, Jack Kerouac, Lucian Carr and David Kamerrer. The movie follows their…
Frozen
I liked this Disney Oscar-winning animated film of girl power, good songs, and magic. The trick is accepting yourself and controlling/using your emotions. Don’t trust princes who don’t stand a chance to inherit on their own. Each of us has known an ice princess
Hollywoodland
I liked this dark look at the death. of George Reeves (good work from Ben Affleck although he never ages like Reeves did). What, you don’t remember George Reeves?. Before there was Christopher Reeves there was George Reeves, the real Superman. This film looks at the last 10 years of his life and his death…
The Dark Knight Rises
I liked this conclusion to the Batman trilogy, although it is a brutal, violent, and disturbing look at life. Well acted by all. It is a caricature of the anarchist vision as a mask for the justification for mass annihilation