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Thursday November 12, 2009

Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire

Claireece (newcomer Gabourey 'Gabby' Sidibe) is a 16-year-old, still in middle school, illiterate, pregnant with her second child. The first baby has Down Syndrome. Both pregnancies are the result of rape by her own father. She is subjected to constant physical, emotional, and sexual abuse and has retreated so far inside herself that she barely exists in the world. And in a cruel parody of tenderness, she is called by her middle name, "Precious." In a cruel demonstration of the constrictions of her world, Precious knew no other name to give her Down Syndrome child than "Mongo."

Inside 350 pounds of weight, a moat of flesh, her wall against the world, Precious hides as far from everyone as she can go. She has little wisps of dreams cobbled together from television, a light-skinned boyfriend, a stroll down a red carpet, surrounded by cameras and adoring fans. But she is so limited in experience and opportunity that she literally cannot imagine a genuine alternative to what she has. She does not even know what the word "alternative" means. When the middle school principal arranges for her to attend a special "each one teach one" alternative school, someone has to explain to her what an alternative is. It is, a distracted administrator tells her, "a different way of doing." And it is that recognition, more than the program itself, just the realization that there are different ways of doing, that leads her to understand that there may be choices available to her.

Seeing Precious understand for the first time that she is worthy of love and capable of learning is the expected pleasure of this movie. But it is also the challenge of the film. Even slightly toned down from the novel, by poet and teacher Sapphire, the abuse is so relentless, so outrageous, even beyond the usual struggles we see in fiction and on the talk shows and tabloid covers.

They thrive on exploitative confessions, a secularized testimony that tries to disinfect the prurient pleasures of wallowing in degradation and tragedy with the superficial pieties of simplistic redemption. The post-production sign-on of Oprah Winfrey and Tyler Perry as producers, both survivors of abuse and highly successful purveyors of abuse melodrama, is a sign to be wary. And even with a sensitive performance by Sidibe, this film would risk falling into that trap of easy sentimentality. That it does not is due to one character and one actress, comedienne Mo'Nique in a fearless portrayal of the mother, a monster named, with grim irony, Mary.

Two key scenes in the film focus on Mary's interactions with social workers. In the first, like a theatrical director, she barks out orders to set the stage for a visit, casting herself in the role of a loving grandmother, to persuade the social worker that she is doing everything necessary to qualify for welfare payments for her extended family. Where moments before she seemed completely out of control, wavering back and forth between stupor and rage, when she has to pull it together, she does, slapping on a wig and cuddling the baby. The instant the door shuts, the monster returns.

And then, near the end, in another meeting with another social worker (beautifully underplayed by pop diva Mariah Carey), Mary starts to talk and for the first time we see her as the victim as well as the inflicter of damage. In a monologue she seems to forget where she is and who she wants to appear to be and opens herself up in a moment so raw, so naked, so vulnerable that it takes the entire film to a different level.

Director Lee Daniels, like his producers Winfrey and Perry, brings a sincerity to telling these stories that tempers the potential for exploitation. He has a sure, if unconventional, eye for casting. In addition to Mo'Nique and Carey, he gets small jewels of performances from talk-show and sit-com star Sherry Shepherd as the alternative school administrator and musician Lenny Kravitz as a sympathetic nurse. The lovely Paula Patton brings understated grace to the role of the alternative teacher, and the assortment of young performers who play the classmates at Each One Teach One manage to avoid the "Welcome Back Kotter" syndrome and evoke full characters. But Mo'Nique's fierce and fearless performance as Mary holds the story together and takes it to another level. She does not let us hate her because she does not let us compartmentalize her. By opening herself up on screen, she forces us to look into the source of her damaged heart. And that moment, more than any other, show us what Precious has had to overcome.

Sunday November 8, 2009

The Box

I loved "Donnie Darko" and was eager to listen to the DVD commentary by writer/director Richard Kelly. But I had to turn it off after the first ten minutes. Kelly explained too much, and his explanations were so mundane they detracted from the film's intriguing ambiguities. After the fascinating but incoherent "Southland Tales," Kelly shifts back toward explaining too much in "The Box, based on a short story by Richard Matheson and its adaptation as an episode of "The Twilight Zone."

Amid the meticulously re-created details of the 1976 Richmond, Virginia setting (harvest gold, maxi coats), a loving couple feeling some financial pressure are presented with a moral dilemma. Early one morning just before Christmas, a plain brown package is left on their doorstep with an elegant note informing them that Mr. Steward (Frank Langella) will be there at 5. Inside the package is a box with a red button covered by a locked glass dome.

Norma (Cameron Diaz) and Arthur (James Marsden) go to work, where each receives bad news. Norma teaches English at a private school. Just after her class on Sartre's "No Exit," she is informed that the school will no longer be able to subsidize her son's tuition, a severe financial blow. And Arthur, who (like Kelly's father) designs lenses for a Mars explorer, learns that his application to the astronaut program has been turned down.

Norma is home alone when Mr. Steward arrives. His appearance is shocking. The lower left quarter of his face has been sheered off by some massive trauma, so devastating we can see not only sinew but teeth through what once was his cheek. His message is shocking, too. He gives Norma a key to open the glass dome and tells her that if she pushes the red button within 24 hours someone she does not know will die and she will receive one million dollars in cash, tax-free.

"Maybe it's a baby," says Arthur. "Maybe it's a man on death row," says Norma. Arthur, the engineer, takes the box apart. There's nothing inside. Rationally, it seems impossible that the offer could be real. They go back and forth. And then, as much to end the agony of uncertainty as anything else, one of them impulsively hits it. And then things really go haywire in the lives of Arthur and Norma and pretty much in the movie, too.

Kelly knows how to create a mood of claustrophobic dread and how to create stunning images. Back in those pre-Google days, people had to do research in the stacks of a library, and Kelly makes those scenes look both retro and chilling. But there is nothing to approach the best moments in "Donnie Darko," the Sparkle Motion dance number to "Notorious," the motivational speaker, the controversy over the story taught in school, the riff on the Smurfs. Like the box with the button, it is enticing on the surface but inside it is empty.

Thursday November 5, 2009

Disney's A Christmas Carol

Writer-director Robert Zemeckis wisely chose the most unquenchable of stories for his technological marvel. Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, already filmed with everyone from Michael Caine to Patrick Stewart, George C. Scott, Vanessa Williams, and Mr. Magoo in the role of the skinflint who learns to give, can hold its own even surrounded by the most dazzling of special effects.

I actually gasped at one moment as the camera flew over London. It was not just that the Victorian setting was so meticulously created, though I plan to go back just to revel in the details. It was that I had never before seen a camera move so fluidly through so many different vantage points in the midst of a convincingly immersive 3D experience. It evokes a visceral sense of buoyant jubilation and freedom that immediately connects us to the movie's setting, making us feel completely present in the story as it unfolds.

We meet Ebeneezer Scrooge (voice of Jim Carrey) as he is bidding farewell to his partner, Jacob Marley, now laid out in his coffin. Scrooge literally removes the coins from Marley's eyes. It may be a custom, but money is money. Seven years later, Scrooge is well into his bah, humbug mode, turning down a Christmas dinner offer from his nephew Fred (voice of Colin Firth), turning down a charitable donation, and grudgingly agreeing to allow his poor clerk Bob Cratchit (voice of Gary Oldman) a day off to celebrate with his family. Scrooge goes home to eat his gruel by himself when, in one of the film's most thrilling effects, Marley's flickering greenish ghost appears, heaving the heavy weights he bears through the door ahead of him. As we all well know, he is there to announced that Scrooge will be visited by three spirits who will teach him about Christmas past, present, and yet to come.

Our familiarity with the story is an anchor in the sea of new visual stimuli, and it keeps our focus on what is happening to the characters, even when the technology goes slightly askew. Zemeckis said that the good news about making a motion capture film is that you can do anything. Whatever you imagine can be realized. But, he added, the bad news is that you have to do everything. The blank screen is there and every single detail, every button on every coat, every log in every fire, every reflection, shadow, and snowflake have to be separately created in three dimensions and designed to interact with every other element we see. Some of the figures are more solidly created while others seem a bit stiff and rubbery. Firth's Fred is particularly awkward. Some of the scenes are hyper-realistic while others, like a dance at the Fezziwig's Christmas party, play with space and weight, not always in aid of the story. It gets too frantic, especially during a non-Dickensian insert of a chase scene that has Scrooge shrinking like Alice in Wonderland. The decision to double up on voices (Carrey plays all three spirits, Oldman plays Cratchit, Tiny Tim, and Marley and Robin Wright Penn plays both Scrooge's sister and his girlfriend) is distracting and occasionally confusing.

But oh, there is a visual sumptuousness here to rival even the merriest Christmas celebration. Scrooge's flights through time, the glorious bounty of the Ghost of Christmas Present, the Victorian streets, the costumes, the warmth of the fire, the magic of Scrooge's first dance with Belle -- make this an instantly indispensable classic. It's all there, Scrooge's bitter loneliness to his thrilling giddy-as-a-schoolboy realization that he can change, and that the power of giving is greater than any power of having. And for the people who gave us this great gift, God bless them everyone.

Thursday November 5, 2009

The Men Who Stare At Goats

"More of this is true than you would believe," "The Men Who Stare at Goats" cheekily informs us as it opens. And while its tone is high satire, even farce, the story it tells is not hard to believe at all. Military officials are portrayed as credulous, ineffectual, and petty. But they are also portrayed as candid, open-minded, and forthright. Much of what goes on in the military's 20-plus-year exploration of what we used to call the "human potential movement" seems outlandish, but those were outlandish times. And one aspect rings especially true. According to this film, based on the non-fiction book by debunking Welsh journalist Jon Ronson, the real reason the US and the USSR entered into these "new age" programs was that each was convinced the other was doing it. So much for the efficacy of "remote viewing."

