Showing posts with label #KevinCostner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #KevinCostner. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2016

Wknd Box Office: Everybody Wants Some!!, Criminal, The Jungle Book, The Adderall Diaries

Here is an interesting article from http://www.debbieschlussel.com/ reviewing some of the movies that came out over the past weekend. This follows this post about some of the movies from last week and THIS POST about some movies that have been released over the past few years that you might have missed! This all follows this post about guidelines to choosing good movies to watch yourself!

Wknd Box Office: Everybody Wants Some!!, Criminal, The Jungle Book, The Adderall Diaries

By Debbie Schlussel
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Here are my belated reviews of the new movies which debuted in theaters this weekend. Remember, you can always hear my movie reviews live, first thing every Friday morning on “The Pat Campbell Show” on KFAQ 1170 AM Tulsa at 7:35 a.m. Eastern, on “The James Show,” on KWTX 1230 AM at 8:30 a.m. Eastern, on “The Mike Church Show” on the Veritas Radio Network/CRUSADE at 10:05 a.m. Easter, and on “The Larry The Cable Guy Show” (sometimes on Thursdays) between 10:30 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Eastern on SiriusXM’s Jeff and Larry’s Comedy Roundup Channel 97. I do my movie reviews on all four shows, as well as some discussion of current political issues and pop culture topics.
* Everybody Wants Some!! – R: When I walked out of this movie, I told the studio reps that, while I like it, this is a higher brow “Porky’s” (the raunchy, sleazy 1981 “coming of age” flick) with better window dressing and more likable characters. It is that, but it has more charm and is slightly sweeter. But it’s still about “boys will be boys” and seek sex. So, if you grew up in the 1980s as I did, you will probably like it more than not. If you are older than 50 (maybe 55), you will probably hate this. I had mixed feelings about it because, ultimately, it’s really about chasing sex at all cost above and beyond everything else.
I loved the nostalgic look at the past, although I don’t remember seeing as many guys in mustaches in 1980. The movie takes place in August 1980 but seems more ’70s-ish. It’s written and directed by Richard Linklater of “Dazed and Confused” fame. He likes to write about his experiences growing up in Texas in the ’70s and ’80s, and this is more of that. He’s generally spot on in giving you the onscreen feel of the era. As a comedy, this hits the spot because it’s very funny. I laughed a lot. But, in the end, it’s the same old sleazy “coming of age” movie . . . except that now–in our age of 24/7 internet porn and zero scruples–it’s hip and acceptable (when I was a kid, Porky’s was for lowlifes to go see).
The movie follows Jake (Blake Jenner), who arrives at a Texas college, where he will be a freshman pitcher on the school’s baseball team. He and his teammates live in two houses that have a frat-like atmosphere. At first, he gets caught up in the culture of the houses and the team and the frenzy aimed at getting a girl alone in a room to have sex. But–and this is the upside–he eventually becomes a gentleman in his quest to romance a cute and charming dancer in the arts part of the college. Their romance does not involve sex, and maybe that’s the laudable lesson here. They spend an entire night together talking, with only a kiss between them. (The girl is played by Zoey Deutch, a mini-me of her mother, actress Lea Thompson–of “Back to the Future” fame). Jake is a likable character as is the leader of the house, “Finn,” played by actor Glen Powell. Finn shows the new kids the ropes and is very funny and likable despite his shameless ways.
There really isn’t much of a plot, other than following the lives of the players on the team in a very short period (the days before college begins). And in many ways it takes off where “Dazed and Confused” began–this is billed as that movie’s “spiritual sequel” (whatever that means–there is little spirituality here). Still, regardless of the plot, it’s entertaining, and I loved the soundtrack, featuring songs from the era. The clothes and cars from the period are spot-on, too. I laughed out loud when Finn mocks the “urban cowboy” clubs of the time and asks why they are in. Remember when John Travolta and Debra Winger helped make that stuff hip for a bit?
Beware, if you are a prude. This is rated “R” for a reason, several of them actually: nudity, sex, explicit language, and drug use. Again, I was entertained by this movie, but culturally, it contributes nothing. In fact, it’s on the cultural sewer side more than not. So I’m being generous (and am very reluctant and hesitant) when I give it . . .
HALF A REAGAN
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Watch the trailer . . .

