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October 8, 2010

Life As We Know It Movie

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , , , — Kate @ 10:24 am

Life as We Know It (2010) Poster

Holly Berenson is an up-and-coming caterer and Eric Messer is a promising network sports director. After a disastrous first date, the only thing they have in common is their dislike for each other and their love for their goddaughter, Sophie. But when they suddenly become all Sophie has in the world, Holly and Eric are forced to put their differences aside. Juggling career ambitions and competing social calendars, they’ll have to find some common ground while living under one roof.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Genres: Comedy, Drama and Romance
Running Time: 1 hr. 52 min.
Release Date: October 8th, 2010 (wide)
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for sexual material, language and some drug content.
Distributors:
Warner Bros. Pictures
Production Co.:
Josephson Entertainment, Gold Circle Films
TomKats Movie Catering, LLC
Company 3
Lola Visual Effects
yU+co
Panavision, Ltd.
Studios:
Warner Bros. Pictures
Filming Locations:
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Produced in: United States

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If the clumsy title is any indication (what “Life”? What are “We” supposed to “Know”?) then, states Kimberly Gadette, we may be in for another rom-coma. But if it’s prettier than The Ugly Truth and livelier than Killers, perhaps there’s hope.

For critics who complain that the set-ups for rom-coms are all too predictable, this one’s certainly not been done before. Inventive? Sort of. Believable? Not on your life.

And yet the opening is still reliably formulaic. The Boy (Josh Duhamel’s Messer) shows up for a blind date with the Girl (Katherine Heigl’s Holly). He’s surly and rude, and she won’t stand for it. In what may rival the shortest date in history, he’s kicked to the curb within minutes. And so we have the usual set-up of instant enemies who will eventually go ga-ga for each other.

Life As We Know It.

In a quick montage, we watch these two over a three-year period, their initial hostility transformed into aggressive teasing. Since they are the mutual best friends of the couple who had set them up (the Novaks, played by Hayes MacArthur and Christina Hendricks), whenever the Novaks have a gathering, Messer and Holly are in attendance – at the wedding, the baby shower, the first birthday of the Novaks’ baby Sophie (played by Alexis, Brynn and Brooke Clagett). When the Novaks suddenly die in a car accident – hold onto your rom-com hats, here comes mission, um, implausible – it turns out that without any prior conversations, the Novaks had appointed their two best friends as co-guardians of their child, with the stipulation that they move into the Novak home together.

We’re probably as confused as Messer and Holly as we try to factor in the obvious. What if one of the singles wants to someday get married and have a family of his or her own? What if living under the same roof becomes unbearable? And how is it that neither of these two supposedly responsible parents, now dead, thought to consult their best friends before they wrote this guardianship into the will?

Life As We Know It.

Though screenwriters Ian Deitchman and Kristin Rusk Robinson have created some amusing supporting characters, and have peppered the script with very funny one-liners, it’s in their overall plotting that the film suffers. We want to enjoy the ride; but at the same time, this initial device of throwing two enemies together, neither of whom has had any child-rearing experience, into parenting an infant under the same roof is hard to swallow. Other glaring faults include the fact that the writers first introduce us to a churlish Messer, verging on the mean. Which makes the actor work doubly hard to win our affection. Surprisingly, we get no ensuing admissions from Messer as to why he first behaved like a cretin; we’re left to plug in that plot hole for ourselves.

As for the threat of the other lover (isn’t there always at least one?), we never understand why the smitten Holly decides that perfect Dr. Sam (Josh Lucas) isn’t “The One.” Again, we can assume the reasons on our own dime, but since we’re not the ones being paid to write the script, it would be nice to hear from the talent that did.

Life As We Know It.

This is a case where the acting outshines the problematic writing at every turn. Heigl has returned from the lower depths of The Ugly Truth and Killers, back to her earlier, Carole Lombard-like glory. She is appealing and vulnerable, a beautiful klutz. Not only do she and Duhamel get to play for laughs, but they each get the opportunity to explore their quieter, darker sides. The loss of their beloved friends, the frustrations of rearing an adopted child, the fright balanced with relief when the possibility looms that that same child may be taken away.

And Duhamel, far more familiar to audiences as the humorless Major Lennox in the Transformers series, is a rom-com lately. (Avoiding all mention of last January’s catastrophic When in Rome. Seriously. Don’t mention it.) His easy charm, quick grin and generous demeanor blend with a genuine depth of feeling. The first time his Messer sees baby Sophie after learning of his friends’ untimely death, his eyes fill with such emotion that it catches us by surprise.

Life As We Know It.

As for that oft-clucked lack of chemistry: happy to report that here, the heat’s on high. These two make a spirited, sparring couple, a delightful duo that may indeed prove to be the best rom-com coupling of 2010. (Sadly, given this year’s competition, it’s not that much of a contest.)