That would be the power to see something mentally that could not be seen visually, either because it was too far away or on the other side of a wall. This division, led by Bill Django (Jeff Bridges), whose long, gray braid hangs down over his fatigues, experiments with all categories of extra-sensory perception including telekinesis (the ability to affect objects without touching them), clairvoyance (the ability to read minds), and precognition (the ability to predict the future).

Jeff Bridges, as a Viet Nam vet who explores the new age fads of the 1970's, one hot tub at a time, conveys slightly seedy optimism in the early days of the program and shows us the consequences of too much mind-bending at the end. Kevin Spacey is the ambitious psychiatrist who guides the program as it mutates from exploring what our troops can do to exploring how what we have learned can take away from the humanity of the enemy troops we capture. George Clooney centers the film as the most gifted of the program's subjects, a man who seeks some way to integrate his abilities and experiences to find some meaning in the effort. But Ewan McGregor never convinces us that he is a dumped husband, a reporter, or an American. The reference to Jedi warriors just reminds us of his role as Obi-Wan Kenobi in the "Star Wars" movies and makes his appearance seem like an in-joke.

The light-heartedness of the movie's tone goes from pratfall humor to a wrenching depiction of the consequences of foolishness. It is smart enough not to be entirely dismissive of the idea that some or all people may have some uncharted capabilities we should try to understand and focus. But it is clear that none of that will do much good against a gun and that the efforts to pursue it may lead to extensive personal and organizational trauma. The main character is unhappy that his scoop is almost entirely ignored when it is published. The media picks up only on the side detail that Barney music was used to break the spirits of prisoners. The pernicious influence of that song appears to have been the only usable information produced by the program; something that any parent of a toddler could have conveyed with great enthusiasm. If this movie directs more attention to Ronson's findings, that will be gratifying to him, but to us it should also be an important lesson about how one factor in allowing large organizations get out of control is that no one is paying attention.

Thursday October 29, 2009

An Education

Part of the charm of "An Education," a bittersweet coming of age story based on a brief memoir by Lynn Barber, is how much we know what its main character does not. Jenny (an incandescent Carey Mulligan) is a teenager in 1961 London, over-protected by her overly-cautious and conventional parents and eager to be independent and to have adventures. She is used to being the smartest one in the class and so even more than most teenagers, she is convinced that she understands many important things her parents cannot possibly comprehend. She is eager to grow up, to seem sophisticated, to be sophisticated. She is innocent, filled with potential, willing to be taught -- and she has no idea how powerfully attractive those qualities are to a predatory older man.

But we know that, and when David (Peter Sarsgaard) rescues Jenny and her cello from a rainstorm by giving her a ride home, we know she will confuse urbanity with wisdom, that she will think that because he lies on her behalf he will not lie to her. But the most important thing we know is that like Jenny, London is also on the brink of enormous changes. We know that a world of opportunities she could never imagine will open up to her. Unlike Jenny, we know she is going to be fine. After all, we know she went on to tell her story, in itself a triumph over whatever went wrong and whatever she lost.

Danish director Lone Scherfig perfectly captures London just as it is about to move from the drab, stiff-upper-lip, world of post-WWII deprivation to the brash and explosive era of mods and rockers, Carnaby Street and the Beatles, Twiggy, "The Avengers," and Joe Orton. Part of what makes David so exciting is that Jenny believes that the only options available to her are teacher and housewife and the only examples of both she has seen appear dull and unrewarding. David gives her a glimpse of a life that is never dull. It is always shopping and parties and travel, pretty clothes and lovely restaurants. If in order to have all of that she must lie to her parents and defy her teachers, that makes it all the more exciting. It binds her to him even more, creating a set of rules that is just for them.

That is how it seems, anyway. The education referred to in the movie title tells us that she will learn some difficult lessons. But its conclusion reminds Jenny and us that it is only the end of her beginning. She thought meeting David was the beginning of her future; she learns that the real beginning only came afterward.

The screenplay by Nick Hornby ("High Fidelity," "About a Boy") is sympathetic but insightful, skillful in sketching in each of the characters. Sarsgaard also makes David more than a predator. Jenny is not just smarter than he is; she is stronger, too. As Jenny goes from school girl to dressed-up doll to the beginning of adulthood, from the make-it-do, wear-it-out modesty of her home to Paris hot spots, Production designer Andrew McAlpine and costume designer Odile Dicks-Mireaux show exquisite sensitivity in giving Jenny a look that tells the story. Every performance is a gem: Alfred Molina, proud but fearful as Jenny's father, Emma Thompson, starchy as the headmistress, and Olivia Williams, a teacher who wants more for Jenny than she wants for herself (it must have been quite a challenge for hair and make-up to turn Williams into such a dowdy character). Rosamund Pike is utterly charming as a dim but kind-hearted party girl. And Carey Mulligan, in a star-making turn, makes this into one of the best films of the year.

Thursday October 22, 2009

Amelia

Amelia Earhart, the pioneering aviator who was lost over the Pacific, is given the big Hollywood biopic treatment in a curiously retro film that feels like it was intended for Katherine Hepburn or Susan Hayward. It is not the 1930's...

Thursday October 15, 2009

Law Abiding Citizen

This is not just a bad film; it is a despicable one. The slim but highly profitable torture porn genre has now begun to permeate major studio films directed at a general audience and the result is this dim-witted thriller...

Thursday October 8, 2009

Categories: Drama, Movies, Spiritual films

A Serious Man

Larry Gopnik (theater actor Michael Stuhlbarg) is a physics professor in 1967 Minneapolis. He covers a blackboard the size of a movie screen with equations, confidently lecturing his students about the uncertainty principle but outside the classroom unable to cope...

Tuesday September 29, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Drama

Shrink

"Physician, heal yourself!" Henry Carter (Kevin Spacey) is the best-selling author of a book called Happiness Now and a Los Angeles psychiatrist to glamorous and highly successful people. But he is a mess, self-medicating to the point of obliterating himself...

Thursday September 17, 2009

The Informant!

Like some of the food made with the substances produced by the corporation at the heart of this story, this movie is pleasant but leaves a sour aftertaste. It is inspired by the real-life story of one of the most...

Monday September 14, 2009

Fame

It's hard to believe it has been almost 30 years since this movie inspired by the real-life New York High School of the Performing Arts exploded into theaters. It remains hugely influential even as recently as the more family-friendly "High...

Sunday September 13, 2009

I Can Do Bad All By Myself

Tyler Perry's movies are review-proof. Not just because he does not let critics see them before they are released, knowing that his audience won't care about reviews, but because they do not lend themselves to the usual kind of analysis....

Tuesday September 1, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Drama

State of Play

You need six things for a successful Washington thriller: a reporter, a Congressman, a dead girl, a choleric editor, some ugly secrets, and, for some reason, a chase inside a parking garage, not so sure why that last one seems...

Thursday August 27, 2009

Taking Woodstock

This is a movie about what went on in the community near Woodstock while the concert that would forever be known by that name was happening. And a happening. In other words, this is a footnote movie. It tries to...

Thursday August 27, 2009

Categories: Crime, DVDs, Drama, Television

Wiseguy

"Wiseguy" was a tough, smart 1980's television series about a cop (Ken Wahl) who goes deep undercover, starting with 18 months in prison to establish his criminal credentials. In this first season, just out on DVD, he infiltrates the organization...

Wednesday August 26, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Drama, Romance, Spies

Duplicity

What do Egyptian launch codes and a new frozen pizza topping have in common? They're both secrets that are of value to both those who know it and those who want to know it. Where there are secrets, there must...

Tuesday August 25, 2009

Adventureland

We all have at least one, a summer when everything changes, when we first start to become the person we truly are. Every writer tries at least once to tell the story of one of these summers and the best...

Thursday August 13, 2009

The Time Traveler's Wife

Books and movies are two very different modes of expression. Books tend to be more subjective and internal, focusing on what the author or characters think and feel. Movies are usually better at showing what happens. Even a hugely popular...

Thursday August 13, 2009

Categories: Date movie, Drama, Movies, Musical

Bandslam

A little edgier than the "High School Musical" series and a little smarter than the usual tween fare, "Bandslam" is a refreshing late-summer treat for tweens, teens, and their families from the always-welcome Walden Media, a top provider of quality...

Thursday August 6, 2009

Julie & Julia

"Julie & Julia" is -- I can't help it -- a scrumptiously satisfying film about writer/director Nora Ephron's two favorite subjects: food and marriage. It is based on two true stories. Julia Child revolutionized American notions about food with her...

Thursday August 6, 2009

Categories: Date movie, Drama, Movies, Romance

Adam

Adam (Hugh Dancy), appropriately shares his name with the first man because even though he lives in contemporary Manhattan, he is in a very real way new to the world. He seems at once tightly wound and untethered. When he...

Tuesday August 4, 2009

The Soloist

All around Los Angeles Times columnist Steve Lopez (Robert Downey, Jr.), everything seems to be broken or breaking. The newspaper is losing readers and laying off staff. His marriage to editor Mary Weston (Catherine Keener) is over. He is estranged...

Tuesday July 21, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Drama

The Great Buck Howard

This story about a retro performer itself has a very retro feeling, as though it is a recently rediscovered artifact. The likable Colin Hanks plays Troy Gabel, who drops out of law school with some vague thought that he would...

Monday July 20, 2009

From the Earth to the Moon

The very best American miniseries I have ever seen is the HBO production from Tom Hanks, From the Earth to the Moon. Instead of a chronological run-down, each episode takes on the space race from a different angle. One gives...

Monday July 13, 2009

Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont

Mrs. Palfrey (Joan Plowright) did not think of herself as someone who would live in the shabby gentility of the Claremont, a residential hotel in London. We never learn the details of what brought her there or keeps her there,...

Friday July 3, 2009

1776

Happy Independence Day! This rousing musical about the Declaration of Independence makes the Founding Fathers vivid, human, and interesting characters, and is so involving that you almost forget that you already know how it all turned out. William Daniels is...

