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Internet Movie Database
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05 Jan

The Namesake

Grade: B+

Beautiful movie directed by one of my favorite directors, Mira Nair.  The story follows a young man from India, who moves to the U.S. with his new wife to start a new life. They have a son, Gogol, named after the man’s favorite author, and then a daughter, Sonia.  The children grow up as Americans, and must learn to reconcile their Indian culture and heritage with their very western environment. “The Namesake” is really Gogol’s story, how he learns and grows and changes from the experiences in his life, how his father influenced him, and how he forges a life for himself that brings together all of the elements that make up the man he has become.  The characters are all richly drawn, the location scenes are incredible.  I cried when the family visited The Taj Mahal.  Wonderful movie, definitely worth seeing.
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05 Jan

The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor

Grade: D+

The first two Mummy movies weren’t bad.  They should have just stopped there.  In this third installment the story has been run into the ground.  We start out with Brendan Fraser and Maria Bello (stepping in for Rachel Weisz) newly retired and bored.  Their college aged son has dropped out of school and gone on an archeological dig all on his own.  Then the couple gets called on for one more “mission” and they run into their sun and are surprised that he’s uncovered such a big find – the tomb of the dragon emperor.

The story is just like the Hellboy story – the emperor is basically “frozen” because a witch cast a spell on him, and his army is frozen as well.  And the bad guys want to bring him back to life – I say “bad guys” because it’s never really clear who these people are or what they really expect to accomplish with all this.  So of course, pandemonium ensues, there are tons of fight scenes, special effects, on and on… yawn.  Then as some forced comic relief, the brother gets into silly scrapes and it’s all very slapstick.

Which audience would appreciate this kind of a movie.  I’d guess pre-teen boys.  Any younger and they’d be scared.  Any older and they’ve seen it done before, and better.

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05 Jan

The Monuments Men

Grade: B+

The Monuments Men is an entertaining film based on a real life story. George Clooney directed the movie, co-wrote and co-produced it, and he stars as the leader of an unlikely group of older art experts who join the service in order to save some of Europe’s most precious pieces during World War II. Even though The Monuments Men is set during war time and and there are war scenes, there is also some humor, and wonderful relationships among the men in this motley crew. Cate Blanchett brings some elegance and gravitas to the group. Worth seeing.

  • Plot summary:  Based on the true story of the greatest treasure hunt in history, The Monuments Men is an action drama focusing on an unlikely World War II platoon, tasked by FDR with going into Germany to rescue artistic masterpieces from Nazi thieves and returning them to their rightful owners. It would be an impossible mission: with the art trapped behind enemy lines, and with the German army under orders to destroy everything as the Reich fell, how could these guys – seven museum directors, curators, and art historians, all more familiar with Michelangelo than the M-1 – possibly hope to succeed? But as the Monuments Men, as they were called, found themselves in a race against time to avoid the destruction of 1000 years of culture, they would risk their lives to protect and defend mankind’s greatest achievements. From director George Clooney, the film stars George Clooney, Matt Damon, Bill Murray, John Goodman, Jean Dujardin, Bob Balaban, Hugh Bonneville, and Cate Blanchett. The screenplay is by George Clooney & Grant Heslov, based on the book by Robert M. Edsel with Bret Witter. Produced by Grant Heslov and George Clooney.

    – Written by Sony Pictures Entertainment

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05 Jan

The Matador

Grade: B+

This is Pierce Brosnan like you’ve never seen him before. He’s scruffy, uncouth, socially inept, awkward, but not so dislikable that we really dislike him. His character is a hit man, good at what he does and proud of it, yet burned out in his work to the point that he’s having a kind of crisis of conscience. He befriends his polar opposite, Greg Kinnear, and they form an unlikely bond. Months later, when Pierce appears on the doorstep of Greg and his devoted wife, the friendship is renewed, and tested. It’s an interesting story, complex, and dark, and definitely original.
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05 Jan

The Master

Grade: C

The Master stars Joaquin Phoenix in a role that earned him an Oscar nomination for best actor.  His character, Freddie, is an alcoholic Navy veteran, out of control and lost.  He stumbles upon a kind of evangelical figure in “The Master” – aka Lancaster Dodd, played by Philip Seymour Hoffman, who also got a nom for his role.  The Master is charismatic, certainly unorthodox in his methods, and probably crazy.  There are many parallels and comparisons to L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology.

 

Amy Adams plays Dodd’s devoted wife.  Paul Thomas Anderson directs.

 

While interesting, the characters are all unlikeable, so it’s hard to root for anyone.  It’s kind of a no-win situation, between the manipulative and the stupid.   I can see the art in the filmmaking, but the story was unsettling, dark.

