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download Just My Luck movie trailers

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

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Just My Luck Reviewed By brianorndorf Posted 05/12/06 14:07:00

"Looooohhhaaaann, you got some splainin’ to do!" (Total Crap)

?Just My Luck? is such a tedious romantic comedy, it can only come from the poisoned touch of director Donald Petrie. I?m all for Lindsay Lohan trying to act silly, but this picture is such a hollow, charisma-free endeavor that whatever effort she?s putting into the film is wasted on material that should have never seen the light of day in the first place.Ashley (Lindsay Lohan) is a PR worker bee with an amazing gift of good luck. Finding everything goes her way, Ashley manages to score a big record company account with the promise of a lavish party. At this party, she meets Jake (Chris Pine, ?Princess Diaries 2?), a wannabe band manager with a wicked case of bad luck. Drawn together by fate, the two kiss, exchanging their luck in the process. Now cursed, Ashley?s life falls quickly to pieces, and she embarks on a hunt across New York City to find Jake again and forcibly take her good luck back. Lindsay Lohan wants to grow up. Perhaps tired of the grind and responsibility of making films for tweens, ?Just My Luck? entrusts her with a role in which she can play a bona fide adult. Whether or not Lohan is ready for such a leap is the larger question that plagues this laborious and mind-numbing romantic comedy. There?s little doubt that Lohan is a charmer; she?s single-handedly propped up crud like ?Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen? and ?Mean Girls,? and her raspy quirks were put to good use in last summer?s ?Herbie? reprise. ?Luck? pushes Lohan to the next stage of comedienne, organizing slapstick sequences for her that should be lightweight fun, however each one seems worse than the last. ?Luck? goes for a Lucille Ball feel, putting Lohan in situations that require comedic chaos to get her into trouble, and a blinding smile that acts as her personal ?get out of jail free? card. I have no problem with Lohan desiring to be Lucy, but she?s got to find a better director than the torturous Donald Petrie to help get her to that level. Petrie is a notorious studio hack, churning out such unimaginative fare as ?Welcome to Mooseport? and ?Miss Congeniality.? He?s a filmmaker without an inch of personality in anything he makes. ?Luck? furthers his creative headlock as Petrie aims for the lowest entertainment level possible for every scene in the film. The director encourages his talent to mug for the camera, fills the supporting cast with actors free of inspiration or charisma, and when the multitude of wacky set-pieces with Lohan and Pine fail to bond due to Petrie?s sledgehammer touch with humor, he has a wealth of animal feces jokes to back him up. What Petrie ignores in his pursuit of inconsistency is the bridge between Ashley and Jake. ?Luck? is a film heavily controlled by a screenplay that Petrie fully believes contains all the cinematic ingredients for easy direction. Watching ?Luck,? there?s not a moment where the two leads ignite their spark. Pine plays his role with boy scout naivet?, while Lohan keeps her attention on pratfalls and ?did I do that?? faces. It?s the script that brings the characters together, not actor chemistry or meticulous directorial attention, and it cheats the film of the one thing it needs the most: a sweet and engaging romance. Strangely, ?Luck? is also a 100 minute commercial for an English power pop/emo band called McFly, who play the struggling group Jake is managing.Playing a rather large and unexpected role in the film, the band is described a ?cross between the Beatles and Blink 182.? That loosely translates into ?bottomlessly awful.? Come to think of it, I guess they do fit in with everything else going on in ?Just My Luck.?
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Monday, June 23rd, 2008

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Golden Child, The
Like most people, I enjoyed Eddie Murphy in the 1980s with the
humorous, wild movies he made. Many of the characters he played were
similar: wisecracking, loud, funny and obnoxious. This is one of the
wilder stories he was involved with with a very good mixture of action,
romance, fantasy and comedy.

The female lead in here was an attractive actress named Charlotte
Lewis. With her looks and manner, I thought she might go places, but I
think this was the only hit movie she's been in.

Twenty years after "The Golden Child," I have found most of those
Murphy films not the entertainment they used to be. Maybe it's just me
getting older, but Eddie's constant shouting and abrasive boorishness
is too much to take now. That includes this movie.

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Saturday, June 21st, 2008

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Good Thief, The Reviewed By Brian McKay Posted 04/09/03 19:15:39

"Nick Nolte is on the Rehab Comeback Trail, and Jordan hitches a ride." (Worth A Look)