Tuesday June 30, 2009

Public Enemies

Back before the days when trashy faux celebrities from tawdry reality shows merited magazine covers and "gangsta" rappers postured and pretended to be killers, there was once a romanticized fascination with actual killers with names like "Baby Face" and "Pretty...

Monday June 29, 2009

Do the Right Thing

Twenty years ago, Spike Lee made a tough, smart, and very provocative film that included an electrifying moment when the character played by Lee himself held up a trash can and aimed it at the glass window of a pizzeria...

Sunday June 28, 2009

Secret Ballot

Those who are interested in the Iranian election and protests should see this superb Iranian film that is one of the finest explorations of freedom, elections, democracy, and the rule of law I have ever watched on screen. It begins...

Thursday June 25, 2009

My Sister's Keeper

How far would you go to save your child's life? How far should you go? Those are the questions posed -- and largely ducked -- in this film based on the best-selling book, My Sister's Keeper, by Jodi Picoult. The...

Tuesday June 9, 2009

Categories: Crime, DVDs, Drama

Crossing Over

A well-intentioned but ham-handed exploration of U.S. immigration policies, this movie's message is undermined by its cardboard characters and clunky script. Like "Babel" and "Crash" it is a multi-story exploration of one theme, but it is formulaic and uninvolving. It...

Tuesday June 9, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Drama, Thriller

The International

This thriller about a multi-national bank with innumerable tentacles and immeasurable power has two problems and the worst is bad timing. It's just a little bit more difficult these days to feel pleasurably shaken up while watching a story about...

Tuesday June 2, 2009

Categories: Based on a book, DVDs, Drama

Revolutionary Road

It may be, as Thoreau said, that "most men lead lives of quiet desperation," but in the movies, desperation is much more likely to be loud. "Revolutionary Road" is another movie about unhappiness, phoniness, and corrosive dysfunction behind the manicured...

Monday June 1, 2009

The Seven Little Foys

Bob Hope would have turned 106 this week, and his birthday and the upcoming Father's Day reminded me of one of my favorite of his films. It's also one of the least characteristic because he is playing a real-life character...

Tuesday May 12, 2009

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Brad Pitt is a very fine actor (see "Twelve Monkeys" and "True Romance") but in this epic fantasy his diligent and thoughtful performance contributes less to the film than his appearance, about two-thirds of the way through. I mean appearance...

Monday May 4, 2009

A Plumm Summer

A Plumm Summer had a limited release in 2007 but is now widely available for the first time with this week's DVD. It is based on the real-life story of a "kidnapped" puppet from a local children's program in Montana...

Thursday April 30, 2009

Categories: Drama, Family Issues, Movies

Is Anybody There?

A boy whose parents turn their house into a nursing home can be expected to develop an interest in death. Ten year old Edward ("Son of Rambow's" Bill Milner) is more than interested. He is fascinated. And that is in...

Tuesday April 21, 2009

Frost/Nixon

More than 30 years after he resigned from office, Richard M. Nixon has transcended politics and history and become epic. He has been portrayed on film by Anthony Hopkins, the man who won an Oscar playing Hannibal the Cannibal. And...

Tuesday April 14, 2009

Categories: Comic book, Crime, DVDs, Drama, Fantasy

The Spirit

If there is ever an Oscar category for best performance by an article of clothing, the red tie worn by the title character in this film would be the clear winner and the rain coat would most likely be the...

Thursday April 9, 2009

For Easter: The Gospel According to St. Matthew and more

Reposting for Easter -- Have a blessed celebration, everyone! Ben-Hur is the traditional Easter classic, but there are some other films that beautifully illuminate the themes of this holy season. I like The Gospel of John, a very reverent re-telling...

Wednesday April 8, 2009

List: Five Passover Movies

Reposting -- Hag Sameach! Passover is not just about remembering the story of the Exodus from Egypt. It is about telling the story. Thousands of years before people talked about "learning styles," the Seder included many different ways of telling...

Tuesday April 7, 2009

Not Easily Broken

If we believe the movies, the tough part of relationships is getting to the "I dos." Everything after that is some vaguely imagined "happily ever after." But "Not Easily Broken," based on the popular novel by preacher T.D. Jakes, is...

Tuesday April 7, 2009

Categories: Based on a play, DVDs, Drama

Doubt

Before movies, there were plays, and before plays there were stories told around the campfire. One of the deepest human impulses is the need to tell our stories in part because of the way they help us make sense of...

Tuesday March 31, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Drama, Romance

Seven Pounds

The way you feel about "Seven Pounds" will depend on the way you feel about the choice made by the main character at the end of the film. Some may consider it admirable and selfless but for me the choice,...

Monday March 30, 2009

Marley & Me

Life is messy. And in this movie, that very important lesson is embodied by Marley, affectionately dubbed "the worst dog in the world" by his loving family. Jennifer (Jennifer Aniston) and John (Owen Wilson) Grogan are newlywed newspaper writers who...

Thursday March 26, 2009

Categories: Based on a play, Drama, Movies

Spinning Into Butter

The best of intentions and a welcome willingness to engage on the touchiest issues is not enough to keep this movie from feeling more like a seminar than a story. It betrays its origins as a play, still talky and...

Tuesday March 10, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Drama, Family Issues

Rachel Getting Married

Fiction is usually very linear, just because of the limits of time. The longest epic and the thickest novel don't have enough scope to encompass extraneous detail. In real life people can't find parking spots and fumble for correct change,...

Tuesday March 10, 2009

Milk

"My name is Harvey Milk and I want to recruit you!" This disarming introduction became the trademark of the man who would become the first out gay man to hold major elective office in the United States. With this greeting,...

Monday March 9, 2009

Pinocchio

This week Disney is releasing a glorious new edition of its most most gorgeous, splendid, and fully realized of all of its animation classics, the high point of painstakingly hand-painted animation, before the use of photocopiers and computers. Every detail...

Tuesday March 3, 2009

Australia

Writer/director Baz Luhrmann is known for his surprises. In Strictly Ballroom, William Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet , and Moulin Rouge! he created visual and musical mash-ups of classic and pop that achieved, sometimes apparently accidentally, some transcendence and that were...

Tuesday February 17, 2009

Changeling

Radiantly beatific, Angelina Jolie glows with mother love in bright red lipstick and a series of divine cloche hats as Christine Collins, a devoted single mother, in this fact-based drama directed by Clint Eastwood. In 1928 Los Angeles, while she...

Tuesday February 17, 2009

Flash of Genius

Americans do love our underdog stories and this one has the ingredients. There's a David -- an engineering professor named Robert Kearns (Greg Kinnear), who had a "flash of genius" and invented a gadget that all the geniuses in Detroit...

Tuesday February 17, 2009

Categories: Action/Adventure, Crime, DVDs, Drama

Body of Lies

Once movie spies were sleek and cool and impeccably dressed. They were devil-may-care, they had joie de vivre, they seemed to know everything, and they were unstoppable. The bad guys had endless money to spend on sociopathic sidekicks and elaborate...

Thursday February 12, 2009

Young Mr. Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln was born 200 years ago today. This film, directed by John Ford and starring Henry Fonda, is an appealing look at his early law practice and his tragic romance with Ann Rutledge. Particularly exciting and moving are the...

Tuesday February 10, 2009

W.

Maybe it is just too soon, maybe we are just too used to the high-gloss satire of "Saturday Night Live" and "The Daily Show," maybe it's the kaleidoscopic structure, but this movie feels like a rough draft. Director Oliver Stone...

Monday February 2, 2009

Categories: Based on a book, DVDs, Drama

The Secret Life of Bees

The beloved best-seller by Sue Monk Kidd has been brought to screen with great care, deep sincerity, and a perfect cast. Unfortunately, it is so careful, so lovingly burnished, so deliberate that it becomes sluggish, never finding the distinctive voice...

Tuesday January 27, 2009

Categories: Crime, DVDs, Drama

Pride and Glory

A big-name cast and some big-time issues are not enough to make up for a small-time script that adds absolutely nothing new to the too-often-told tale of police corruption and family betrayal. It is as generic as its title. Four...

Tuesday January 6, 2009

Categories: Crime, DVDs, Drama, Thriller

Righteous Kill

Has there ever been a cinematic pairing as eagerly anticipated as this one? Perhaps, but I can't think of one that has been anticipated as long. Al Pacino and Robert DeNiro were both in 1974's "The Godfather II" but their...

Tuesday December 23, 2008

Categories: Comedy, DVDs, Drama, Satire, Spies

Burn After Reading

The Coen brothers may have achieved mainstream success with their Best Picture Oscar for No Country for Old Men, but so much for adapting prestigious literary novels that engage the essential American archetypes; they are back with another twisty, genre-tweaking...

Monday December 22, 2008

Love Actually

"Love Actually" is as stuffed with goodies as the Christmas stockings for those at the very top of Santa's "nice" list -- and it is just as entertaining, too. You say you like romantic comedies with gorgeous stars, witty dialogue...

Sunday December 21, 2008

Period of Adjustment

Tennessee Williams' only comedy is this neglected gem of a movie about two couples at Christmas. It has never been available on DVD so your only chance to see it is this Tuesday on Turner Classic Movies. It stars a...

Thursday December 11, 2008

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

Nothing Like the Holidays

Natalie Morales of ABC Family's The Middleman lists her three rules for a movie with Latino characters: Nobody calls anybody Papi. No dancing to salsa music. No gratuitous Spanish. By that standard, this latest entry in the dysfunctional family holiday...

Tuesday December 9, 2008

The Dark Knight

"Dark" is right. Christopher Nolan's sequel to his Batman Begins is not only dark; it is searing and disturbing. The bad guys are very, very bad. These are not guys who do bad things because that is the only way...

Thursday December 4, 2008

Cadillac Records

In the words of Etta James, at last. At last, albeit imperfectly, the extraordinary story of the rise and fall of Chess Records has been given the loving attention it deserves. Magnificent performances and soul-shaking music make up for some...

Monday November 24, 2008

What's Cooking?