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05 Jan

The Love Guru

Grade: C

Mike Myers is a gifted comedian. Unfortunately, his are the gifts that keep on giving – over and over and over again.  The same basic jokes that were in the Austin Powers franchise are now recycled in The Love Guru.  If you like jokes about erections, the size of a penis, urine, animals having sex, little people (Myers pal Vern Troyer has a key role) being either being abused or being cruel, then you’ll probably like this movie.  I think the problem is that Mike Myers’ audience has grown up, but he hasn’t.  And this is a shame, because the basic underlying messages in this movie: you can’t love anyone until you can love yourself, and be the best you that you can be, are lost in so much of the mess.  There’s a whole unnecessary sequence about a sports anchor’s addiction, and his inappropriate comments on-air that totally misses.

I SO wanted to love this movie.  As everyone knows, I am Deepak Chopra’s biggest fan.  Deepak is mentioned throughout the movie as the fictional Guru Pitka’s (Mike Myers) perceived rival.  Deepak has a small cameo at the end, where he is sweet and genuine and lends some credibility to the circus at hand.  But it’s pretty obvious to me that this particular scene, and the other scenes shot with celebrities Mariska Hargitay et al, were shot on green screen – we never see the celebrity and the Guru in the same shot.

Jessica Alba plays the owner of the Toronto hockey team (Myers is from Canada and a huge jockey fan).  She provides a love interest, by some stretch of the imagination, for the love guru.  She hires him to come out and get her star player back on track by reuniting him with his estranged wife.  Wife in question is having a fling with “The Coq,” (Justin Timberlake, showing comedic chops) a goalie for the Los Angeles Kings, who got his name from being so well-endowed.

Ben Kingsley has a role as Guru Pitka’s guru – and he teaches him “DRAMA” which is an acronym for some spiritual lesson that doesn’t really make sense – it is a tool to move the action – the D being for “Distraction” – all a set up so that we get a glimpse of two elephants humping in the final moments, or shall I say “the climax” or the movie.

Of course, in the end it is Guru Pitka himself who learns the big lesson – and it all ends sweetly and happily with a cute Bollywood dance sequence at the end.  Loved the music throughout.

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05 Jan

The Lincoln Lawyer

Grade: B+

We haven’t seen Matthew McCoughnahey in a while – and this part, the title character in The Lincoln Lawyer, seems like it was written specifically for him.  He’s clever, charming, and smooth as an attorney who takes chances and gets away with it.  Marisa Tomei is smart and fresh as his former love and current legal adversary.  Ryan Phillippe is the client who makes him question his skills.  Great performances from a very strong cast.  Lots of surprises, and that’s a good thing.
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05 Jan

The Life Aquatic

Grade: C-

The previews for “The Life Aquatic” make this look like a kooky movie, and guess what? It is! It’s directed by Wes Anderson, the same guy who did “The Royal Tennenbaums.” That wasn’t one of my favorite movies, but I can’t resist Bill Murray, so I thought I’d give this one a shot. Well� I think it’s an acquired taste. I got the feeling that there were so many places where they were trying to be “off-the-wall” – and sometimes they were trying too hard. It didn’t come off as quirky as much as just plain silly to me. Props to Angelica Huston (love her!) and Jeff Goldblum for their contributions. Some nice moments, but overall, I could have missed it and not noticed.
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05 Jan

The Last Mimzy

Grade: A
Love this movie!  A little reminiscent of E.T., “The Last Mimzy” follows a brother and sister who find a mysterious package washed up on the shore of the family beach house.  When they begin playing with the “toys” they find in there, including a stuffed rabbit named Mimzy, they develop extraordinary intellect and sensitivity.  Of course, the adults in their lives don’t know what to make of all this, they’re confused and scared.  But the kids are intrigued, and clever enough to figure out their role in the grand scheme of things.  They end up saving the world!  Sweet, smart, well done all around.  A wonderful movie for everyone in the family.  It’s marketed mostly as a family film, but when my husband and I went to an evening show there were no kids in the audience, just adults out on date night.  Highly recommended!
MOVIE REVIEW ARCHIVES
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05 Jan

The Last Airbender

Grade: C

Oh, I wanted to love this movie.  The previews looked promising, and M. Night Shyalaman is an amazing director. The books are supposed to be fabulous – mystical and magical – and I really love the idea of something more of substance in a family movie, so I was really looking forward to “The Last Airbender.”

The effects are great.  You can see all the money, something like $116 million dollars (?) up on the screen.  But the whole thing fell flat very fast.  The script was bogged down in bad dialogue and the story dragged on.  There were no relationships that made us care about any of the characters.  The attempts at humor were corny at best.

Maybe kids under 12 would like the movie if it were shorter, and faster paced.  I’m way over 12 and I was shifting in my seat and trying to read my watch in the dark!

Too bad…

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