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05 Jan

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Grade: B

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is truly original.    Brad Pitt stars as a man who is born old in a baby’s body.  As the years go by, he grows younger.  The whole theme is about time, and the relativity of time, and how we move through time – or how time moves through us.

We start in a hospital room in New Orleans.  A dying old woman gives her daughter an old journal to read to her.  It’s the life story of Benjamin Button.  The movie goes back to this hospital room as the story progresses.

Baby Benjamin is abandoned by his father when his mother dies in childbirth.  But he finds a home in an old-folks home where he fits right in.  It’s an untraditional family, but he thrives, learns and grows.  It is here that he meets Daisy, the granddaughter of a resident.  She’s a young girl, and they immediately form a connection.  As Daisy gets older, and Benjamin gets younger, their lives come together for a short period of time. Cate Blanchett plays Daisy with much grace.  Daisy is a dancer, an artist who expresses herself unabashedly.  She’s curious, and drawn to this mysterious man she can’t possibly understand.

The movie is a little bit magical.  We have to suspend disbelief, and put ourselves in Benjamin’s world.  But the pace is slow, and the movie runs long – about 2 hours 45 minutes.

Beautifully filmed, written, and acted.

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05 Jan

The Counselor

Grade: D

Despite an all star cast that includes Michael Fassbender, Penelope Cruz, Brad Pitt, Javier Bardem and Cameron Diaz, The Counselor is just plain bad. Really, it has to be the worst movie I’ve seen all year, and maybe ever.

A convoluted story, gratuitous sex and violence, cliche villains, and not one hero in the mix – this movie is one big waste of time. I don’t want to waste any more of my time going over it in a review – just take my advice and skip this one.

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05 Jan

The Constant Gardener

Grade: B

The Constant Gardener is billed as a thriller, but I didn’t find it all that thrilling. The mystery is what everyone is up to, and the audience figures it out before the lead character. Considering that this couple is married, you think they guy would have more of a clue how his wife spent her time. Ralph Fiennes, charming as always, is the title character. Rachel Weisz, so good in this role, is his wife. The villain this time is the pharmaceutical company doing experimental treatments in Africa, where the two of them work. Well acted, great supporting cast, just really not all that intriguing.
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05 Jan

The Company Men

Grade: B

The Company Men is a drama that almost plays like a documentary.  Ben Affleck stars as a successful company man, a sales guy making big bucks.  When the company downsizes, he loses his job, and with it, the status that high high salary afforded him.  His marriage suffers, his self-esteem plummets, but he eventually figures out what he has to do.  This is an interesting social commentary reflective of the times we are going through right now.  Terrific cast, great performances, compelling story.
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05 Jan

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

Grade: B

I saw this first installment of The Chronicles of Narnia on DVD.  I wanted to make sure I saw it before I went to see the sequel, Prince Caspian.  I remember loving the books when I was a kid, but I couldn’t remember much about the story at all.  It was as magical as I could have imagined.

Four children are sent to stay with a distant relative to get away from their city home during World War I.  They discover a wardrobe that leads them to Narnia, a magical land filled with magical creatures.  All is not sweetness and light there, though.  A war is looming, another good versus evil battle where the kind-hearted lion, Aslan, must fight against the cold-hearted witch.  Tilda Swinton plays the witch, the self-declared Queen of Narnia, to the hilt.  Why Aslan has disappeared for so long and then suddenly shows up again must be better explained in the book, because it wasn’t addressed much in the film except to reference “the prophesy” of “two sons of Adam and two daughters of Eve” coming to change things for the better.  James McAvoy has a nice role as a faun, a kind of half-man, half-goat who befriends the youngest child.

Lots of Christian undertones, which is to be expected since the book is written by C.S. Lewis.  Charming movie, looking forward to the next one!

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05 Jan

The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian

Grade: B+

It helps a lot to have seen the first movie.  That’s where a lot of the character development takes place, and a lot of the back story that you really need to know to understand this second installment.  Based on the popular books by C.S. Lewis, the Narnia movies are really beautiful, they bring the magic to life.  In Prince Caspian, the four children return once again to Narnia and soon find themselves entrenched in another battle to save the place.  They meet up with the Prince, who has been thrown out of his neighboring kingdom by his power-hungry uncle, and they join forces.  The girls are great role models, strong and smart.  Of course there are war scenes, but they’re all very sanitized, no blood or guts.
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05 Jan

The Butler

Grade: A

Finally a movie that is a must-see!