The Star-Spangled Banner plays over the credits and we see a classic Thanksgiving poster, only to find that it is on the side of a bus that carries very few passengers resembling its smiling Caucasian family. A very diverse group...

Tuesday November 18, 2008

Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2

When the first five minutes of a film show us a wedding, a graduation, a pregnancy, some kisses, and two grave sites, followed by a reunion scene involving shrieking and hugging, we know we are in for an irresistible saga...

Sunday November 9, 2008

This Christmas

As much a tradition as indigestible fruitcake and the dogs barking "Jingle Bells," every Christmas season brings us at least one new family holiday angst-fest, stuffed with secrets, accusations, forgiveness, food, and laughter. The best of them give us...

Thursday September 25, 2008

The Duchess

Kiera Knightly plays 18th century aristocrat Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire in this muddled but eye-filling saga of an ancestor of Diana, Princess of Wales, who shared her status as a fashion icon, heartbroken wife of a man in love with...

Wednesday September 24, 2008

'Gabriel Over the White House' -- The President Finds God

A little-seen 1933 film called "Gabriel Over the White House" has some themes that are particularly resonant in this time of unprecedented economic uncertainty and this historic Presidential campaign. Walter Houston (father of director John Huston and grandfather of actress...

Tuesday September 23, 2008

Categories: Comedy, DVDs, Drama, Remake

The Women

It isn't so much that they have updated or re-invented the brilliantly acidic Claire Boothe Luce play that was adapted for a classic 1939 movie; they completely misunderstood it. The surface details of the original may need updating but its...

Thursday September 18, 2008

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

Tyler Perry's The Family That Preys

Tyler Perry's latest film is more traditional and with a more consistent tone than his "Medea" movies, but it has his trademark trio: sincerity, spirituality, and story. And if he passes on that other "s" -- subtlety, that's all right....

Thursday September 11, 2008

Categories: Based on a book, Drama, Movies

Towelhead

Alicia Erian's semi-autobiographical novel about a young girl coming of age has been brought to the screen by writer/director Alan Ball, whose "American Beauty" and "Six Feet Under" explored the darker side of sunny suburban streets. This is the story...

Wednesday August 27, 2008

Traitor

A timely story, some welcome complexity, and a compelling performance elevate this story of terrorism above the usual bang-bang. Don Cheadle plays Samir, a person of interest being tracked by the authorities for his possible involvement in terrorist activities. He...

Thursday August 21, 2008

The Longshots

A little bit of grittiness keeps this fact-based story of a girl who plays football from getting too sugary. The talented Keke Palmer of Akeelah and the Bee gives a beautifully understated, witty, and sincere performance as Jasmine, the first...

Saturday July 26, 2008

List: The Top 25 Law Movies

The magazine published by the American Bar Association has assembled a list of the 25 best movies about the law, with another 25 on the list of runners-up. I am a lawyer from a family of lawyers and we all...

Sunday July 13, 2008

Categories: Classic, DVDs, Drama

12 Angry Men

Twelve jurors, hot and tired after a six-day murder trial, file into the jury room. They begin with a vote -- 11 vote for a guilty verdict, but one (Henry Fonda), juror Number 8, votes to acquit. The others are...

Tuesday July 8, 2008

Categories: DVDs, Drama, War

Stop-Loss

A young soldier who has come home from Iraq is forced to rethink his ideas about heroism and patriotism when he is "stop-lossed" -- informed that instead of leaving the Army he has been involuntarily assigned to another tour of...

Tuesday July 1, 2008

Vantage Point

A gimmicky thriller without much of a gimmick or many thrills, "Vantage Point" suffers, too, from being out of synch with its time. Its premise may be current -- an assassination attempt at an anti-terrorism summit -- but its tone...

Tuesday June 17, 2008

Categories: DVDs, Drama

Under the Same Moon

As the title suggests, there is a little bit of fairy tale moondust sprinkled over this story of a nine-year-old boy who runs away from his home in Mexico to find his mother in Los Angeles. As with all fairy...

Monday June 9, 2008

The Other Boleyn Girl

Take away the sumptuous settings and Hollywood glamour and what you have here is like Henry VIII for Dummies enacted by the cast of the OC. Natalie Portman plays Anne Boleyn, who became the second of Henry VIII's six wives...

Monday June 9, 2008

Categories: DVDs, Drama, Genre, Reviews

The Bucket List

It's The Shawshank Redemption part two, or it tries to be. It has voiceover narration by Morgan Freeman. It has an inspiring and life-affirming friendship -- featuring Morgan Freeman. It just is not very good. If you've seen the trailer,...

Thursday May 15, 2008

Categories: Based on a book, Drama, Movies

Fugitive Pieces

In this impressionistic, rose-and honey-toned memory piece, young Jacob hides from the Nazis in 1941 Poland but his parents are killed and his sister is captured. The terrified boy is discovered by a Greek archaeologist, who takes him in and...

Monday May 12, 2008

The Great Debaters

In 1935, the debate team from a tiny all-black college took on the top white team in the country and they won. This is that story, Oprah-fied to be sure (Winfrey's company produced the film), but powerfully told by...

Wednesday May 7, 2008

P.S. I Love You

Hillary Swank does not have the chin for romance or the rhythm for comedy. Her two Oscars were for earnest, androgynous roles (“Boys Don’t Cry” and “Million Dollar Baby”) that made the most of her strong jaw and lanky...

Tuesday April 22, 2008

Charlie Wilson's War

It is not easy to take a wealthy socialite, a powerful Congressman, and a CIA agent, have them played by three Oscar-winners, two who are genuine box office gold, and make them look like the underdogs, but in this...

Tuesday April 15, 2008

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Genre, Movies, Reviews

Juno

It's time for the q-word again. Every year, it seems, there is some audience-favorite-quirky-little-indy -- that category is now a genre of its own, like thriller and romantic comedy. 2006's Little Miss Sunshine was called "this year's Napoleon Dynamite....

Thursday April 10, 2008

Categories: Drama, Independent, Movies, Romance

Smart People

A burned-out literature professor named Lawrence Wetherhold (Dennis Quaid) has written an "unpublishable" book called The Price of Postmodernism: Epistemology, Hermeneutics and the Literary Canon. Of course it is unpublishable. Everyone knows that the part of the title that comes...

Wednesday April 9, 2008

Street Kings

"Street Kings" is a like a Cliff's Notes version of Training Day not that Training Day was any special challenge to the mental muscle. Corruption is bad, we get it. At least that movie had a sizzling performance and an...

Monday April 7, 2008

Categories: Based on a book, DVDs, Drama

Reservation Road

We’ve all done it. We know we shouldn’t. We know it is dangerous. Dwight (Mark Ruffalo) is racing to get his 10-year-old son home after a ball game went into extra innings. He is talking on the cell phone to...

Friday March 28, 2008

Beaufort

'Beaufort," the first Israeli movie nominated for the best foreign film Oscar in 24 years, is a meditation on the tragic ironies that soldiers face while ending an 18-year occupation of a medieval fortress in Lebanon. Despite their valor, the...

Monday March 17, 2008

Arranged

This quiet little independent film is the story of the friendship between two New York City schoolteachers, an Orthodox Jew and a Muslim, who transcend the assumptions of those around them. They quickly realize that they have more in common...

Tuesday March 11, 2008

Categories: Crime, DVDs, Drama

No Country for Old Men

"I'm fixin to go do somethin dumbern hell but I'm goin anyways. If I don't come back tell Mother I love her." "Your mother's dead Llewelyn." "Well I'll tell her myself then." For the Coen brothers' first-ever adaptation of another...

Monday March 10, 2008

Categories: Comedy, DVDs, Drama, Romance

Dan in Real Life

No one is better than Steve Carell at playing clenched. In "Dan in Real Life," he plays a character so clenched he just about levitates off the ground. Dan is an advice columnist and a single parent. He cares for...

Monday March 3, 2008

Into the Wild

Every one of us at times hears the call of the wild, to match the wild of the outdoors to the wild that is inside us, to leave behind all of the petty complications of civilization and test ourselves down...

Thursday February 21, 2008

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

Charlie Bartlett

Charlie Bartlett (Anton Yelchin) has been kicked out of so many posh prep schools that the only thing left to try is the local public school. At first, he shows up wearing his prep school blazer and carrying an attaché...

Tuesday February 19, 2008

Categories: DVDs, Drama

Rendition

This is America. We do not torture people. But sometimes we send prisoners suspected of ties to terrorism to places where they do torture people. That is what happens to Anwar El-Ibrahimi (Omar Metwally), a chemical engineer who moved to...

Tuesday February 12, 2008

Categories: DVDs, Drama, Thriller

We Own the Night

This is a curious hybrid combining contemporary language and violence with a retro set-up right out of a 1930's James Cagney/Pat O'Brien movie and pulsating undercover law enforcement action of 1970's films like Serpico and The French Connection. The story...

Tuesday February 12, 2008

Categories: DVDs, Drama

The Martian Child

There's nothing wrong with a little fakery now and then if it smooths out some rough spots and eliminates some distractions. But this film goes past fakery into condescending phoniness that knocks the story off its tracks. What is frustrating...

Tuesday February 5, 2008

The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford

This movie may be about one of the most famous outlaws in the days of the Wild West, but it is not a bang-bang shoot-em-up Western. It is a broody psychological Western, a lot of peering out into endless prairie...

Monday January 28, 2008

Categories: Comedy, DVDs, Drama, Genre, Independent

Rocket Science

Hal (Reece Thompson) has something say but he has a lot of trouble saying it. On the bus, he can practice asking for pizza, but when it comes to the moment and he is standing in the cafeteria line, he...

Monday December 24, 2007

The Water-Horse

In the grand tradition of "he followed me home -- can I keep him?" movies, we have seen movies about children who are brought to adventure and understanding through dogs, horses, cats, a whale, a dolphin, dragons, geese, and...