As for the assortment of supporting cast members, the spotlight shines brightly on the overweight diva neighbor (Melissa McCarthy, speaking with the only credible Atlanta accent in the film), bulldozing her outwardly-obsequious hubby who smiles as he mutters insults under his breath (Andrew Daly), the pushy social worker Janine (Sarah Burns) and the all-knowing 11-year-old babysitter (Britt Flatmo).

Though it won’t take your baby’s breath away, thanks to Greg Berlanti’s energetic direction and the combined efforts of an effervescent cast, Life As We Know It is one of the better rom-coms we’ve seen this year.

Rating on a scale of 5 infantile ideas: 3

Release date: US: 8 October 2010; UK: 8 October 2010
Directed by: Greg Berlanti
Written by: Ian Deitchman & Kristin Rusk Robinson
Cast: Katherine Heigl, Josh Duhamel, Josh Lucas, Hayes MacArthur, Christina Hendricks, Sarah Burns, Jessica St. Clair, Britt Flatmo, Melissa McCarthy, Andrew Daly
Rating: US = PG-13; UK = 12A
Running time: 112 minutes

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Its Kind of a Funny Story

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 10:24 am

It's Kind of a Funny Story (2010) Poster

What’s a 16-year-old boy doing playing music and table tennis with adult psychiatric patients – on a school day? It’s kind of a funny story… It’s @5:00 AM on a Sunday in Brooklyn. Craig Gilner is bicycling up to the entrance of a mental health clinic; this bright 16-year-old is stressed out from the demands of being a teenager. Before his parents and younger sister are even awake, Craig checks himself into Argenon Hospital and is admitted by a psychiatrist. But the youth ward is temporarily closed – so he finds himself stuck in the adult ward. One of the patients, Bobby, soon becomes both Craig’s mentor and protege. Craig is also quickly drawn to another 16-year-old displaced to the adult ward, the sensitive Noelle, who just might make him forget his longtime unrequited crush Nia. With a minimum five days’ stay imposed on him by the adult ward’s staff psychiatrist Dr. Eden Minerva, Craig is sustained by friendships on both the inside and the outside as he learns more about life, love, and the pressures of growing up.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Logline: A clinically depressed 16-year-old checks himself into an adult psychiatric ward where he gains a new lease on life.
Genres: Comedy, Drama and Adaptation
Release Date: October 8th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for mature thematic issues, sexual content, drug material and language.
Distributors:
Wayfare Entertainment Ventures, LLC, Focus Features
Production Co.:
Misher Films, Wayfare Entertainment Ventures, LLC, Journeyman Pictures, Gowanus Projections
Soundtrack Group
Digital Cinema Inc.
AON/Albert G. Ruben Insurance Services
Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton
Ashley Kravitz Inc.
Gourmet To U
Curious Pictures
Technicolor New York
Technicolor
Technicolor
Eastern Effects Inc
CSC
C5, Inc.
Studios:
Focus Features
Filming Locations:
New York City, New York, USA
Produced in: United States

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Craig is a sharp kid. He’s got a cool, supportive family. He goes to an elite Manhattan high school and will probably be accepted into an elite pre-college business program. He’s crushing on his best friend’s girl, and his best friend is kind of a dick, but otherwise Craig has a pretty good life.

Craig is also suicidal.

Anyone who thinks the first paragraph and the second ought to be mutually exclusive does not understand clinical depression—nor, necessarily, do Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, the writer-directors of It’s Kind of a Funny Story. The filmmakers set their film in a mental ward, but it’s rarely clear whether they want you to laugh or cry at its long-term residents, the sight of whom nearly scares Craig (Keir Gilchrist) sane after he talks an ER doctor into admitting him. (Doc doesn’t think his suicidal tendency is serious.) The patients stare and shuffle, shout random thoughts to no one in particular, never get out of bed. When Craig first meets them—mouth agape in horror—he asks the staff if there’s a place “for people more like me.” Cue audience laughter?

To be fair, the teenager is mildly rebuked for thinking himself better than the others; still, many of these patients are too caricaturized for you to believe they’re there for anything but a giggle. It’s rather heartbreaking—you know their real-life counterparts exist—but so is the flip side: When Craig shows up at the emergency room at 5 a.m. asking for help yet is nearly sent home because he just seems like a kid with the blues, the doctor is both throttle-worthy and completely realistic. Few people who look at Craig see someone mentally unbalanced. Those who do, including the ward’s psychiatrist (Viola Davis), stress medication and communication about the pressures he’s feeling. Even Bobby (Zach Galifianakis), the middle-aged eccentric who takes Craig under his broken wing, seems to recognize a kindred walking wounded.