* Criminal – R: This movie was, in theory, a great idea. In execution, not so much. I love science fiction and the idea here of transferring one man’s knowledge and experiences into the brain of another. But it turned out to be a jumbled, unpleasant, violent mess here. On top of that, this is the latest in a series of never-ending Hollywood contortions–more pretzel-esque than the kinkiest gymnast–to avoid showing us an Islamic terrorist as a villain. In this one, it’s a Spanish anarchist billionaire hacker and former CEO. Um, how many of those have attacked Americans in the last couple of decades? Yup, I have the same count: ZERO. And who is most likely to assassinate an American CIA agent in London? An Islamic terrorist or a . . . Spanish anarchist billionaire hacker and former CEO? Yes, we know it’s the former. But not in this preposterous flick.
Ryan Reynolds is the aforementioned CIA agent in London. He is killed early on in the movie, but his CIA boss (Jew-hater Gary Oldman) doesn’t know the location of the safe house where Reynolds took a hacker and CIA informant. The only possible way to get that information–locked inside the dead CIA agent’s head–is to use an experimental medical technique developed by a doctor (a very, very old and tired-looking Tommy Lee Jones). The technique involves using brain surgery and high-tech computer wiring to transfer the knowledge and memories of one man from his brain to the brain of another man. And the experiment needs the brain of a living man who has the memories portion of his brain wiped out. The only such man is a convicted serial killer and career violent criminal played by Kevin Costner.
At first, the experiment doesn’t seem to take hold, but soon Costner–who has by now escaped CIA custody–begins to have visions and flashbacks to events in Reynold’s life. He goes to Reynolds’ home and terrorizes his wife. But soon he begins to see the importance of his mission to find the safe house with the hacker. If he does not do so in time, the aforementioned Spanish anarchist billionaire hacker terrorist will get his hands on all of America’s nuclear codes, spy and operations information, and so on. In short, he’ll be able to hack in to everything that the U.S. government does at the highest and most classified levels. And the terrorist will use all of this to destroy the world. He already demonstrates this by sending missiles to nearly blow up a U.S. ship.
Costner’s hardened criminal is eventually softened by the dead CIA agent Reynolds’ memories–and this very slow and boring movie eventually heats up and improves at that point. But he still kills a bunch of innocent cops and others in the course of all that. And none of that seems to matter to anyone at the end, which is infuriating and unrealistic.
When things do finally get exciting, it’s not until the last 15-20% of the movie. And by then, I already lost most of the scant interest I had once this movie started to lull me into a snooze.
Like I said, great idea. Lackluster execution. What could have been a very exciting story was mostly incredibly dull (despite being packed with action and stunts).
By the way, Israeli actress Gal Gadot (who likes to star in Jew-hating, anti-Israel movies) is in this as Reynold’s wife. Who cares? Not me.
HALF A REAGAN
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Watch the trailer . . .