The Butler is the true story of Cecil Gaines, a butler who worked in the White House through many presidencies.

We first meet Cecil as a child, picking cotton on a plantation with his parents. Although the civil war has won freedom for slaves, you’d never know it by the way the family and the other worker are so terribly abused. Cecil ends up working inside the home, coached by the plantation’s matriarch, and a new career is born.

Cecil as an adult is played by Forest Whitaker, who will surely get nominations for hit performance.  Cecil is a smart man, and he is able to parlay his experience into opportunities, and he ends up employed by the White House.

Oprah Winfrey plays Cecil’s wife Gloria.  She’s a marvelous actress, and we feel her pain as she suffers from loneliness, and struggles with her obligations as wife and mother during the tumultuous civil rights confrontations during this time in history.

Lee Daniels directs.  This is a fabulous movie – filled with rich history told through one remarkable man’s story.  Highly recommended.

 

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04 Jan

The Bucket List

Grade: C+

When rich hospital owner Edward (Jack Nicholson) ends up a patient in his own hospital, his roommate is Carter (Morgan Freeman).  Ed is the playboy, spoiled and set in his ways.  Carter is the family man, who sacrificed and worked hard for his wife and children.  The mis-matched pair have nothing in common, except that they are each given about six months to live.  A friendship forms, and the two come up with a “bucket list” – a list of things they want to accomplish before they “kick the bucket.”  Soon they’re out of the hospital and on a trip around the world.  As they get to know each other, they re-set their priorities, and learn what it really means to be a friend.

Wonderful performances from two masters of their craft – Nicholson and Freeman have terrific chemistry.  Sad, but sweet, and some nice moments for each of these fine actors.

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04 Jan

The Break Up

Grade: D

I’ve been waiting for a good romantic comedy to come around for a long time. Unfortunately “The Break Up” isn’t it. I’m sorry to say that there is nothing funny about this movie. It’s depressing, actually. The whole thing is flawed from the start. We see Brook (Jennifer Aniston) and Gary (Vince Vaughn) meet cute at a baseball game. Then over the opening credits we get a montage of photographs of the two of them lovey-dovey. Their first scene together starts with a fight, and the rest of the movie goes downhill from there. What we have here, people, is a failure to communicate. Instead of talking out their issues, going to therapy, having any kind of adult interaction, what the characters choose to do is to embark on a seriies of revenge tactics meant to get the other party to come around and apologize… huh? I guess if they actually did take the high road there wouldn’t be any material for a movie. But then again, there’s not much movie here anyway. I found myself thinking: “What’s the point?” These are two unlikeable people. We never see them interact happily with each other. We never have any reason to root for them to get back together. And we’re not even rewarded with a happy ending. Dismal. Then there’s a waste of talent that parades through, Ann-Margret, Judy Davis, Jason Bateman – what are they doing there? Why would they sign up to be a supporting player in this dreck? The only character to give me a chuckle is Jon Favreau’s bartender, who has a great scene with Vince Vaughn. I also liked Vincent D’Onofrio as Vince’s big brother – great casting there. But really, if you saw the previews for “The Break Up” you’ve seen the best bits. Jennifer shows off her toned, tanned body – Vince mugs for the camera. There’s no audience for this movie. It’s a terrible date movie – you’ll be arguing and depressed afterwards. Teens will hate it because they won’t understand it. And adults will hate it because they’ve been there, done that, and gotten over it years ago. Spare yourself. go see Cars instead!
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04 Jan

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas

Grade: B+

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas takes place in Germany during the time of the Concentration Camps.  It looks at one family where the father is assigned to run one of the camps, and he moves his wife and two children out of the city and into the country to be with him during this new job.  The boy is lonely, isolated as he is, and goes exploring.  He stumbles upon the camp, which he perceives to be a farm, and a boy, whose prison uniform he takes to be pajamas.

The German boy is just 8 years old, and doesn’t fully comprehend what is going on.  As he starts to piece things together, he makes friends with the boy in the striped pajamas.  Meanwhile, the wife is devastated when she learns just what goes on at the camp, and it causes a strain in the marriage.

This is one of the saddest stories I’ve ever seen.  It is played out really well, hitting all the right emotional notes.  Just be prepared, there is no happy ending, no neatly wrapped up story.  It’s just sad, as it should be.

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