Until he doesn’t, that is. As Craig adjusts to life in the ward, befriending the freaks and chatting up the cute girl (a luminous Emma Roberts), Bobby’s relative togetherness starts to unravel. Slowly, the guy with the dry humor, dating advice, and short-escape plans isn’t so smooth when he has to face life outside the hospital. Which is also believable—but then the character turns into another there’s-nothing-wrong-with-you sounding board, suggesting that a little perspective is all a suicidal teen needs to climb out of a soul-sucking depression.

The message is contradictory at best and dangerous at worst, though it seems that Boden and Fleck, the team behind the indie hits Half Nelson and Sugar, at least intended to make a life-affirming film. Just as there are aching moments, there are soaring ones, including a shoulda-been-hackneyed group performance of “Under Pressure” and a jubilant going-away party. And the topic certainly isn’t too sacred to be mined for humor. (“I want to kill myself,” Craig tells the intake staffer. “Fill this out,” she replies.) The unimpeachable highlight of the film, in fact, is Galifianakis, who’s understated and charming as the melancholy Bobby; turns out that the lower the actor dials it down, the higher his appeal.

Gilchrist, best known as the gay son in Showtime’s The United States of Tara, is rather vanilla here, as the filmmakers clearly poured their colors into supporting characters. But the story may not have worked had Craig been a stronger personality. His milquetoast demeanor is what propels the debate over exactly how much help he needs. If only the answer wasn’t so fumbled and disappointing.

Life as We Know It Directed by Greg Berlanti

Life as We Know It, in contrast, knows how to take serious things seriously. Despite the presence of Katherine Heigl, director Greg Berlanti’s second film is more drama than romantic comedy—and a good drama at that. The plot’s not the only thing that offers something unexpected.

The film does begin with some typical Heiglisms. She plays Holly, a Type-A caterer who’s scrambling through her closet of at least 27 dresses until she finds the tightest wrap and the highest heels. Then she waits. When her blind date, Eric (Josh Duhamel), shows up, he’s an hour late. When Eric takes an obvious booty call and responds, “Really?” when Holly suggests they don’t have to go through with their mutual friends’ setup, they both get huffy and pretty much declare themselves Enemies for Life.

Cut to a couple of years later, when their besties Peter and Alison (Hayes MacArthur and Christina Hendricks) get married and have a baby. Through each of the milestones up until baby Sophie’s first birthday, Holly and Eric are shown fighting. So it’s a bit of a shock—though not so surprising in Movieland—when the happy couple dies in a car accident and leave custody of Sophie to the two people who can’t stand each other. Hijinks will surely ensue, right?

Mercifully, there are hardly any at all. First-time scripters Ian Deitchman and Kristin Rush Robinson deliver a story that quickly forgets its wacky introduction yet never brushes off the devastating turn of events that truly sets the plot in motion. Peter and Alison’s deaths are handled with understated taste—and are all the more gut-wrenching for it—and the needs of darling Sophie (played by triplets Brynn, Brooke, and Alexis Clagett) are kept in the foreground. Holly and Eric, after the requisite wha-wha-what? moment in which they learn of their new responsibility, don’t whine or bicker over stupid shit. Yes, they doubt they can make their situation work. No, they’re not happy about the upending of their lives.

But when Sophie is hungry or needs to be changed, it’s all about her, even if said changing elicits gagging and lines such as, “It’s like Slumdog Millionaire!” This is, after all, a comedy, but the jokes are generally dry and original and help the whole baby business be cute instead of cloying.

The romantic angle has to play out, too, but here the baby isn’t as much of a roadblock as Sam (Josh Lucas), a handsome pediatrician whom Holly meets at her bistro the day of her friends’ death. Of course, rom-com rules require that they meet again afterward, and get along quite swell. Of course, Eric is a little jealous. And with both Holly and Eric devoted to their careers (Eric works in broadcast sports and is eyeing a promotion), some crazy schemes will be hatched to smooth over the bumps in their schedules.

Hey, this film may not be exactly what you’re expecting, but the filmmakers and the marketing campaign can’t completely ignore the carrots they dangle. Life as We Know It is both feel-sad and feel-good, which is a tricky balance yet one that’s so satisfying when the film hits the right marks. “Hit” is not a word our stars may be used to when it comes to the big screen—at least not critical ones, anyway—but this movie may change that.

September 18, 2010

You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger

Filed under: Movies, Movies online — Tags: , , , , , , , — Kate @ 3:07 am

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woody-stranger-filmYOU WILL MEET A TALL DARK STRANGER

Considering Woody Allen, 74, makes a film a year, the question to be asked is not why so many of his movies are uneven, but why so many are to be treasured. Even in this past decade, there’s been Vicki Cristina Barcelona (2008), Match Point (2005), Hollywood Ending (2002), and Small Time Crooks (2000). Although none achieve the magic, wit, or depth of Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989), The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985), or Annie Hall (1977), they all are embraceable entertainments, worthy of numerous viewings.