* The Jungle Book – PG: I’m not really sure yet another iteration of Rudyard Kipling’s “The Jungle Book” needed to be made (and, in addition to this latest one, yet another is scheduled to be released in a year or two). But this one, directed by Jon Favreau, is charming and entertaining for young kids and the parents who bring them. Although some of it is incredibly creepy and scary (more on that later).
Most of the animals in this are computer generated images (CGI). But, unlike most standard CGI, the animals here are incredibly lifelike and realistic. It doesn’t really look like CGI, but for a couple of brief instances or so.
You’re probably familiar with the story: a young boy is raised by the animals of the jungle, and thinks he’s one of them, even though he’s human. He’s been “abandoned” in the jungle because he went missing after his father was killed by one of the animals. The animals, though they find the jungle boy endearing and regard him as family, realize that eventually they must return him to the “man village,” as his presence in the jungle endangers all of the animals, and it endangers the boy, as well.
Most jungle animals you can think of are in this, including a very creepy, in-your-face giant python. And when I say, “in-your-face,” I mean it. A close-up of the snake’s head about to pounce on the jungle boy is frightening, especially if you see it in 3D as I did. If I had seen this as a kid, I would have had nightmares for weeks. It’s that real. And that’s why this movie has been declared too scary for kids by some parties. Also lifelike: the fires (“the red flower”) that consume the jungle.
The animals are mostly voiced by big stars, like Bill Murray, Christopher Walken, Israel-hater Ben Kingsley, Cuba-lover Charlize Theron, and Planned Parenthood tax-funding proponent Scarlett Johansson. Murray is funny as the lazy bear who enlists the jungle boy to secure bee hives for the bear’s meals. And he’s the character who most stands out, other than the snake. There is also a tiger who is trying to kill the jungle boy and chases him throughout the movie.
This isn’t the greatest kids movie, but it’s good enough for the purpose for which it is meant. And as a version of “The Jungle Book,” it’s better than workmanlike. It’s cute and entertaining for little kids and the parents who accompany them.
ONE REAGAN
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Watch the trailer . . .

* The Adderall Diaries – R: This is just awful. A complete, extremely boring waste of time. This is yet another one of those movies, the idea of which is better than the execution. It’s boring, slow, and disjointed, on top of the fact that instead of delving into the plot, it focuses on artsy fartsy crap. And no wonder. This is one of those low-budget, arthouse flicks that belongs there.
James Franco plays an author who writes about his childhood of abuse at the hands of his evil father. He writes of his life of drugs and homelessness and how he overcame it. He also wrote that his father was dead. The books sell, and he’s a successful, rising-star writer.
But, one day, his “dead” father shows up at one of Franco’s public readings of his book. And, thus, the rising career as a writer is ended (or, at least, paused) because he’s shown to be a fraud. The father claims none of it is true–that he was a good father and did the best he could, while his son, the writer, was a very troubled kid and problem child. Who is telling the truth? The movie never really tells us, though there are a series of disjointed, sudden flashbacks throughout the movie–all of which are ambiguous, once the father appears.
Anyway, because of the “dead” father’s appearance and claims the book is a lie and defamatory, Franco loses all of his book and writing deals, but for one. He’s set to write monthly (or weekly?) articles for a publication, and he manages to hold on to that gig because he pitches covering a murder trial as the topic of the articles. A wealthy man is on trial for killing his missing wife, whose body has never been found. Franco has visions of becoming the next Truman Capote by covering the trial. He also believes the hubby is innocent.
While covering the trial, Franco meets Amber Heard, a New York Times reporter also covering the trial. They begin a troubled romance that includes the use of drugs, including Adderall.
Like I said, the idea of this was interesting. But the brief trial coverage and scenes of the accused murderer (and what eventually happens with that) seem like an afterthought. And the relationship with Heard is uninteresting and bland. Even the interaction between the author and his allegedly dead, allegedly abusive dad is banal and boring.
This movie is pointless and a waste of time. And I struggled to get through it. You would, too, but I’m saving you the ten-bucks-plus and time you’d have wasted. Because now you’ve been forewarned.
TWO MARXES
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Watch the trailer . . .

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Monday, February 23, 2015

Wknd Box Office: McFarland, USA, The DUFF, Hot Tub Time Machine 2

Here is an interesting article from http://www.debbieschlussel.com/ reviewing some of the movies that came out over the past weekend. This follows this post about some of the movies from last week and THIS POST about some movies that have been released over the past few years that you might have missed! This all follows this post about guidelines to choosing good movies to watch yourself!


