ccm22

Posts Tagged ‘Movie Reviews’

In Theaters Movie Reviews Ocotber 24, 2009

In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on October 24, 2009 at 8:38 pm

Carey Mulligan & Peter Sarsgaard in the movie An Education


An Education

Novelist Nick Hornby’s screenplay for British journalist Lynn Barber’s memoir sands a few edges off the
corners of its heroine’s story, yet the film is awfully charming. It bops along with so much esprit and lively acting.

 

Hilary Swank & Richard Gere in the movie Amelia

Hilary Swank & Richard Gere


Amelia

This Amelia Earhart biopic isn’t a bad movie, but it’s distressingly ordinary for such an extraordinary
subject. Played by an aptly cast and game Hilary Swank, Earhart becomes a checklist of Historical Legend accomplishments

 

Freddie Highmore & Kristen Bell in the movie Astro Boy

Astro Boy Anime Movie Feature


Astro Boy

Astro Boy first appeared in a Japanese comic in 1951. His adventures led to a ’60s Japanese TV series, then to the first of the American spin-offs, and now “Astro Boy” hits the big screen. I wish the film version of “Astro Boy” provided a stronger antidote to mediocrity. With the voices of Freddie Highmore, Kristen Bell and Nicolas Cage

 

John C. Reilly & Patrick Fugit in the movie Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant

John C. Reilly & Patrick Fugit


Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant

In this campy vampire flick, the truce between vampires who sip, leaving humans a little weaker but
none the wiser, and those who gorge, leaving death and destruction behind, comes to an end. This is an adaptation of the
frothy kids book series by Darren Shan.

Movie Reviews … In Theaters

In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on October 18, 2009 at 3:27 am

Max Records & Catherine Keener in the movie Where the Wild Things Are

Where the Wild Things Are


Where the Wild Things Are


Max Records & Catherine Keener in Where the Wild Things Are

Based on Maurice Sendak’s 338-word storybook, Spike Jonze’s film strikes minor chords and plaintive emotions where other directors would’ve gone for the throat. A boy (Max Records) coping with a household unsteadied by divorce sets sail for an island where the Wild Things wrestle with the same clique issues and hurt feelings the boy deals with back home.

 

Michael Sheen & Timothy Spall in the movie The Damned United

Michael Sheen & Timothy Spall


The Damned United


Michael Sheen & Timothy Spall in The Damned United

This engaging film, a winner for soccer fans and soccer idiots alike, focuses on Brian Clough, one-time English footballer turned failed manager of the Leeds United club. Michael Sheen, who played David Frost in ‘Frost/Nixon,’ portrays Clough

 

Jamie Foxx  & Gerard Butler in the movie Law Abiding Citizen

Jamie Foxx & Gerard Butler


Law Abiding Citizen


Jamie Foxx & Gerard Butler in Law Abiding Citizen

Gerard Butler and Jamie Foxx star in this brutal, preposterous revenge fantasy that taps into a lot of fears about the American legal system. Butler plays a gadget-maker who survives the slaughter of his family and sets out to get even, and then some. Foxx is the politically ambitious Philadelphia prosecutor who lets one of the killers get off easy so the other will be executed.

 

Natalie Portman & Maggie Q in the movie 'New York, I Love You'

Natalie Portman & Maggie Q


New York, I Love You


Natalie Portman & Maggie Q in ‘New York, I Love You’

The ongoing ‘Cities We Love’ project that began three years ago with ‘Paris, je t’aime’ continues its global exploration with ‘New York, I Love You.’ Eleven directors and 16 screenwriters contributed to the omnibus affair. I like the idea of the film more than the film itself; the batting average with the Paris project was a good deal higher. Nonetheless, this one provides some compensatory satisfactions

 


Couples Retreat


Vince Vaughn & Jason Bateman in Couples Retreat

Four couples on a tropical retreat think they’re in for umbrella drinks and beach time. They’re met instead with a stern regimen of ‘couples-whispering’ tactics. Though it boasts a good cast that also includes Jason Bateman, Kristen Bell and Jon Favreau, ‘Couples Retreat’ is pretty meager and more than a little depressing.


A Serious Man


Michael Stuhlbarg & Richard Kind in A Serious Man

Set in 1967 in the Minneapolis suburbs, ‘A Serious Man’ is a tart, brilliantly acted fable of life’s little cosmic difficulties, a Coen brothers comedy with a darker philosophical outlook than ‘No Country for Old Men’ but with a script rich in verbal wit.


Good Hair


Chris Rock & Paul Mooney in Good Hair

Comedian Chris Rock’s ‘Good Hair’ consists of two documentaries braided together, one enjoyable, the other enjoyable and provocative. Rock and a film crew covered the 2007 edition of the Bronner Bros. Hair Show in Atlanta and its climactic Hair Battle Royale


Free Style


Corbin Bleu & Penelope Ann Miller in Free Style

Corbin Bleu may have graduated from “High School Musical,” but he stays close to his Disney Channel roots in “Free Style,” a squeaky-clean sports flick about a poor kid with big dreams (and bigger hair) trying to make it in the motocross world.