You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger, however, is middling Woody. Not unwatchable as The Curse of the Jade Scorpion (2001) or as annoying as Melinda and Melinda (2004), the film still has a rushed quality to it. The proof is a horrendously off-putting voiceover (supplied by a dreadful Zak Orth) that is consistently employed to fill in plot points the screenplay is unable to incorporate with any grace.

The tale centers on upon a divorced couple, Alfie (Anthony Hopkins) and Helena (Gemma Jones). After 40 years of wedded life, Alfie has developed a fear of aging and winds up marrying Charmaine (Lucy Punch), a youngish prostitute, whom he satisfies with the aid of Viagra and his dwindling bank account.

A distraught Helena, at loose ends, seeks the aid of Cristal (Pauline Collins), a fortune teller, who convinces her of her former glamorous lives and a future romance.

Meanwhile, the marriage of the ex-couple’s daughter Sally (Naomi Watts) to a one-time promising writer, Roy (Josh Brolin), is falling apart. She’s attracted to her boss (Antonio Banderas) and he has the hots for his neighbor, a young guitar-playing woman in red (Freida Pinto).

All the ingredients are here for a successful Woody romp, but they never gel. Bookended between Shakespearean quotes and the tune “When You Wish Upon a Star,” the film seems more the product of a work-for-hire sensibility than an inspired act of love. The bon mots are few and far between. The cinematography by Vilmos Szigmond (Close Encounters of the Third Kind) is seldom flattering to the stars. And numerous scenes are awkwardly staged.

Yet Jones as the alcoholic, dithering Helena, Collins as her soothsayer, and Roger Ashton-Griffiths as her new beau, are splendid, and Lucy Punch steals the show. As she did in Dinner for Schmucks playing the nightmare ex-date of all time, Punch supplies a high-powered comic energy that makes you mope every time the camera leaves her presence.

In conclusion, my prognostication for this bit of celluloid is that it will encounter a short, overlooked run in the theaters and be favored with a few clicks now and then on Netflix. As Woody himself has noted, “If you’re not failing every now and again, it’s a sign you’re not doing anything very innovative.” – Brandon Judell

brandon.jpg

Mr. Judell is featured in the forthcoming documentary Activist: The Times of Vito Russo and has been edited out of Rosa von Praunheim’s New York Memories. In the fall, he’ll be teaching “American Jewish Theater” and “Theater into Film” at The City College of New York. He has written on film for The Village Voice, indieWire.com, The New York Daily News, and The Advocate, and is anthologized in Cynthia Fuchs’s Spike Lee Interviews (University Press of Mississippi).

Picture Me

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , — Kate @ 3:07 am

The story of the life, literary and motion-picture accomplishments of Kenneth Anger, a pivotal figure in the history of experimental film. Considered to be one of the major personalities of the 1960’s and 1970’s underground art scene, Kenneth defined himself as a “cinematographic magician” and his “cinema” as a ritualistic form. In 1947 in Los Angeles, while his parents were away, a young Kenneth took his family’s film camera and shot a short, dramatic film entitled “Fireworks”, which is now considered one of the seminal works of experimental film. Expressive, imagistic, sexually charged, and made with the help of friends (and apparently without a script), “Fireworks” brought to the screen an unconstrained vision and an almost unbelievable candor. Kenneth Anger also led in the field of visualization of homo-erotic imagery. “Fireworks” was a film that went beyond maturity and sexual conscience–an extraordinary event considering that it was made in 1947. Kenneth did not cross over to commercial cinema. Throughout his career he has been completely devoted to uncompromising expression. Since the 1960’s, Kenneth Anger’s films have been the subject of many books, film panels and film theory courses. Although he has never made a commercial music video, he has even been called the “Godfather of MTV”.

Production Status: Released
Genres: Art/Foreign, Documentary and Biopic
Running Time: 1 hr. 13 min.
Distributors:
Segnale Digitale, A Few Steps Production
Production Co.:
Segnale Digitale, A Few Steps Production
Financiers:
Canada Council for the Arts, Ontario Arts Council
Produced in: Canada

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Ben Stein’s Debate for Intelligent Design Lacks Substantial Argument

Dec 17, 2008 Rob Humanick

Ben Stein may be a certifiable genius, but his (in)ability to sufficiently craft an argument is so deprived that any rational person could be forgiven for mistaking him as outrightly deranged. His cinematic thesis, Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, plays so poorly and laughably that one may very well mistake it for a lampoon of its subject matter (here, the debate between evolution and Intelligent Design).