Wknd Box Office: McFarland, USA, The DUFF, Hot Tub Time Machine 2



By Debbie Schlussel
Two out of three new movies debuting in theaters today are decent. So things are definitely getting better.
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* “McFarland, USA“: I had mixed feelings about this. I mostly liked it and do recommend it. But, while it is an incredibly uplifting and positive movie (and if I had kids, I would take them to see it), it also contains several scenes using the stock narrative that most White people are prejudiced and bigoted (in this case, against Hispanics of Mexican descent). This Disney movie has an overall positive message: that no matter who you are or where you come from, through hard work and doing what’s right, you can succeed in America. And, for that reason alone, it’s worthy. I thought that this was going to be a propaganda film for illegal alien amnesty. But, thankfully, it wasn’t. In fact, immigration and the immigration status of those in the movie are never mentioned (even though in real life, they were probably issues).
Based on a true story, Kevin Costner plays coach Jim White, a high school teacher who coaches his high school cross country team to winning the first ever California state championship in the sport in 1987, the year the movie takes place. White moves his family to McFarland, California, a town dominated by immigrants from Mexico, who work the fields picking produce. He notices that, after school, the kids–running to the fields to help their families pick the produce–run at incredibly fast speeds, faster than the top runners in the State of California. And he convinces the local high school to start a cross country team. Despite naysayers, doubters, and bigots on competing teams, his runners work hard, stay the course, and win the state championship. And, on top of that, despite the fact that none of their parents were educated beyond the ninth grade, all of those on the team got college scholarships to run cross country and all of them graduated.








What bothered me: every single scene of competition between the McFarland team and others in California, includes some sort of racism or bigotry on the part of the other teams, all of whom are completely White. It’s the usual stock narrative that all Whites–except, in this movie, the coach and his family–are bigots. But there is little shown in the reverse, even though we know that, in real life, there is also bigotry against Whites in the Mexican immigrant community. (Ever hear of La Raza (The Race)?) This typical Hollywood plot line and the lack of balance on this issue troubled me. But it is a small part of the movie when compared to the positive parts of it.
One other thing: Jim White says that his relationship with his players involved a lot of Christianity and group prayers with his runners. None of that is shown, other than one scene toward the end, in which his runners engage in a brief, pre-race prayer to G-d. White told USA Today that this faith aspect of his team’s success is largely erased in the movie. And, today, he’d probably be sued by the ACLU over it.
Like I said, this movie is overwhelmingly positive and moral, typical of Disney fare and suitable for family viewing. And if it did not include the narrative of constant White bigotry, I would give it THREE or even THREE-AND-A-HALF REAGANS. Because it does include that, I give it . .
TWO-AND-A-HALF REAGANS
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Watch the trailer . . .

* “The DUFF“: I (and probably you) have seen a million versions of this movie before–ostracized nerdy girl is persecuted at school, but eventually becomes a swan and gets the hot guy (not necessarily in that order). But, still, I enjoyed this movie, despite some minor raunchy humor. The movie is funny and has a good message: that your inner worth and morality is valuable and important above outer beauty and materialism.
I must point out that I do NOT like the director of this film, Ari Sandel. I interviewed the vapid, self-hating Jew Sandel, when he was nominated for an Oscar for his dumb moral equivalence movie, “West Bank Story,” which essentially says that Jewish-Israeli victims of Islamic terrorism and Palestinian terrorists and their supporters are morally equivalent. And if they would only make and eat falafel together and sing, dance, and romance like “West Side Story,” all would be good with the world. Read about my interview with Sandel, the typical Hollywood dhimmi leftist.
The story: a high school student, Bianca (Mae Whitman), who has two better-looking best friends, is told by her next door neighbor that she is the “DUFF”–Designated Ugly Fat Friend–for her clique of friends. At first, she is angry. But, then, she researches it, and realizes that she probably is the DUFF. The funniest part of the movie is when she searches “DUFF” online and popping onto the screen is a photo of Chris Christie a/k/a Chris ChrispieCreme with Barack Obama.
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Bianca is persecuted and ostracized by the “popular” girl at school, and can’t bring herself to talk to the guy at school on whom she has a crush. So, she hires her next door neighbor–a good-looking jock, who strongly resembles Tom Cruise (Robbie Amell)–to coach her out of DUFFdom. Unfortunately, it backfires, after an embarrassing video of her is released by the popular girl, and all of the high school laughs at her. The bullying via social media, at first, crushes her. But she is strong and moves on. Ultimately, Bianca realizes what’s important in life and that beauty, as the trite saying goes, is only skin deep. She also realizes that she needs to be herself and not let haters get her down. Although the ending of the movie is predictable and probably not realistic regarding what would happen in real life, I liked it.
Beware that this movie is aimed at adults under thirty, so if you aren’t in that group, you aren’t the target demo. But for teens and 20-somethings, it’s uplifting stuff with a decent message and happy ending.
TWO REAGANS
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Watch the trailer . . .