Monday December 24, 2007

Persepolis

Marjane Satrapi brings her award-winning graphic memoir to the screen in a powerful story of growing up in Iran as the Shah was ousted and hopes for democracy were crushed by the rise of the fundamentalists. Named for the legendary...

Friday December 14, 2007

The Kite Runner

This faithful adaptation of the worldwide best-seller puts a struggle for personal redemption and atonement in the context of devastating divides, ethnic, cultural, poltical, and moral, set in Afghanistan before, during, and after the Soviet invasion of 1979. Loyalty,...

Wednesday November 7, 2007

Categories: Drama, Genre, Movies, Reviews

Lions for Lambs

It is more op-ed than movie. "Lions for Lambs" is a well-meaning attempt to encapsulate and move forward one segment of our current political debates. But it is mostly speeches, not stories....

Monday September 24, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies, Thriller

The Kingdom

The highlight of this film is over by the time it begins. A brief credit sequence outlines the relationship between the US and Saudi Arabia in provocative, trenchant terms covering the Saudi nationality of Osama Bin Laden and most 9/11...

Friday August 24, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies

Chalk

A kinder, gentler mockumentary, this black and white film's greatest strength and weakness is its unwillingness to be too tough on the high school teachers and administrators it portrays. The writers, director, and stars of this movie are all former...

Thursday August 23, 2007

Categories: Biography, Drama, Movies

Into the Wild

Every one of us at times hears the call of the wild, to match the wild of the outdoors to the wild that is inside us, to leave behind all of the petty complications of civilization and test ourselves down...

Tuesday August 21, 2007

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Illegal Tender

There's a chance, but a very slight chance that 20 years from now this could be one of those films whose pulpiness overcomes its dopiness. But I doubt it. Oh, it is fun to see Wanda de Jesus get all...

Tuesday August 14, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

The Nanny Diaries

Oh, we all love to feel superior to rich people, don't we? It makes us feel so nice and smug. They may have the fancy apartments and couture, but we have a lock on authenticity and unpretentiousness, right? That's what...

Wednesday July 18, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Musical

Hairspray

I am not sure which is the more amusingly surprising -- the idea that one of the most painful struggles in American history could become the subject of a light musical comedy, or the idea that it comes from one...

Tuesday July 10, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies

Resurrecting the Champ

Critic-turned-writer/director Rod Lurie produces old-fashioned potboilers, and that's not necessarily a bad thing. His unabashed melodramas can be refreshing in an era when very little of what we see onscreen takes on big issues or provocative positions. But this time,...

Wednesday May 30, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies

Gracie

When it rains, baseball players go to the locker rooms and put on their street clothes, but soccer players stay on the field, according to father/coach Bryan Bowen (Dermot Mulroney). So we get not one but two high-tension moments as...

Wednesday May 23, 2007

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Mr. Brooks

I have to give this film credit for embracing its craziness. This is one movie that proudly raises its freak flag high and lets it wave. But that does not mean it works. Mr. Brooks (Kevin Costner) is an upstanding...

Wednesday May 9, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

Georgia Rule

Minow rule: If Hector Elizondo barely makes an appearance in a Garry Marshall film, watch out. Or, I should say, don't watch. Marshall wisely does his best to include the talented Elizondo in every one of his films. If the...

Saturday May 5, 2007

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Jindabyne

Parents should know that this film deals with very disturbing themes, including the discovery of the dead body of a young woman who may have been raped. There are scenes of nudity and graphic wounds. Characters drink (sometimes to excess),...

Wednesday May 2, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

Lucky You

Maybe if it had been made in the 1940's or 50's in black and white, maybe if it starred Frank Sinatra and Lee Remick, maybe if we had never seen better films like "The Hustler," maybe this script might have...

Monday April 16, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

Knocked Up

Here's the secret for making a raunchy comedy work -- it has to be sweet and even a little bit romantic. What the makers of films like American Pie and The 40-Year-Old Virgin understood is that the "oh, no, they...

Friday April 13, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

In the Land of Women

If you've see the ads with vulnerable cutie Adam Brody from "The O.C." kissing willowy cutie Kristen Stewart (the kid in Panic Room and growing up very nicely), you probably think it must be a romantic comedy. That's what they...

Friday April 13, 2007

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Fracture

This is not a who-dun-it. It's a will-they-be-able-to-prove-it. As in the old Columbo television series, we know from the beginning who pulled the trigger. We see Ted Crawford (Anthony Hopkins) shoot his wife in the head because she was having...

Wednesday April 11, 2007

Disturbia

This nicely nifty little thriller takes Hitchcock's classic Rear Window and updates it to the era of cell phones and webcams. Kale (Shia LeBeouf) is under house arrest for hitting a teacher. For three months, he has to wear an...

Friday April 6, 2007

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Perfect Stranger

Was Ashley Judd at the hairdresser the day this script came in? She's usually the star of movies like this -- the low-level potboiler with the plucky girl in jeopardy, and Morgan Freeman around somewhere to give some sage advice....

Wednesday March 28, 2007

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

The Lookout

In this tense and twisty thriller, our narrator and central figure is Chris (the stunning Joseph Gordon-Levitt), a one-time high school hockey star and dreamboat who was brain-damaged in a car crash on prom night. Now, he works as the...

Thursday March 22, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

The Hoax

What is it about liars that makes them the focus of so many movies? In the past few months alone we've had Breech (from the same writer/director who gave us another real-life liar story, Shattered Glass) and Colour Me Kubrick:...

Wednesday March 21, 2007

The Last Mimzy

Two children find toys that make them more intelligent and powerful and send them on an adventure in this fine story for 4th-8th graders and their families. After he plays with the toys, Noah (Chris O'Neil) doesn't need his glasses...

Wednesday March 21, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies

Pride

Like all sports stories, this is about teamwork, but the team that matters here is Terrence Howard and Bernie Mac who bring such conviction and authenticity to this story of an inner-city Pennsylvania 70's swim team that you can smell...

Friday March 16, 2007

TMNT

They're teenagers, they're mutants, they're ninjas, and they're turtles. Up from the sewers by way of some handy toxic waste, those Renaissance-named, three-fingered, ninja-fighting, pizza-eating turtle siblings are back in their first all-CGI adventure. They say funny-tough things like, "I'm...

Friday March 16, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies, Romance

Away From Her

Parents should know that this is a very sad movie with themes that may be disturbing to some audience members. Characters use brief strong language. Families who see this movie should talk about some of their own stories about losing...

Thursday March 15, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

I Think I Love My Wife

Chris Rock has often said he admires the work of Woody Allen, and in Rock’s latest film, "I Think I Love My Wife," the comedian tries to channel a very “Allen” vibe. Like Allen, he writes, directs, and stars. And...

Tuesday March 13, 2007

Categories: Drama, Fantasy, Movies, Thriller

Premonition

With little style and no substance, this low-wattage forgettable thriller plays like a rejected episode of "The Twilight Zone." Linda (Sandra Bullock) wakes up every day in a different reality (and a different sleeping outfit -- she has quite the...

Thursday March 1, 2007

300

"Everyone will kneel to you -- if you will kneel to me." That is the offer made by a gold-dusted, multi-pierced Xerxes of Persia to King Lionidas (Gerard Butler) of Sparta in this visually sumptuous version of the battle of...

Wednesday February 28, 2007

Zodiac

We still don't know for sure who was -- or is -- the California serial killer known as the Zodiac, the name he used in a series of letters he sent to San Francisco newspapers in the late 1960's and...

Tuesday February 20, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies, Thriller

The Number 23

There are 23 things wrong with this movie. Or maybe there are 24. Or 165. To be honest, I lost count. Despite this film's best efforts, it never persuaded me that there was anything special about the number 23.It began...

Thursday February 8, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies, Thriller

Hannibal Rising

My first Hannibal Lecter was Brian Cox in Manhunter . As dazzling as Anthony Hopkins was, that's still my favorite Hannibal portrayal. Like Hopkins, Cox showed us Lecter's mesmerizing stillness and unnervingly penetrating mind. In both Manhunter and The Silence...

Saturday February 3, 2007

The Namesake

Ashima (Indian superstar Tabu) pauses before entering the living room to meet her prospective bridegroom and his family. Their shoes have been left outside the door, according to the customs of her home in India. Ashima sees that inside the...

Saturday February 3, 2007

Categories: Action/Adventure, Drama, Movies

The Astronaut Farmer

Once upon a time there was a farmer who wanted to build a rocket ship and orbit the earth. And there were some evil ogres who wanted to stop him. That's the best way to describe this slight fairy tale...

Saturday February 3, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies, Thriller

Breach

Robert Hanssen was the head of the Soviet department in the FBI. And he was working for the enemy. Over a period of 22 years, he sold vital secrets to the Soviet and Russian governments for $1.5 million, resulting in...

Saturday February 3, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

Black Snake Moan

Things are not going well for Lazarus (Samuel L. Jackson). He has been living a life right out of a blues song. His wife left him. For his brother. And now, he has found an almost-naked young woman, badly beaten,...

Saturday February 3, 2007

Bridge to Terabithia

Thirty years ago, a young mother named Katherine Paterson wrote a book to console her son David after his close friend was killed in an accident. That book went on to win the Newberry, children's publishing's highest honor, and to...

Saturday February 3, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies

The Namesake

Ashima (Indian superstar Tabu) pauses before entering the living room to meet her prospective bridegroom and his family. Their shoes have been left outside the door, according to the customs of her home in India. Ashima sees that inside the...

Friday February 2, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies, Thriller

The Messengers

The trailers for "The Messengers" don’t do it justice — there’s a lot more potential in this movie than appears in the Grudge- and The Omen-like snippets shown as teasers. The idea isn't bad. It’s in living up to this...

Sunday January 28, 2007

Categories: Drama, Movies

The Situation

Parents should know that this film contains disturbing wartime violence involving military and insurgent groups. Characters are injured and killed. There are some non-explicit sexual situations. Characters drink, smoke, and use some strong language. A strength of the movie is...