In Theaters … Movie Reviews

In Uncategorized on June 7, 2009 at 10:48 pm

Movie Reviews: This week’s theater releases …

Movie Reviews in Theatres this Weekend January 30, 2009

In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on January 31, 2009 at 12:54 am
The Movie Taken Starring Liam Neeson

The Movie Taken Starring Liam Neeson

Taken Movie Review

Liam Neeson plays a former CIA spook whose clandestine career bled into his home and led to a divorce. After traffickers kidnap his daughter in Europe, our hero has 96 hours to save her, and he wastes no time karate-chopping his way through every mime and baguette peddler in France.

New in Town Movie Review

Renee Zellweger plays a hotshot Miami businesswoman whose firm assigns her to oversee a workforce reduction at a food-processing plant in New Ulm, Minn. Easygoing Harry Connick Jr. plays the union rep.

The Uninvited Movie Review

After a stay in a psychiatric clinic, teenager Anna (Emily Browning) returns home, with her father (David Strathairn) now engaged to the caregiver (Elizabeth Banks) who oversaw Anna’s invalid mother in her last days, before a fatal fire. Anna attempted suicide after the tragedy, and now she’s plagued by visions, one of which appears to be her late mother, crying out for revenge.

Inkheart Movie Review & Trailer

Brendan Fraser plays a single dad able to usher characters out of books and into the real world. Years earlier, his wife disappeared into a fantasy called “Inkheart,” trading places with a street performer (Paul Bettany). Dad and his daughter are now being stalked in preparation for the arrival of the fearsome “Shadow.”

Waltz With Bashir Movie Review & Trailer

Academy Award Oscar Nomination for Best Foreign Film

An extraordinary achievement and a true visual feast, Ari Folman’s animated “Waltz With Bashir” is a detective story as well as an moral inquiry into the specific horrors of one war (the 1982 Lebanon War), and one man’s buried memories of it.

Outlander Movie Review & Trailer

Viking warriors and a stoic intergalactic traveler (Jim Caviezel) join forces in the eighth century to combat an enormous beetle with whiplash stingers.

The movie overheats quickly, but Neeson and the filmmakers manage to make the Charles Bronson-style simplicity work.

Movie Reviews In Theatres this Weekend January 16, 2009

In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on January 16, 2009 at 6:24 pm

Daniel Craig in a scene from the movie Defiance


Defiance


Daniel Craig and Liev Schreiber portray two of the four Bielski brothers, Jewish farmers and smugglers who led more
than 1,000 Jews to safety in a Belarusian forest during the Holocaust.

  • Paul Blart: Mall Cop
  • Notorious
  • Hotel for Dogs
  • The Movie “Che”
  • Last Chance Harvey

    Dustin Hoffman and Emma Thompson smooth over most of the problems just by showing up and doing what they do for a living. Hoffman plays a composer who meets the lonely-hearts frump played by the luminous Thompson and invites her to his daughter’s wedding.

    Sex Drive Movie Review Starring Josh Zuckerman, Clark Duke

    In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on October 19, 2008 at 12:49 am

    Sean Anders’ derivative gross-out movie “Sex Drive” is easier to take if you accept that the answer to every baffling plot question is “because it’s a teen sex comedy.”

    For instance, why is nice-guy protagonist Ian (Josh Zuckerman) still a virgin at 18, even though he’s reasonably clean, social and movie-star cute?

    Because he’s in a teen sex comedy.

    See Full Movie Review & Movie Trailer:

    Sex Drive Movie Review Starring Josh Zuckerman & Clark Duke – Movie Review & Movie trailer

    The Secret Life of Bees Movie Review (2 Stars)

    In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on October 19, 2008 at 12:43 am

    The real shame about “The Secret Life of Bees” is that it tries so very, very hard to hit all its marks.

    Reasonably faithful adaptation of New York Times best-seller? Check. Heartfelt message of racial tolerance? Check. Highly marketable cast? Double check.

    See Full Movie Review & Movie Trailer:

    The Secret Life of Bees Movie Starring Queen Latifah Movie Review & Movie Trailer

    Max Payne Movie Review Starring Mark Wahlberg (1 Star)

    In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on October 18, 2008 at 11:59 pm

    If an action film strains to impress an audience, over and over, with slow-motion first-person kill shots, I am not likely to be impressed. But even the target demographic for “Max Payne,” the ones who spent untold hours working their way through the game, may well resist director John Moore’s film.

    Full Review & Movie Trailer:
    Max Payne Movie Review & Max Payne Movie Trailer Starring Mark Wahlberg