* “Hot Tub Time Machine 2“: High quality Gitmo torture material. Sooooo bad. Just absolutely awful. I hated the first “Hot Tub Time Machine” (read my review), but this second installment (um, who decided we needed a second one?) makes that one look like a cinematic masterpiece. Barf. Methinks the purpose of this movie was to show us shots of penises and women’s breasts. ‘Cuz the “story” is incredibly stupid, ridiculous, and nonsensical. There are a few funny lines, but mostly this movie is dumb and disgusting. Men being forced to anal rape each other on a futuristic virtual reality TV show–this is funny how? A painting of a man raping a tiger–again, how is this funny? (And where is PETA when you need it?)
In the first installment, a few male friends and relatives are at a resort and discover that the hot tub is a time machine, taking them back in time. In this sequel, the men have gotten rich because they went back in time, stealing ideas from the present, to make money. Lou (Rob Corddry) invented a search engine, “Lougle.” And that was after he was the lead singer of “Motley Lou.” Nick (Craig Robinson) “wrote” a bunch of very popular songs, all of which he stole and went back to the past to “pre-plagiarize.” That includes a song by Lisa Loeb (she makes a cameo–must’ve been pretty desperate for a paycheck), who is now a cat wrangler for Nick’s video for the song he stole from her. Everyone hates Lou, and someone shoots him in the penis. So, all of the characters go into the hot tub time machine to try to save Lou’s life. They end up in the future, and lots of idiocy ensues to find out who is Lou’s shooter (and to try and stop it).
Lewd and ridiculous. This movie is an IQ test. If you like it, you fail. A total waste of time and two hours of my life I’ll never get back.
FOUR MARXES PLUS FOUR ISIS BEHEADINGS
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Watch the trailer . . .


Monday, February 2, 2015

Wknd Box Office: A Most Violent Year (a/k/a “All the Bad Guys Are Jews”), Project Almanac, Black Sea, Black or White, Cake, The Loft

Here is an interesting article from http://www.debbieschlussel.com/ reviewing some of the movies that came out over the past weekend. This follows this post about some of the movies from last week and THIS POST about some movies that have been released over the past few years that you might have missed! This all follows this post about guidelines to choosing good movies to watch yourself!


Wknd Box Office: A Most Violent Year (a/k/a “All the Bad Guys Are Jews”), Project Almanac, Black Sea, Black or White, Cake, The Loft



By Debbie Schlussel
I really liked three of the new movies debuting at theaters this weekend, so things are starting to get better.
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* “A Most Violent Year“: Shoulda been called, “All the Bad Guys Are Jews.” This movie was heavily pimped at the end of last year for awards–Oscars, local film critics groups, etc. I didn’t vote for it because, while I liked one of its messages, I couldn’t help but notice that every single bad guy in this movie is markedly Jewish. From the loan sharks to the mobster competitors who hire thugs, every single bad guy in this movie is Jewish. And, of course, the hero is a Hispanic immigrant who wants to do everything right and by the book. You see, in Hollywood, all of the minorities in the barnyard are equal, but some are more equal than others.
Oscar Isaac (whose family in real life is Cuban and Guatemalan but he says he took the stage surname of Isaac in tribute to his father’s “Jewish side”) plays Abel Morales, a Cuban immigrant and self-made man who owns a heating oil business. It’s 1981, and he is successful, making a lot of money, and driving his competitors out of business in New York. So, his chief competitor, named “Arnold Klein” and played by Jewish actor (and obvious, desperate self-hater) Glenn Fleshler, hires gunmen to attack his truck drivers and hijack their fuel. The union is pressuring Abel to allow his drivers to carry guns. But Abel is opposed and doesn’t want to resort to violence.