Expelled is Short on Insight; Long on Assumption

Sadly, no such irony exists here. Expelled’s argument for ID is so dimly and laughably constructed that anyone who isn’t familiar with the topic could easily become overwhelmed – strike that – infuriated by the rampant assumptions and finger-pointing abundant therein. A disingenuous bit of propaganda masking itself as an informed and evenhanded documentary, Expelled makes one valid point before stepping permanently outside the lines of acceptability, that being that, despite its overwhelming popularity within the scientific community and the culture at large, Darwinian theory is incomplete insofar as it answers how life arose in the first place.

From this moment on, the film assumes that this lack of conclusive evidence on the part of the scientific community represents nothing less than proof of Intelligent Design. Period. End of discussion. Not for a moment does Stein even attempt to provide his own shreds of evidence, let alone an encompassing argument that could claim some sort of irrefutable proof. That this double-standard bias violates virtually every rule of rational debate (i.e. lack of evidence for one argument does not inherently render a sufficient counter-argument) makes it difficult to accept anything else that the film proceeds to establish is a given, and one made even more frustrating given Stein’s supposed dedication to scientific inquiry.

Science vs. Religion vs. Science & Religion

For him, ID needn’t be a religiously associated belief, but instead represents a viable scientific acknowledgment that entities beyond our understanding or perception may very well exist in the universe, and that such entities may have deliberately planned and created life as we know it. Call it God, call it the Big Bang, call it the unseen aliens that nurture mankind from across the cosmos in 2001: A Space Odyssey: the fact remains that, as to how life itself arose, we don’t know. It’s an essential truth and one that addresses the fundamental relationship between science and religion, but it’s one only appreciated between the lines in this rancid debacle of a film. Indeed, to grant Expelled any credibility beyond the opening minutes requires nothing short of a leap of faith.

Offensive Documentary Tactics

Stein interviews scientists both for and against ID, yet his methods of inquiry pander to inflammatory tabloid antics more than a genuine inquiry of the films chosen, loaded subject matter. Rather than pondering the notion of a God or how the rise of Christian fundamentalism has affected the ID debate within the scientific community (the film interviews several professors of science blacklisted for merely giving ID the time of day in serious discussion), Stein goes for easy targets and exploitative arguments that make some of Michael Moore’s tactics look saintly by comparison. Without going into great detail, Expelled goes so far as to equate the lack of free speech in today’s scientific community (itself a sad reflection on the status quo) with the sum loss of life at the hands of the Nazi’s in WWII.

Frightening as this is, it says nothing of Stein’s already gut-churning lack of humility; for a film so appalled at a dearth of open-mindedness, Expelled never even grazes the age-old conundrum of “If God made us, then who made God?” The imposed slant of the film rarely eases its stranglehold – even the anti-ID voices interviewed therein often feel deliberately handpicked for their lack of charm or grace in discussion as Stein lays out his bullying verbal traps. There are many who believe that a union between spiritual and scientific exploration is needed to foster any true progress in either category. With the utterly inept Expelled, Stein does nothing short of shooting himself in the foot, considerably setting back any such understanding in the process. No intelligence, indeed.

  • Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed movie poster - Premise Media Corporation

    Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed movie poster – Premise Media Corporation

  • Ben Stein in deep thought in Expelled - Premise Media Corporation

    Ben Stein in deep thought in Expelled – Premise Media Corporation

The Town

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , , , , , — admin @ 3:07 am

Ghost Town (2008) Poster

Bertram Pincus is a man whose people skills leave much to be desired. When Pincus dies unexpectedly, but is miraculously revived after seven minutes, he wakes up to discover that he now has the annoying ability to see ghosts. Even worse, they all want something from him, particularly Frank Herlihy, who pesters him into breaking up the impending marriage of his widow Gwen. That puts Pincus squarely in the middle of a triangle, with spirited results.

Production Status: Released
Genres: Comedy and Science Fiction/Fantasy
Running Time: 1 hr. 42 min.
Release Date: September 19th, 2008 (wide)
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for some strong language, sexual humor and drug references.
Production Co.:
Central Casting, Inc.
Henry s International Cuisine
Remote Control Productions, Santa Monica
Rhino-Gravity
Chapman/Leonard Studio Equipment, Inc.
Technicolor New York
Spyglass Entertainment Holdings, LLC, Pariah
Studios:
DreamWorks Studios
U.S. Box Office: $13,214,030
Filming Locations:
New York City, New York, USA
New York City, New York, USA
Produced in: United States

