Entries Tagged 'At the Movies' ↓
October 15th, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews
- You Again
- OPENING: 09/24/2010
- STUDIO: Touchstone Pictures
- RUN TIME: 105 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
What doesn’t kill you…is going to marry your brother!
Opening Statement
At first glance, You Again looks like another run-of-the-mill romantic comedy headlined by a largely female cast. Since I never viewed the trailer prior to going to the theater, this was my assumption when I glanced at the poster. As it turns out, You Again wasn’t what I expected, yet does that mean it’s still worth a look?
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September 25th, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews
- Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
- OPENING: 09/24/2010
- STUDIO: Fox
- RUN TIME: 133 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
An Oliver Stone Film
Opening Statement
Few films have encapsulated the era in which they were made quite so much as Oliver Stone’s 1987 film Wall Street. Sure, the film falls short of being a masterpiece, but it reached a kind of greatness in the way it captured the rabid, no-holds-barred capitalism of the 1980s. Stone intended the film as a cautionary tale, and intended the character of Gordon Gecko as a villain. Alas, the character was almost too magnetic: Gecko was less a warning than an inspiration to many aspiring young businessmen. 23 years later, as America’s financial crisis continues to dominate the headlines, it only seems natural for Stone to revisit the world of finance.
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September 18th, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews
- The Town
- OPENING: 09/17/2010
- STUDIO: Warner Bros.
- RUN TIME: 123 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
Welcome to the bank robbery capitol of America.
Opening Statement
For a certain window of time in the early part of the 21st Century, Ben Affleck became Hollywood’s whipping boy. Maybe it was all the tabloid attention he was getting due to his high-profile relationships with two women named Jennifer; maybe it was the level of his stardom in contrast to his seemingly limited talents, but the man took a lot of flack. Then in 2007, Affleck directed the sensitive crime drama Gone, Baby, Gone. The film was well-regarded by critics and audiences, almost instantly earning Affleck a measure of respect and credibility he hadn’t enjoyed since the Good Will Hunting days. Now Affleck has returned to the directing game, hoping to repeat his success by offering up The Town, another crime drama set in Boston. While it’s not quite as memorable as its predecessor, it’s another well-made flick that confirms Affleck knows what he’s doing behind the camera.
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August 24th, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews, Uncategorized
- Colin Fitz Lives!
- OPENING: 08/13/2010
- STUDIO: Baby Shark, Inc
- RUN TIME:91 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
A comedy about love, death and rock ‘n roll.
Opening Statement
In July of 1996, Robert Bella decided he wanted to direct Tom Morrissey’s script, then called simply, Colin Fitz. For two weeks, he and his small cast and crew, working mostly on deferred salaries and in the rain, completed production on this, Bella’s directorial debut. The universe lined up many times for this film, from being able to grab a treasure trove of stars on the rise such as John C. McGinley, William H. Macy, Mary McCormack, and Matt McGrath, to being accepted into Sundance in 1997 – a high honor, indeed. There was much praise being heaped upon its head, from Roger Ebert to Harry Knowles. Everything seemed to be going very well for this independent feature but when time came to bring out the wallets to buy it, no one did. For 13 years, it sat in Robert Bella’s closet and for 13 years he tried desperately to sell it, if for nothing else to pay back all the investors he owed over $150,000 to. It finally made it to the big screen, but was it worth the wait?
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August 23rd, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews
- Lebanon
- OPENING: 08/13/2010
- STUDIO: Sony Pictures Classics
- RUN TIME:93 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
A look at war from the inside of a tank
Opening Statement
“Man is steel. The tank is only iron.” On July 12, 2006, conflict began between Israel and Lebanon. It began when Hezbollah soldiers fired rockets into Israel and blew up two armored Humvees patrolling the Israeli side of the border. Three soldiers died. Two other soldiers were taken by Hezbollah into Lebanon. Israel responded and for 34 days they carried out air strikes and rolled into Lebanon with tanks and foot soldiers. The writer/director of Lebanon, Samuel Maoz, was himself a gunner in one of those tanks, so this is a sort-of autobiography of his experiences. You can feel that placing this story on paper and on celluloid was a form therapy for Samuel. He places us, as the audience, in the dark, dank, cold, putrid, unwelcoming pit of a monster that he knows all too well. And because the camera never leaves the inside of that tank, save for two small book-ending scenes, he shows us what it felt like to be sequestered in those claustrophobic spaces only understanding the outside world what we see through the gunner’s scope.
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August 14th, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews
- Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
- OPENING: 08/13/2010
- STUDIO: Universal Pictures
- RUN TIME: 112 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
An epic of epic epicness.
Opening Statement
Until now, Edgar Wright’s career has been almost exclusively dedicated to collaborations with his pals Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. After a string of successful efforts including Spaced, Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz, Wright is finally digging into new territory with Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, a Pegg-n-Frost-free adaptation of Bryan Lee O’Malley’s delightful comic book series. While the film isn’t quite on the level of the books, it’s yet another entertaining outing from Wright that’s stuffed to the brim with nifty moments.
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August 9th, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews
- The Other Guys
- OPENING: 08/06/2010
- STUDIO: Columbia Pictures
- RUN TIME: 107 min
-
ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
They’re not heroes — they’re The Other Guys.
Opening Statement
The buddy-cop subgenre is firmly in the sights of director Adam McKay and frequent collaborator Will Ferrell in their new movie, The Other Guys, and while it might not match the heights of absurdity achieved in Anchorman, the pair’s first and perhaps finest cinematic effort, it still stands tall as one of this summer’s funniest entertainments.
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July 30th, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews
- Dinner for Schmucks
- OPENING: 07/30/2010
- STUDIO: Paramount Pictures
- RUN TIME: 114 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
Takes One to Know One.
Opening Statement
My reaction upon seeing the Dinner for Schmucks trailer was a blend of pain and pleasure. I like Steve Carell and Paul Rudd, but the premise seemed awfully flimsy. I also experienced a blend of pain and pleasure watching the film itself. To my surprise, the premise actually works, but other elements of the script do a lot of damage to a film boasting a wide variety of entertaining performances.
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July 30th, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews
- Salt
- OPENING: 07/23/2010
- STUDIO: Sony
- RUN TIME: 100 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
Who is Salt?
Opening Statement
I have to admit, the trailers for Salt didn’t exactly inspire much excitement in yours truly. It looked like a fairly typical action film rooted in a typical “innocent person wrongly accused” plot; a bit of generic noise to fill a gap in the summer movie season. I’m glad to have been proven wrong. Salt is one of the loopiest films of the summer, but also a tremendously well-crafted thriller and a grandly entertaining experience.
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July 17th, 2010 — At the Movies, Reviews
- Inception
- OPENING: 07/16/2010
- STUDIO: Warner Bros.
- RUN TIME: 148 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
Your Mind is the Scene of the Crime
Opening Statement
After achieving remarkable success both critically and financially with The Dark Knight, Director Christopher Nolan has taken a break from Batman to pursue his own original idea: Inception, based on a script that Nolan developed for over a decade. The result is a film that sees Nolan reaching dizzying heights as an artist; an intelligent, original serving of thunderous elegance that towers over the rest of the summer movie crop like a giant in Lilluput.
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