Abel also wants to run his business legally and by the book, and he thinks he’s doing that. But his wife, a mafia boss’ tough daughter (Jessica Chastain), does the accounting and books at the company. Abel buys a piece of land with storage for his fuel, which he buys from money-grubbing, price-exacting Chassidic Jews in full uniform. But the Chassidim only give him 30 days to pay up, and it’s a few million dollars he must come up with. He struggles to get the money and goes to Jewish loan sharks, Saul Lefkowitz and his daughter Lorraine, to get a loan with very steep terms.
In the meantime, Abel is also under investigation for criminal activity in running his business, and a Black prosecutor is going after him. His home is raided by police during his daughter’s birthday party. And that’s after there have been strange break-ins and violence in his home, all perpetrated, apparently, by his Jewish competitor, Arnold Klein.
Okay, I get it. Jews are mobsters, criminals, loan sharks, greedy Chassidic Jews, and violent. Thanks for the tip, filmmakers. You may now return to your SS Officers reunion party. Or your mosque. Did every single villain in this movie have to be Jewish? I mean, every single one? Talk about overkill which would make the ghost of Goebbels proud.
I would have liked this movie if all the bad guys weren’t THE JOOOOOOS, because the movie shows a good businessman trying to run an honest, profitable, decent business, and trying to treat his workers right. Oscar Isaac is a very good actor and reminds me a lot of a young Al Pacino. Plus, as with most period movies, I loved the spot-on accuracy with the ’80s cars and clothes. However, the movie feels like half a movie, even without the Gestapo-laden propaganda against the “Evil Zionists!” And, instead of being a decent flick about doing the right thing in the face of non-stop pressure to do otherwise, this is the subtle, cinematic version of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. So, um, no thanks for the Jew-baiting. Sieg heil.
By the way, Hollywood, when does the movie–where all the crooks and violent guys are Muslim–come out? How about making even one of the terrorists Muslim? Not holdin’ my breath.
FOUR GOEBBELSES PLUS FOUR BIN LADENS PLUS FOUR ARAFATS
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Watch the trailer . . .

* “Project Almanac“: I loved this movie. It was exciting, funny, entertaining, suspenseful, and it raised ethical questions and issues. Plus, the characters were sweet-natured, decent teens and science-obsessed nerds. Gotta love that. I expected to hate this when I saw “MTV Films” emblazoned on the screen as the movie began. But this isn’t your typical MTV fare. It wasn’t filled with drugs and sex (there is a tiny, quick barely there reference to sex having occurred in one scene). Instead, it promotes everything MTV is against: doing the right thing morally, being good to and caring about others, learning about science and math, and being good citizens. And the smart nerds are the good guys. If I had kids, I would allow my high-school-aged teen kids to see it (it’s rated PG-13). The actors in the movie are all unknowns.
Jonny Weston plays David Raskin, a bright, nerdy high school senior who is dying to get into MIT. He creates amazing technology to fly and direct drones using his hands through his cellphone. And he gets into his dream school. The problem is that he only gets a $5,000 scholarship and can’t afford to pay MIT’s steep tuition. His father died when he was just seven, and his mother doesn’t make enough money to afford the school. He’s trying to do another experiment or create another invention to get one last scholarship to MIT, when he and his sister discover a video camera in the attic, taken by their father at David’s seventh birthday party. They see an image of 17-year-old David in the mirror on the video and discover technology and instructions on how to build a time machine in their father’s basement laboratory. Soon, David and his nerdy group of friends, plus a popular girl on whom David has a crush, are building and using the time machine.
What would you do if you could go back in time? Would you do things over? Would you play the lottery? What is the right and ethical way to behave when you have a time machine? This thought-provoking movie raises those questions and more. The movie’s posters proclaim, “Today is better the second time around.” But the movie asks if it actually is better the second time around. And I don’t think it reaches that conclusion.
I found this movie to be charming, witty, and fun. And it’s a great movie, whether or not you’re into science fiction. It reminded me a lot of another movie in which teens discover a super or magical power and what they do with it: 2012’s excellent “Chronicle” (read my review–though I like it better now than I did when I first saw it). Plus I liked the ending.
FOUR REAGANS
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Watch the trailer . . .