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Leaves of Grass

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , — Kate @ 3:07 am

Leaves of Grass (2010) Poster

When Ivy League classics professor Bill Kincaid receives news of the murder of his estranged identical twin brother, Brady, in a pot deal gone bad, he leaves the world of Northeastern academia to travel back to his home state of Oklahoma. Upon arrival, he finds that reports of his brother’s death are greatly exaggerated, and he’s soon caught up in the dangerous and unpredictable world of drug commerce in the backwaters of the Southwest. In the process, he reconnects with his eccentric mother, meets a wise and educated young woman who has bypassed academia in favor of the gentler rhythms of life, and unwittingly helps his troubled brother settle a score with a pernicious drug lord who uses Tulsa, Oklahoma’s small Jewish community for cover.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Logline: A tale of identical twins, one an Ivy League classics professor and the other a pot-smoking career criminal.
Genres: Comedy, Thriller and Crime/Gangster
Running Time: 1 hr. 44 min.
Release Date: April 2nd, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: R for violence, pervasive language, and drug content.
Production Co.:
Class 5 Films, Nu Image/Millennium Films, Langley Productions
Filming Locations:
Shreveport, Louisiana, USA
Produced in: United States

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“Leaves of Grass” is not a Walt Whitman movie about poetry. This is Tim Blake Nelson’s affectionate and curious vision of his native Oklahoma, and what he sees makes for a uniquely restless, ribald motion picture.

Nelson is likely best known as an actor for his role in the Coen brothers’ film “O Brother, Where Art Thou,” and he embraces their sense of multiple styles in making a film that is by turns a marijuana comedy, a suspenseful crime tale and an analytical philosophy short course.

These ideas at times go together about as well as the official state meal that includes chicken fried steak, barbecued pork and strawberries. But a degree of patience with this mellow, quirky look at living life on one’s own terms is ultimately rewarded.

Some may think that “Leaves of Grass” is best enjoyed with a good smoke. The Holland Hall graduate and writer-director has made a film that has cult favorite written all over it.

Nelson was smart enough to have his pal Edward Norton in mind when writing the part of the lead characters. Bill and Brady are identical twin brothers, and the only thing better than one complex performance by Norton is two such creations.

Both brothers are brilliant, and they could hardly be more different: Bill is a classics professor, a rising “great mind” in the brainy community who’s being wooed by Harvard. Meanwhile, Brady is a marijuana grower in southeastern Oklahoma.

Bill has long distanced himself from his Oklahoma roots, going so far as to eradicate

any hint of an accent and estranging himself from his criminal screw-up of a brother. Meanwhile, Brady has a problem of such severity – he owes money to a Tulsa druglord who hides his criminal activities behind his Jewishness – that he must fake his death to force his brother home to the Sooner state.

“He got shot with a crossbow,” Bill plaintively tells his secretary, to her confusion. “They’re inexplicably popular where I come from.”

Uniquely Oklahoma

Nelson himself lives in New York City, but he is consistently pulled back to Tulsa by family and his love of his state and roots. Throughout the film, we watch the contradiction of cultures examined.

One example of this is Nelson’s unique view of Tulsa Jewishness, such as Richard Dreyfuss as the druglord. This is a man who uses a menorah as a weapon and seeks to have his name put on Tulsa’s buildings. The writing of these scenes is both informed and gleefully taken to extremes on Nelson’s part.

Nelson embraces Oklahoma’s unique eccentricities. A love of the arts and outdoor sports is combined in Keri Russell’s character, a Walt Whitman-quoting, catfish-noodling poet and love interest for Bill.

The film is punctuated by violence on several occasions in the second half of the film, and Nelson consistently finds a balance to such harshness with gentleness like tender moments between Russell and Norton.

In one scene, they are sitting on a rural home’s front porch with friends, with beer flowing, music chilling the atmosphere and Bill mellowing from toking on one of Brady’s turbocharged joints. The couple’s flirty little dance of words, of romantic mystery and of her setting his priorities straight (the women in this film are all smarter than the men) is as beautiful in its simplicity as in its execution.

The film is rich in its detail of Oklahoma manners and lifestyles that should make local audiences warmly embrace the picture. Multiple performances stand out, such as Melanie Lynskey as Brady’s pregnant fiancee, who sets the film’s events in motion by demanding that, with their first child on the way, he quit the pot business.

A character played by Josh Pais is bothersome, an orthodontist who makes a connection between the brothers. He’s a minor character who comes to play too vital a role in the story, I decided, because his making the connection seemed implausible, and without that connection the third act would fall apart.

“Leaves of Grass” – a reference to Whitman’s idea of a life lived at one’s own poetic pace, as well as to the wacky weed – leads to a conclusion that is predictable in its outcome, if not its path in getting there.

Which is a lot like life, when you think about it. Nelson, at age 45, has clearly been thinking about it.