Thursday January 25, 2007

Categories: Drama, Fantasy, Movies, Romance

Blood and Chocolate

There was enthusiastic applause in the theater when the name of author Annette Curtis Klause appeared in the opening credits. The book, about a teenage girl in Maryland whose werewolf issues serve as a metaphor for the sometimes-disturbing forces in...

Tuesday January 23, 2007

Smokin' Aces

This is a flashy, nasty, hyper-violent story about a lot of people who are very, very interested in a snitch, magician and five time entertainer-of-the-year Buddy "Aces" Israel (Jeremy Piven). He's about to turn state's evidence against his long-time cronies...

Monday January 22, 2007

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

Catch and Release

For the first time, screenwriter Susannah Grant not only writes but directs with this messy romantic weepie about a woman whose fiance is killed just before the wedding. Grant is known for writing movies with strong female characters, from Disney's...

Monday January 1, 2007

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies

Freedom Writers

Here is the formula for movies about idealistic young teachers who go into bad neighborhoods: 1. Idealistic teacher goes into bad neighborhood and is aghast at poor conditions and cynicism of the school administration. 2. Students treat teacher with contempt...

Wednesday December 27, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies

Notes on a Scandal

Long-time teacher Barbara Covett (Judi Dench) doesn't even pretend to care anymore. The other teachers come back from summer break with thoughtful reports -- or apparently thoughtful reports -- on their departments and their plans, but she turns in three...

Wednesday December 27, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Perfume: The Story of a Murderer

It's an engaging idea -- to make a movie about the one sense least able to be evoked by film, the sense of smell. The great triumph of the cinema is the way it unites sound, words, and images to...

Friday December 22, 2006

Children of Men

"A baby is God's opinion life should go on," Carl Sandburg said. So, in a world where babies have stopped being born and the death of the youngest person on earth is an international tragedy, there seems to be no...

Wednesday December 20, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Musical

Dreamgirls

If my movie reviews had headlines, this one's would be: "A Star is Born." More like a Supernova. Jennifer Hudson explodes onto screen in this incendiary production of the Broadway musical inspired by Motown and the Supremes. She is mesmerizing....

Wednesday December 20, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Thriller

The Good Shepherd

You can see what drew director Robert DeNiro and co-producer Francis Ford Coppola to this film about the beginnings of the CIA. It resonates with many of the same themes as their great triumph Godfather II. In both stories, men...

Monday December 18, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies

Rocky Balboa

"You throw a big shadow," someone tells Sylvester Stallone in his sixth appearance as heavyweight Rocky Balboa, the character he created for the Oscar-winning Rocky). And those five previous films throw a big shadow, indeed, making this slight coda seem...

Wednesday December 13, 2006

Categories: Biography, Drama, Movies

Miss Potter

As delicate as the title character's watercolors, this gentle story about the author and illustrator of The Tale of Peter Rabbit very winning. Renee Zellwegger plays the quiet daughter of conventional parents who don't quite know how to respond to...

Monday December 11, 2006

Categories: Biography, Comedy, Drama, Movies

The Pursuit of Happyness

If a man goes from homeless single dad to multi-millionaire stockbroker, you know there has to be a movie. This one has the good sense to star Will Smith and his real-life son Jaden. Their natural chemistry and Smith's natural...

Wednesday December 6, 2006

Blood Diamond

December brings us the thinking person's thrillers -- all of the explosions and shooting and close calls of a summer movie, but with a more serious purpose and a more distinguished pedigree. Like Syriana and Traffic, this is the story...

Tuesday December 5, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Sports

We Are Marshall

At least in movies, sports are almost always about redemption, community, and triumph. Sports -- like movies -- provide a controlled world with boundaries within which we can work through issues that seem insurmountably complex outside the chalk lines on...

Tuesday December 5, 2006

Categories: Action/Adventure, Drama, Movies

Apocalypto

There are at least three movies here and two of them are great. There is the classic adventure saga of the hero who is trying to get home and save his family. Mel Gibson, as director, has created brilliant action...

Tuesday December 5, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Mystery, Thriller

The Good German

Director Steven Soderbergh has created a loving tribute to the films of the 1940's that is more accomplished than effective. It is such a meticulous re-creation of the techniques and technology of the era that it seems jarring to see...

Sunday December 3, 2006

Categories: Comedy, DVDs, Drama, Holidays, Romance

The Holiday

Amanda (Cameron Diaz) has a successful business cutting up new Hollywood releases into three-minute trailers that make the films look as enticing as possible. Writer-director Nancy Meyers essentially cuts up classic romantic comedies and reassembles them for modern consumption. The...

Thursday November 30, 2006

Charlotte's Web

E.B. White's book, Charlotte's Web, is a genuine classic for readers of any age, a beautifully written literary novel about loyalty and loss, friendship and the importance of a perfectly chosen word. The book began with a little girl named...

Thursday November 30, 2006

Turistas

The growing trend in horror is to be as disgusting as possible — the story need not be involved, as long as it includes some form of stainless-steel torture and preferably five to six young backpackers/tourists/campers/other people away from home....

Tuesday November 28, 2006

Categories: Drama, Family Issues, Movies

The Nativity Story

Jean Kerr once wrote of school Christmas pageant with a moving depiction of the nativity that consisted of two young children crossing a bare stage. They stopped briefly. Joseph said, "Mary, 'tis a cold, cold night." "'Tis," she replied. And...

Monday November 20, 2006

Deja Vu

A heart-pounding thriller with a time-travel twist, "Deja Vu" will not leave you thinking you've seen it all before. Denzel Washington plays Doug Carlin, an ATF agent called in to investigate a bombing. Someone, perhaps a terrorist, has blown up...

Friday November 10, 2006

Categories: Drama, Family Issues, Movies

Opal Dream

Antoine de Saint-Exupery wrote in The Little Prince, "It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye." That is the theme of this gentle story about a little girl whose...

Wednesday November 8, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Harsh Times

If David Ayer the director paid David Ayer the screenwriter for this script, he should ask himself for some of his money back. The screenplay is awfully close to Ayer's own Training Day, the film that won Denzel Washington his...

Wednesday November 8, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

A Good Year

Plonk is a Britishism for cheap, low-quality wine -- not undrinkable, by any means, just nothing special. As much could be said for this film, lightly based on the helium-weight plonk of a best-seller by Peter Mayle. Some movies begin...

Wednesday November 8, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

A Good Year

Plonk is a Britishism for cheap, low-quality wine -- not undrinkable, by any means, just nothing special. As much could be said for this film, lightly based on the helium-weight plonk of a best-seller by Peter Mayle. Some movies begin...

Wednesday November 8, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Thriller

Babel

In the Bible, the story of Babel is a cautionary tale of hubris. The whole world had a common language until God, seeing that the people were building a huge tower together, "confused their speech." They could no longer understand...

Tuesday November 7, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Fantasy, Movies, Romance

Stranger Than Fiction

Who among us has not leaned into the bathroom mirror as we brushed our teeth, thinking about what a narrator might be saying about us if we were in a story? "Our hero prepared for battle as though he was...

Friday October 27, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

Running With Scissors

The appeal for actors of movies about hideously dysfunctional people is obvious. They're fun to play, and always good for awards consideration. Which script would you go for, the umpty-umpth "meet cute" romantic comedy or the one where you play...

Wednesday October 25, 2006

Catch a Fire

A sizzling performance by Derek Luke ignites this story about Patrick Chamusso, a South African oil refinery worker who became caught up in the fight against apartheid. Chamusso who did his best to stay out of trouble and care for...

Wednesday October 18, 2006

The Prestige

As if we should believe him, Hugh Jackman’s character proclaims in “The Prestige” that magicians have a “circle of trust.” “The Prestige” takes that circle of trust and twists it into a Russian roulette, with Jackman betting on black and...

Wednesday October 18, 2006

Flags of Our Fathers

Clint Eastwood's first of two films about the WWII battle at Iwo Jima is sincere, competent, and respectful. He powerfully conveys the madness and brutality of battle and the conflicting feelings of thosw who fight -- dedication, loyalty, patriotism, fear,...

Sunday October 15, 2006

Marie Antoinette

With this third film, we can begin to see the themes emerging in the work of writer/director Sofia Coppola. Again, she has given us the story of a sensitive, vulnerable young woman trying to find a place and some meaning...

Sunday October 15, 2006

Flicka

"No one's riding that loco thing!" Well, of course as soon as we hear that line we know someone's going to have to ride it. And in this very fine family film, the rider will be Katy (Alison Lohman), just...

Friday October 13, 2006

Categories: Drama, Horror, Movies, Mystery, Thriller

The Grudge 2

There are two types of people who awake with an uneasy feeling on Friday the 13th: the superstitious, and those who just can’t stomach the release of another horror sequel, remake, or (in this case), sequel to a remake. But...

Wednesday October 11, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance, Thriller

Man of the Year

So, what if Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert decided to run for President? First of all, didn't we already see that movie, when it was called Head of State and starred Chris Rock? (Okay, he didn't play a comedian, but...

Saturday October 7, 2006

Categories: Biography, Drama, Movies

The Queen

Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) is feeling more triumphant than nervous as he goes to Buckingham Palace for the queen's formal invitation to serve. He and his wife all but snicker as they consider the anachronism of royalty in the modern...

Wednesday October 4, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

The Departed

Brilliantly acted, enthrallingly told, this vast, operatic saga centers on two men, Colin Sullivan (Matt Damon) and William Costigan (Leonardo DiCaprio), both Boston Southies. Both are pretending to be the opposite of what they really are. Both are caught between...

Sunday September 24, 2006

Categories: Action/Adventure, Drama, Movies

The Guardian

"Have you learned the lessons only of those who admired you, and were tender with you, and stood aside for you? Have you not learned great lessons from those who braced themselves against you, and disputed the passage with you?"...

Friday September 22, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies

Haven

Director Frank E. Flowers’ full-length debut, "Haven," is a study in sin. Set mostly in the Cayman Islands, the film’s characters live in a world where the stakes are high and the people are higher. It could be written off...