* “Black Sea“: This movie was so suspenseful and filled with thrills that at times it stressed me out. It’s that effective. I enjoyed the story, the suspense, and the adventure, but I wished it did not have the anti-business, class-warfare element to the plot. Still, it’s well-acted, and I enjoyed it immensely. Plus, I liked the ending.
The story: Jude Law plays an English submarine pilot who has just been laid off from the company to which he’s given his best years. He’s divorced and lost custody and rights to see his young son, while his ex-wife, the love of his life, is now married to a rich man, who is raising the child. Law, unemployed, bitter, and looking to make something of himself and get back into his son’s life, learns of a rumored sunken Nazi ship filled with gold. The ship is somewhere at the bottom of the Black Sea, and Law has an idea of where it may be.
Law is hooked up with a wealthy investor who finances the mission to find the ship and the gold. Law brings together a rag-tag crew of divers and others who know how to run a submarine, and he also gets a crew of Russians to join the mission. They use an old, decrepit submarine and look for the ship. During the trip, there is a lot of drama, infighting, and violence, as well as a lot of manifestation of greed. And there’s also a lot of heart-pounding suspense as they not only search for the ship but struggle to stay afloat, alive, and safe.
My description undersells the movie because it’s exciting and engrossing. And not entirely predictable. Very entertaining.
THREE-AND-A-HALF REAGANS (would be FOUR, but for the class-warfare element of the plot)
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Watch the trailer . . .

* “Black or White“: I expected to hate this movie and to find a liberal diatribe on race. But it wasn’t that. And it was surprisingly even-handed and balanced. I watched it with a mostly Black audience, and I was surprised to see that many of them applauded the White grandfather in this race-laden custody case movie. I heard many of them jeer at the Black crackhead father in the movie, too.
Written and directed by actor/comedian Mike Binder (a Jewish liberal from Detroit), Kevin Costner invested $9 million of his own money to get this movie made. Binder helped raise his biracial nephew (who has Black family in South Central Los Angeles), and it inspired him to write this movie.
Costner, who is very good in this, plays a White grandfather who, along with his wife, is raising their biracial granddaughter. The girl is the product of their White daughter’s underage “relationship” at age 17 with a 23-year-old Black crack addict. Costner’s daughter died in childbirth. The crack addict has been out of the picture for years, and now Costner’s wife has died (she was killed in a car accident). Costner, a wealthy lawyer with a drinking problem, now must raise his granddaughter on his own and fight the girl’s Black grandmother, Rowena (Octavia Spencer), for custody. And he must do all of this as he grieves for his wife.
While I had some mild objections, the movie is mostly pretty good. One such objection is that every time the movie shows the girl’s absentee crackhead father lighting up his crack pipe, it shows Costner’s character drinking alcohol. But the two are hardly morally equivalent, nor are their addictions. Costner is responsible and hires a driver for whenever he cannot drive, and he is a loving, nurturing parent to the girl, whereas the crackhead is absent and repeatedly lets his daughter down. The movie does show that, however. Also, the movie shows the obvious, sleazy, race-baiting techniques of the Black grandmother’s lawyer. On the other hand, the movie shows the Black grandmother seeking custody to be a successful, loving businesswoman. Is that usually the case in situations like this?
A lot of mainstream (liberal) movie critics don’t like this movie because they hate the ending. And because they hate the balanced look at things here, something they aren’t used to seeing in the theater. They prefer the usual propaganda and agenda-laden narratives. I prefer a fair portrayal of the issues at hand. And this refreshing movie did that in spades, far more than we usually get. It went out of its way to be fair and thoughtful.
I would be remiss if I failed to mention the outstanding acting by all parties in this movie, especially Jillian Estell, the cute, young actress who plays Costner’s granddaughter.
THREE REAGANS
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Watch the trailer . . .