LEAVES OF GRASS

Stars: Edward Norton, Tim Blake
Nelson, Keri Russell, Susan
Sarandon, Richard Dreyfuss

Theater: Circle Cinema

Running time: 1 hour, 45 minutes

Rated: R (violence, pervasive
language, drug content)

Quality: (on a scale of zero
to four stars)

Original Print Headline: ‘Leaves of Grass’ offers a hit of Oklahoma life


Michael Smith 581-8479

michael.smith@tulsaworld.com

Jack Goes Boating

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , — admin @ 3:07 am

Jack Goes Boating (2010) Poster

Jack and Connie are two single people who on their own might continue to recede into the anonymous background of the city, but in each other begin to find the courage and desire to pursue their budding relationship. In contrast, the couple that introduced them, Clyde and Lucy are confronting unresolved issues in their marriage. Jack is a limo driver with vague dreams of landing a job with the MTA and an obsession with reggae that has prompted him to begin a half-hearted attempt at growing dreadlocks. He spends most of his time hanging out with his best friend and fellow driver Clyde and Clyde’s wife Lucy. The couple set Jack up with Connie, Lucy’s co-worker at a Brooklyn funeral home. Being with Connie inspires Jack to learn to cook, pursue a new career and take swimming lessons from Clyde so he can give Connie the romantic boat ride she dreams of. But as Jack and Connie cautiously circle commitment, Clyde and Lucy’s marriage begins to disintegrate. From there, we watch as each couple comes face to face with the inevitable path of their relationship.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Logline: Jack, a stoner limo driver, embarking on such quixotic missions as cooking and swimming lessons forms an unlikely friendship with another lovable loser.
Genres: Drama, Romance and Adaptation
Running Time: 1 hr. 29 min.
Release Date: September 17th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: R for language, drug use and some sexual content.
Distributors:
Relativity Media
Production Co.:
Big Beach Productions, Cooper s Town Productions
Camera Service Center
Tribe Road Catering
Sylvia Fay/Lee Genick & Associates Casting
Entertainment Partners
Sloss Law Office
Production Resources
Indieclear
Orbit Digital
Soundtrack Group
C5, Inc.
Technicolor New York
Brainstorm Digital
Brainstorm Digital
Dubway Studios, NY
Studios:
Relativity Media Distribution Group
Filming Locations:
New York, New York USA
New York City, New York, USA
Produced in: United States

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Movieline Score: 7

jackgoesboating_rev.jpgJack Goes Boating, Philip Seymour Hoffman’s first time out directing a feature film, is such a gentle picture that at times it threatens to drift off the screen. Hoffman plays Jack, a going-nowhere, reggae-loving New York limo driver who appears never to have had a girlfriend. His closest friends, married couple Clyde (John Ortiz) and Lucy (Daphne Rubin-Vega), decide to set him up with one of Lucy’s new co-workers, Connie (Amy Ryan) — she works phone sales for a slick funeral director-bereavement guru, though she’s so awkward and tentative in this new gig that she’s in danger of losing it.

Jack and Connie hit it off, sort-of, and though it’s the middle of winter, Connie expresses her desire to go boating in Central Park. Jack nervously sets up a possible date — it will have to happen a few months down the line, after the weather gets warmer — and then panics, because he doesn’t know how to swim. Clyde offers to teach him, and this is the beginning of Jack’s gradual blossoming, his first step toward feeling comfortable in the world and in his own skin. A shy, pudgy, uncertain fellow, who typically mashes down his matted blond almost-locs with a nondescript knit cap, Jack suddenly becomes alive to certain possibilities — for one thing, he may actually be on his way to having sex.

Jack Goes Boating was originally an off-Broadway play, and the playwright, Robert Glaudini, has adapted the script himself. Perhaps that’s part of the reason the picture feels more playlike than cinematic: This is a work in which every line has been measured and weighted carefully, in which characters will undergo Big Transformations and have Sudden Realizations, all of them coming together with a nice, loud click in the third act. Hoffman (formerly the artistic codirector, with Ortiz, of New York’s LABryinth Theater Company) has clearly thought about every moment, every shot, carefully — perhaps too carefully.

That’s not to say he doesn’t stage some things quite nicely: A scene in which Jack goes to visit Connie in the hospital (she’s been mysteriously attacked on the subway), shortly after meeting her for the first time, is delicately framed and articulated. Unsure of what to bring her, he’s toting along a stuffed koala bear. When he arrives at the hospital waiting room, Clyde and Lucy have an argument — the first sign that even though they truly want Jack to have love in his life, their own marriage is coming apart at the seams — and Jack’s childlike discomfort speaks volumes about his own idealistic yet fearful expectations about love.

Hoffman, a versatile and tactile actor, gives a charming, shuffling performance here, albeit one with a bit of an edge: You always get the sense that Jack is capable of really blowing his stack, and sure enough, in that all-important third act, he does. Ryan matches him nicely: She’s fidgety and brittle at first, but as she gets used to Jack, and becomes accustomed to the possibility of love, she begins to radiate a slow-burning warmth. Her character is likable without being desperate to be liked.