Friday September 22, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Fantasy, Movies, Romance

The Science of Sleep

Stephane (Gael Garcia Bernal of The Motorcycle Diaries) lives across the hall from Stephanie (Charlotte Gainsbourg), though for some reason he goes to elaborate lengths to have her think he lives on the other side of town. They share more...

Wednesday September 20, 2006

Jet Li's Fearless

It does not have the ravishing images of Hero but it does not have the cheesy plot of Cradle 2 the Grave, either. For his last action film, Jet Li has decided to give us a reverential biopic about Huo...

Monday September 18, 2006

Flyboys

Has this script been in a drawer somewhere since 1942? It sure seems like it. It's "inspired" by the absorbing true story of Americans who enlisted with the French armed forces in World War I, flying aircraft that were more...

Monday September 18, 2006

Categories: Classic, DVDs, Drama

All the King's Men

This is the story of the rise and fall of a Southern politician, based on the career of Louisiana's Huey Long. Here, the politician is named Willie Stark (Broderick Crawford), and the Southern state where it takes place is never...

Wednesday September 13, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Remake, Sports

Gridiron Gang

The biggest shock in this film comes at the very end. It is not a spoiler to say that there's the usual "here's what happened to the characters" round-up. The shocker is the reminder that the murderers and drug dealers...

Tuesday September 12, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

The Last Kiss

A man tells his pregnant girlfriend he will marry her when she can name three couples who have been happy together for more than five years. She offers her parents and "that cute couple from the pond." He reminds her...

Monday September 11, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Mystery, Thriller

The Black Dahlia

Director Brian de Palma is all about the look and the mood and paying tribute to the classic old movies he loves. He loves them so much he crawls inside them. He imitates them like an art student sitting in...

Thursday September 7, 2006

The Protector

Martial arts actor Tony Jaa’s follow-up to his breakout performance, 2003’s Ong-bak, could be called Kill Bill with a conscience. The violence is so pervasive that viewers can’t help but become increasingly desensitized, and there’s a clear attention to style...

Monday September 4, 2006

Hollywoodland

Is there a more heartbreakingly unsolveable mystery than a suicide? The only person who really knows what happened is gone. Even if we find out the how, we who are left behind will always wonder why. Those who are still...

Friday September 1, 2006

Categories: Drama, Horror, Movies, Mystery, Thriller

The Wicker Man

Fans of the original The Wicker Man appreciate the film for many reasons: Its dichotomy of paganism and Christianity, its skillful use of Celtic folk music, its eerie and overbearing ambience. Although some might find it slow, disturbing, and at...

Friday September 1, 2006

Crank

Crank -- as in the highly potent and highly agitating street drug, as in cranked up, as in dizzying cuts and swoops with the camera to replicate a disorienting strung-out high followed by an even more disorienting and strung-out crash....

Thursday August 31, 2006

Crossover

This is one air ball of a movie, a talented cast and an appealing idea stranded by a clunky script. It shoots. And it shoots and shoots and shoots, but it never scores. Tech (Anthony Mackie) works in the mall,...

Friday August 25, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

Little Miss Sunshine

When the family in this movie learns that their van cannot be repaired in time for them to get to the Little Miss Sunshine competition, they decide to drive it as is. And that means that in order to get...

Thursday August 24, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Musical, Romance

Idlewild

Percival, a mortician by day/speakeasy piano player by night, sleeps under an assortment of singing cuckoo clocks and serenades a lovely corpse dressed as a bride. The engraved rooster on a silver liquor flask talks to its owner, also named...

Saturday August 19, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Family Issues, Movies

Material Girls

The problem with a movie about rich people learning about real life that is written by rich people who have no idea about real life is that you end up with something like this -- a movie about two rich...

Wednesday August 16, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Mystery, Romance, Thriller

The Illusionist

This feels like a fairy tale, so I will begin: "Once upon a time..." ...there was a princess who loved a commoner but was engaged to a cruel prince. The commoner and the princess played together as children, but when...

Tuesday August 15, 2006

Categories: Biography, Drama, Movies, Sports

Invincible

In this movie, a father tells his son that one great touchdown by Steve Van Buren of the Philadelphia Eagles got him through 30 years of factory work. We often identify so completely with the teams and athletes we love...

Wednesday August 9, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Musical, Romance

Step Up

A ballet dancer needs a partner for the biggest show of the year. She sees a boy working off his community service time at her school showing some of his dance moves off to a friend. Could he do? Will...

Monday August 7, 2006

Categories: Drama, Epic/Historical, Movies

World Trade Center

September 11, 2001 was one of those days that cleave history in two, forever separating the Before and the After as irrecovably as it separated those who were lost from those who survived. As we watched it over and over...

Wednesday August 2, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Mystery, Thriller

The Night Listener

Armistad Maupin (Tales of the City) didn't trust his own story in his adaptation of his novel inspired by something that happened to him. But what could have been a thoughtful psychological drama raising issues of identity and trust and...

Tuesday July 25, 2006

Miami Vice

The original "Miami Vice" was Michael Mann's decade-defining television show. It ran from 1984-89 and everything about it was fresh, edgy, and influential. The t-shirt under the Armani jacket with photogenic beard stubble look, the best-selling techno-synth musical theme that...

Wednesday July 19, 2006

My Super Ex-Girlfriend

Even with a face contorted with rage and vengeance and a voice echoing through the streets of New York as well as the theater, it’s difficult not to like Uma Thurman as the needy, controlling and manipulative Jenny Johnson/G-girl. The...

Monday June 26, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

The Devil Wears Prada

It is just too bad Meryl Streep is so good at drama and suffering and accents and stuff like that because that means we don't get enough of a chance to see how brilliantly funny she is. Her under-appreciated work...

Wednesday June 21, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Fantasy, Movies

Click

Like Tom Cruise, Adam Sandler has based his career on playing shallow, callow boy-men who learn painful for him/humorous for us lessons about the importance of growing up. Those stories have enduring appeal on two levels. First, we get the...

Tuesday June 20, 2006

Waist Deep

A standard gangsta bang-bang movie with a script like a rap song benefits from charismatic performers and smooth writing and direction by Vondie Curtis Hall, who plays it like an urban western -- a strong, quiet loner takes on a...

Monday June 19, 2006

The Lake House

In honor of Sandra Bullock's best all-time movie opening with "The Proposal," this week's DVD pick is another Bullock favorite. Movie romances must have two things: an obstacle to keep the apart and a reason to root for them to...

Sunday June 11, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Sports

Peaceful Warrior

Saturday June 3, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Musical

A Prairie Home Companion

Garrison Keillor's voice is a national treasure. It is so warm, so magnetic, even hypnotic that it lulls you into a whole different dimension, an idealized past located somewhere between innocent nostalgia and ironic self-awareness, as though Norman Rockwell painted...

Friday June 2, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

The Break-Up

Someone should file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission about false advertising for this film. The trailer and the ads indicate that it is a romantic comedy. But it is, in fact, neither romantic nor a comedy; it's more...

Wednesday May 17, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Mystery, Thriller

The Da Vinci Code

A character in this movie's version of the Catholic organization Opus Dei explains that their mission is to follow doctrine very strictly. That was director Ron Howard's secular mission as well with this adaptation of the world-wide best-seller. He and...

Wednesday May 10, 2006

Poseidon

This remake is so stripped down it doesn't even have time for two of the three words of the original: this isn't The Poseidon Adventure -- it's just "Poseidon." If they remake it, it will be called "Pos." Top-notch action...

Wednesday May 10, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Sports

Goal!

A soccer-mad friend sat beside me in the theater, leaning over from time to time to explain what was going on in the game on the screen or point out an in-joke about the appearance of a real-life figure from...

Wednesday April 26, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Sports

Stick It

This fresh, fun, funny, and smart story about a teenager "sentenced" to return to the gymnastics training she thought she had left behind has all the sizzling attitude of a great floor routine, and all of the discipline and heart...

Tuesday April 25, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies

Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont

Sunday April 23, 2006

Categories: Drama, Epic/Historical, Movies

United 93

I cannot tell you whether you are ready to see a movie about the only hijacked flight that did not hit its target on September 11, 2001 because a brave group of passengers subdued the hijackers, crashing the plane into...

Friday April 21, 2006

The Sentinel

What this movie gets right is the dry, cynical, slightly gallows-ish humor of people who spend their lives on constant alert, knowing that 999 out of a thousand of the "suspicious" activities they check out will be nothing. They are...

Sunday April 2, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Lucky Number Slevin

Slevin (Josh Harnett) is not having a good week. He lost his job and his girlfriend. He was mugged and his wallet and suitcase were stolen. He decided to visit a friend, who seems to have disappeared. But the door...

Wednesday March 29, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies

ATL

The star of this movie is first-time director Chris Robinson, who took an appealing but conventional story of five friends on the brink of adulthood and made it come alive with a vibrant, pulsing, slightly cynical but ultimately hopeful tone...

Wednesday March 29, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Mystery, Thriller

Basic Instinct 2

Someone should tell Sharon Stone that you can't step in the same river twice. Or you can't go home again. Or that for every Godfather II there are a hundred Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloos. Anything to stop another big, boring...

Friday March 24, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Musical

Take the Lead

It never fails. No matter how many times rap songs win the Oscar, no matter how many years have passed since Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers were at the top of the box office as they danced the Carioca and...

Tuesday March 21, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Inside Man

Spike Lee's brilliant direction and a clever and surprising script from first-timer Russell Gewirtz provide an ideal setting for four of the most watchable actors in the business in a heist film that transcends and tweaks its genre. It has...

Thursday March 16, 2006

Categories: DVDs, Drama, Family Issues

Akeelah and the Bee

"Prestidigitation." Akeelah (Keke Palmer) has just won her school's spelling bee and everyone is impressed and proud. But Dr. Larrabee (Laurence Fishburne), who, like Keke, grew up in Compton, pushes her further, with this long word that means magic. "Prestidigiation."...