* “Cake“: Jennifer Aniston is getting rave reviews for her starring role in this depressing art house movie, mostly–I think–because she’s very de-glammed and very average looking without much makeup in this film. It wasn’t as bad as I expected it to be. But it was kind of pointless, in my view. I felt like I’ve seen this kind of movie a million times before and didn’t need more of this kind of self-absorbed cinematic misery.
Aniston plays a Los-Angeles-area woman who is part of a pain-management support group (is there anything they don’t have a support group for in our ever-softer, wimpy country?). We don’t know why she’s in the group or what happened to her, and we aren’t told until about three-fourths into the movie (though there are strong hints to that point and you can kind of figure it out). We just know that something bad or tragic happened to her. Aniston is kicked out of the group because she’s rude, sullen, obnoxious, and everyone hates her. She is also wealthy, has a full-time Mexican housekeeper, and doesn’t seem to do anything for a living. She also pops a lot of pills, does drugs, and sleeps with the help.
Soon, Aniston becomes obsessed with a woman who was in the support group but committed suicide. Aniston goes to where the woman committed suicide and imagines herself re-enacting it. She also stalks the woman’s widower and visits his home. But they become friends. Still, throughout all of this, we know something is terribly wrong with Aniston and she has failed to face it, grieve, and move on with her life.
It finally becomes obvious what that is when it all comes to a a head. I could have done without the slowness and then sudden onslaught of melodrama that is this movie. It was boring and then way too much. I wouldn’t spent ten bucks-plus to see this. I want to go to the movies to escape or learn something or be entertained and come out happy. This did none of those things. But maybe it will help someone who has faced a tragic loss (in how NOT to face grief).
Or maybe not.
Either way, it qualifies as great torture material for the few remaining Gitmo detainees.
TWO MARXES
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Watch the trailer . . .

* “The Loft“: This was not screened for critics. But ignoring the stark signs, I went, last night, to see it on my own, so I could review it for you here. In a word: Oy. I thought this was going to be a guilty pleasure, as it could and should have been. Instead, it was a long, slow bore, and I struggled to stay awake.
The story: Five married men who are friends (four of whom are good-looking plus one very fat Eric Stonestreet) pay equal rent on a fancy loft in Manhattan. Each has a key, and they use the loft for extra-marital trysts. But one day, they discover a bloodied, dead, body of a blonde woman in the bed at the loft. And all of them are under suspicion from the police (and each other) about who murdered her and why. All of them are hiding the secret of the loft and their extramarital affairs from their wives.
Believe me, I’m making it sound far more exciting and thrilling than it actually is. The movie isn’t just cliched–that might still be fun and entertaining to watch. It’s nonsensical and stupid. I didn’t end up caring who did it or why. I just kept focusing on how nothing is happening in this movie and I just wasted my money and time on crap. Also, one of the blonde chicks in the movie looks like a Vulcan alien (or like E.T.–phone home!).
The only funny part of this movie is when the fat guy makes fun of a fat chick (but then he ends up with her–water rises to its own level). The rest of the movie was lame.
The poster for this movie urges people to “Indulge.” But this isn’t an indulgence. It’s just crap.
Skip this.
THREE MARXES