But as a director, Hoffman appears to have saddled Jack Goes Boating with more weight than it can comfortably bear. The material is sensitive and a little biting, but it’s not particularly deep. Even so, Hoffman appears to have worked overtime to polish every scene to a jewel-like gloss, and he’s lost some spontaneity and freshness in the process. The picture is well-crafted; it just doesn’t breathe.

There are also some tantalizing but unanswered questions about Connie’s character, who’s constantly claiming that men — on the subway, at work, just about everywhere — are victimizing her with inappropriate sexual attention. How much of it is real and how much is in her imagination? The movie fudges the issue, as if it doesn’t matter, and maybe it doesn’t. Still, you’d hate to see a character like Jack get saddled with a delusional nutcase.

And the movie’s conclusion — that all people in romantic partnerships can expect to have trouble; they just won’t all have the same kind of trouble — feels wispy, despite the fact that it’s a completely reasonable idea. Jack Goes Boating is a lightweight picture that operates on the illusion that it has more ballast than it does. It ought to shimmer more; instead, it keeps getting caught in the glare of its not-so-profound ideas.

Alpha and Omega

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Kate @ 3:07 am

Alpha and Omega (2010) Poster

What makes for the ultimate road trip? Hitchhiking, truck stops, angry bears, prickly porcupines and a golfing goose with a duck caddy. Just ask Kate and Humphrey, two wolves who are trying to get home after being taken by park rangers and shipped halfway across the country. Humphrey is an Omega wolf, whose days are about quick wit, snappy one-liners and hanging with his motley crew of fun-loving wolves and video-gaming squirrels. Kate is an Alpha: duty, discipline and sleek Lara Croft eye-popping moves fuel her fire. Humphrey’s motto – make ‘em laugh. Kate’s motto – I’m the boss. And they have a thousand miles to go. Back home rival wolf packs are on the march and conflict is brewing. Only Kate and Humphrey can restore the peace. But first, they have to survive each other.

Also Known As:
Alpha & Omega
Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Logline: 3-D
Genres: Kids/Family and Animation
Running Time: 1 hr. 28 min.
Release Date: September 17th, 2010 (wide)
MPAA Rating: PG for rude humor and some mild action.
Distributors:
Lionsgate
Production Co.:
Crest Animation Productions, Inc.
Computational Research Laboratories Ltd
James Newton Howard Studios. Inc.
Digital Domain
Warner Brothers Eastwood Scoring Stage
MHz Sound Design Inc
Studiopolis Inc
Level 3 Post
Technicolor Digital Intermediates
Blink Digital Productions
Studios:
Lionsgate
Filming Locations:
Los Angeles, California USA
Los Angeles, California, USA
Produced in: United States

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Catfish

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 3:07 am

Catfish (2010) Poster

When a 20-something New York City photographer is contacted on MySpace by an 8-year-old painting prodigy from rural Michigan, he becomes deeply enmeshed in her life. He starts to correspond with her family and ends up having a cyber-romance with her older sister. That is, until a crack appears in her older sister’s story.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Genres: Documentary and Thriller
Running Time: 1 hr. 34 min.
Release Date: September 17th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for some sexual references.
Distributors:
Rogue Pictures
Production Co.:
Rogue Pictures
Studios:
Rogue Pictures
Produced in: United States

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August 29, 2010

Public Enemy 1

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 9:58 am

Mesrine: Public Enemy No. 1 (2010) Poster

Now back in France, Mesrine is finally in police custody and facing justice for his crimes. After escaping a courtroom and kidnapping the judge at gunpoint, Mesrine is declared Public Enemy Number 1 and is eventually condemned to a maximum-security prison where he writes his memoirs, establishing himself as a household name and the anti-hero across France. Mesrine stages another daring escape and disappears into the lawless underworld, taunting the police and reinventing himself as a celebrity criminal through his savvy manipulation of the media. After such a monumental rise, comes the inevitable fall as the police close in, bringing the life of Jacques Mesrine to full bloody circle.

Also Known As:
L’ Ennemi public nombre un
L’ Ennemi public n° 1
L’ Ennemi public n° 1,
Mesrine: A Film in Two Parts: Part Two
Mesrine: L’ennemi public n° 1
Public Enemy No. 1
Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Logline: The story continues Mesrine’s incredible life of crime while manipulating the media, the government and the police. He plans his last and greatest escape, hoping to leave France, and the character he has become, behind forever.
Genres: Art/Foreign, Crime/Gangster and Biopic
Running Time: 2 hr. 14 min.
Release Date: September 3rd, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: R for bloody brutal violence, a scene of sexuality, nudity and pervasive language.
Distributors:
Music Box Films
Production Co.:
La Petite Reine, StudioCanal, M6 Films
Filming Locations:
Canada
France
Produced in: Italy

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