Wednesday March 15, 2006

V for Vendetta

"Remember, remember, the fifth of November, gunpowder treason and plot. I see no reason why the gunpowder treason should ever be forgot.” Who says good-looking, brawny action flicks cannot also have brains to match? “V for Vendetta,” based on Alan...

Wednesday March 15, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Crime, Drama, Movies

Find Me Guilty

Director Sidney Lumet revisits the themes of two of his most memorable films in this movie, but with less success. Like Dog Day Afternoon, it is a true story with colorful characters and both comic and tragic overtones. Like 12...

Tuesday February 28, 2006

16 Blocks

When a cop at a crime scene needs someone to stay with the bodies until the detectives arrive, he asks "who don't we need?" That would be tired, slow, Jack Mosley (Bruce Willis). As soon as the other cops leave,...

Saturday February 25, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

Madea's Family Reunion

As the Borg say on "Star Trek," "Resistance is futile." Don't even try to get in the way of Madea, that pistol-packing, Bible-thumping, larger than life powerhouse and force for good creation of Tyler Perry, who also plays the part....

Friday February 17, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Mystery, Thriller

Freedomland

This movie’s inability to live up to its potential is nearly as epic as its misleading title. In other hands, "Freedomland" might have played a jazz-like riff of personal loss and moving vignettes against the 4/4 beat of racial injustice...

Tuesday February 14, 2006

Categories: Drama, Horror, Movies, Mystery, Thriller

Final Destination 3

It’s like deja vu, says the main character, only of something I haven’t done yet. Wow, get out of my head, Wendy! We are barely minutes into “Final Destination 3” and already we, the audience, are sharing her feeling. We...

Tuesday February 7, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Thriller

Firewall

What can you do if you want to rob a bank and hotshot Harrison Ford has designed a foolproof security system? Well, firewalls may be unbreakable, but people are not. So, you tell him that if he doesn't break into...

Friday February 3, 2006

Eight Below

The dogs rescue the humans, but will the humans rescue the dogs? Can they? A scientist (Bruce Greenwood) arrives at a National Science Foundation base in Antarctica, in search of a rare meteor. Vehicles are too heavy to take over...

Saturday January 28, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

Imagine Me & You

Love at first sight can be thrilling, but it can very very inconvenient when it happens to a bride who is walking down the aisle at the time. Especially if the loved-at-first-sight object of affection is another woman. Rachel (Piper...

Wednesday January 25, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Remake, Sports

Annapolis

Sincere performances and some star charisma can't save this movie from its derivative screenplay, a retread of every "callow youth learns what it means to be a man" service drama. This movie samples An Officer and a Gentleman and Top...

Monday January 23, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

Something New

They are so afraid we won't get the point that this movie has our heroine literally letting down her hair, literally putting some color into her beige world, and -- in case we still don't get it -- literally having...

Wednesday January 18, 2006

The New World

It is beautiful to look at. Director Terrence Malick knows how to create images of stunning beauty and power. Those images are especially compelling in this story of Captain John Smith and the because they show us what it was...

Wednesday January 11, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies

End of the Spear

Can you forgive the unforgiveable? Fifty years ago, five American missionaries were killed by members of the most violent culture ever studied by anthropologists, the Waodani tribe in Ecuador. The homicide rate was 60 percent. The widows and children and...

Tuesday January 10, 2006

Categories: Drama, Movies, Sports

Glory Road

A man who coaches high school girls' basketball gets a job at a small Texas school and not only takes them to the nationals, where they defeat the long-time champions in a stunning upset, he changes the course of college...

Tuesday January 10, 2006

Tristan + Isolde

Tristan and Isolde have suffered enough. This movie feels like overkill. Oh, their legend will survive. But this classic comics-style perfume commercial of a re-telling will not. The ampersand is a giveaway. "And" isn't good enough? An ampersand is, what,...

Saturday January 7, 2006

Categories: DVDs, Drama

The Corn is Green

Miss Moffat (Bette Davis), an educated and very independent woman, arrives in a small Welsh mining village in 1895 to live in a house she inherited and start a school for the miners’ children. She is told, “Down here, they’re...

Friday January 6, 2006

Categories: Crime, Drama, Movies, Romance

Match Point

In Stardust Memories, Woody Allen's character refers to his mother's cooking as putting food through the "deflavorizing machine." His latest movie feels as though he has taken his complex and powerful Crimes and Misdemeanors abd put it through a deflavorizing...

Wednesday December 21, 2005

Categories: Comedy, DVDs, Drama, Romance

The Family Stone

If you believe the previews or have seen the poster of an aggressively extended and bejeweled ring finger, then you might presume that “The Family Stone” is going to be a light-hearted romp of a comedy. Boy brings home uptight...

Tuesday December 20, 2005

Categories: Comedy, Drama, Movies, Romance

Rumor Has It

In the savage satire The Player, actor/screenwriter Buck Henry makes a hilarious pitch for a sequel to The Graduate, something of a savage satire itself, though cloaked in the garb of a romantic fantasy of rebellion and authenticity. The thing...

Thursday December 15, 2005

Categories: Drama, Movies, Romance

Brokeback Mountain

Director Ang Lee is a master of repressed love whether between young Taiwanese men in The Wedding Banquet, Jane Austen’s class-conscious Brits in Sense & Sensibility, duty-bound warriors in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, or even monsters and scientists in The...

Tuesday December 13, 2005

King Kong

This is not just one of the most thrilling action movies ever made – it is more like five or six of the most thrilling action movies ever made. It is not quite twice as long as the usual movie,...

Sunday December 11, 2005

Last Holiday

Every night, Georgia Bird (Queen Latifah) cooks a spectacular meal, arranges everything perfectly, takes a picture of it for her "possibilities" scrapbook and then feeds it to the boy who lives next door while she microwaves a frozen diet dinner...

Friday December 9, 2005

Munich

Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meier said, "I can forgive them for killing my children. I cannot forgive them for forcing my children to kill theirs." At the 1972 Olympic games in Munich, there was very little security because the Germans...

Wednesday December 7, 2005

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

The perennial children's classic by C. S. Lewis has been lovingly, thrillingly, enchantingly, brilliantly brought to screen in this flawless adaptation of the first of the "Narnia" series. (Note for purists -- yes, it is chronologically the second in the...

Tuesday November 22, 2005

Categories: Drama, Movies, Thriller

Syriana

Most movies tell us everything and then they tell it to us again, just to make sure. Some movies, like this one, tell us too little, making us work at it, making us lean forward in our seats, fill in...

Tuesday November 22, 2005

Casanova

Mistake number one may be the title. There may be times in history when it is possible to have an appealing lead character whose primary interest in life is women, but this doesn't seem to be it. For centuries, people...

Sunday November 20, 2005

Categories: Drama, Movies, Musical, Romance

Rent

When thinking about a Tony- and Pulitzer-prize winning musical based on an opera, an almost-entirely-sung story about homeless artists, some of them drug addicts, some infected with the AIDS virus, the director of Mrs. Doubtfire is not the first thought...

Tuesday May 31, 2005

The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants

This is a story about one summer in the life of four friends, told with sincerity, heart, and a little bit of magic -- the very same qualities that made the original book and its sequels a "you have to...

Friday December 13, 2002

Categories: DVDs, Drama

About Schmidt

Warren Schmidt (Jack Nicholson) sits at his desk as though he was standing at attention during a full-dress inspection. As he watches the clock move from 4:58 to 5:00, he is as clenched as a fist. It is Warren's last...

Friday December 13, 2002

The Best Years of Our Lives

Three men are returning home from service during WWII. Fred Derry (Dana Andrews), a bombardier, Al Stephenson (Frederic March), a middle- aged footsoldier, and Homer Parrish (Harold Russell), a sailor who has lost both hands, fly back to their home...

Friday December 13, 2002

Categories: DVDs, Drama, Series/Sequel, Sports

Rocky

Plot: Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone) is a sweet-natured but not very bright boxer and small-time enforcer for a loan-shark. He has a crush on Adrian (Talia Shire), the painfully shy sister of his friend, Pauly (Burt Young). Apollo Creed (Carl...

Friday December 13, 2002

Categories: DVDs, Drama, War

Deterrence

Teens may think that it does not really matter who gets elected President. Or, they may think that the important issues in this year's election are the domestic controversies that attract most of the coverage, like abortion and gun control....

Friday December 13, 2002

All the King's Men

Huey Long was man of gigantic proportions, an epic, almost operatic figure who rose to power as the greatest of populists, succumbed to corruption, and was murdered at age 42. His story inspired a Pulitzer Prize-winning book and an Oscar-winning...

Friday December 13, 2002

Amadeus

Antionio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham in an Oscar-winning performance), the court composer, should have been Mozart. He followed all the rules, worked hard, and cared deeply. Music was his life. Mozart (Tom Hulce) arrives, a bawdy, bratty, foolish boy whose...

Friday December 13, 2002

Categories: DVDs, Drama

American Beauty

Lester Burnham (Kevin Spacey) is a 42-year-old man who has lost touch with anything that made him feel alive. His wife Carolyn (Annette Benning) is a realtor, so highly focused that she is clenched. His daughter Jane (Thora Birch) is...

Friday June 14, 2002

Categories: Classic, DVDs, Drama, Romance

Splendor in the Grass

In this classic of repressed teenage sexuality, set in the 1920s, Bud (Warren Beatty) and Deanie (Natalie Wood) are high school students who are newly in love and breathless with desire, physical and emotional. Deenie's parents are unable to give...

Saturday March 9, 2002

Categories: DVDs, Drama, Romance

The Quiet Man

Tall American Sean Thornton (John Wayne) arrives in Innisfree, a small, beautiful Irish village and meets Michaleen Oge Flynn (Barry Fitzgerald), who drives him into town. Something of a busybody, Michaeleen is very curious, and is delighted to find that...

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