Hot Damn! Nick Nolte is back in the saddle after his big drug arrest and rehab fiasco last year. Ironically enough, he plays a former thief and current heroin and gambling addict who goes clean "cold turkey" to pull off one last big heist. And man, is he fun to watch. THE GOOD THIEF is "a Neil Jordan film", and Jordan may hold the title and registration, but Nolte is definitely behind the wheel.Nolte plays Bob Montagnet, who has retired from the world of big-time heists and is living in semi-retirement in France. Besides shooting Heroin and gambling, the main love in his life is a Picasso painting that hangs on his wall - a painting he won from Picasso himself after they bet on a bullfight . . . or so he tells everyone. However, Bob’s betting and gambling lifestyle has caught up to him. When he bets the last of his money on a horse race, his friend asks "But what if you lose?" His reply is a casual "Well, then I’ll have hit rock-bottom, and will have to change my ways". When his horse loses and the drugs run out, he is in a prime position to be lured by one of his former associates, Said (Ouassini Embarek), into pulling off a really big score. Only this time it’s not money, but a valuable cache of paintings . . . including some Picassos. As it turns out, art is Bob’s Kryptonite. Count him in. Along the way, Bob plays savior to a teenage Russian prostitute named Anne (Nutsa Kukhianidze), who he rescues from an abusive pimp and then lets stay at his home. Anne immediately develops a thing for Bob and tries to seduce him (kind of a "Daddy, why didn’t you love me?" sort of thing). However, he rebuffs her advances and handcuffs himself to the bed for a few days until he can get through withdrawals and focus on the upcoming job. Anne decides to settle for Bob’s young partner, Paulo (Sa?d Taghmaoui) instead. Paulo of course falls for her immediately, but Anne’s just killing time waiting for Big Daddy Bob to come around.As a heist flick, The Good Thief is nothing breathtakingly new. Most of the elements of the genre are borrowed here. Bob shares the obligatory friendship with the French cop, Roger (Tch?ky Karyo), who is trying to keep him from doing something he’ll have to arrest him for. Bob recruits his assorted team of specialists ala Ocean’s 11, and of course one of them happens to be the only guy who can crack the security system, a Russian named Vladimir (Emir Kusturica), because he happens to be the guy who installed it. Thankfully, however, there is no reliance on the ultra-cliched "Hacker" character who can wreak all manner of havoc in their favor via the highly overestimated power of THE INTERNET.There are a few other nagging flaws with the film. One of them is Jordan’s directorial style. Most of the time it’s crisp and vivid, but he seems to have been in "experimental" mode here. A few chase scenes are edited together with a blurry and stuttered look that is altogether annoying, and he’s also discovered a penchant for transitioning various scenes with a distracting and seemingly arbitrary split-second freeze-frame shot which really brings nothing to the table. Now maybe if the freeze-frames had been used a bit more artistically, like to highlight certain moments of action or an interesting look on a character’s face, it would have yielded better results. As it stands, they just seem to give the flow of the film an occasional hiccup.Another problem is with the dialogue. Not in the sense that it’s poorly written - to the contrary, it’s generally crisp and amusing. The problem is that I (and I’m sure many others) had a difficult time understanding what was being said. Most of the cast is European or Russian, and the mish-mash of accents is often difficult to follow along with. Even Nolte, the only American in the principal cast, mumbles his way through some of his lines, rendering them indistinguishable. Often the problem is complicated by the presence of loud sound effects or the musical score. This is not to say that the cast isn’t a talented one, because they are all quite capable and enjoyable to watch in their roles. But when Tch?ky Karyo’s is one of the easiest accents to follow, you may have a language barrier problem on your hands. Note to filmmakers - when 90 percent of your cast speaks English as a second language, and your one American tends to mumble a lot, a voice coach may not be a bad investment. Say it with me, now - EN-UN-CI-ATE.Still, these minor quibbles aside, The Good Thief is a highly enjoyable heist flick that’s light on genre cliches and loud action, but strong on good dialogue and interesting characters. Even if you won’t understand all the words coming out of their mouths, the ensemble cast carries the film quite well, with standouts that include Karyo, Taghmaoui, Kusturica, and Embarek. Ralph Fiennes also pops in for a couple of enjoyable scenes as a decidedly shady underwold art dealer. As for Kukhianidze - well, she’s certainly an attractive young lady, with a waifish look and short hair that gives off a distinct vibe of Bridget Fonda in Point of No Return. However, her acting chops seem to pale in comparison to the rest of the cast - although, since her accent is at times the most difficult to follow, it’s hard to say how much her abilities are hampered by the language barrier.But make no mistake - the real star is Nolte. He carries the day as he shuffles, grumbles, and chain smokes his way through the film, giving off the kind of gruff charm he did in 48 Hours or Mulholland Falls. With few exceptions, Nolte hasn’t had a real charismatic "star" presence in anything for a while, and it’s great to see him bring back that old Nolte charm that we’ve been missing of late. Although there are many aspects of The Good Thief that make for an enjoyable time, Nolte is definitely the boost that often keeps the film from nearly stalling.Neil Jordan is a director who has been hit and miss. Yes, he brought us THE CRYING GAME, but don’t forget, he’s also responsible for HIGH SPIRITS. However, with Nolte by his side, THE GOOD THIEF is sure to bring you over to his camp.
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download Hitch dvd online

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

Download Hitch

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Hitch

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Hitch Reviewed By U.J. Lessing Posted 02/14/05 12:35:17

"Fresh Prince Eye for the Straight Guy" (Average)

Will Smith?s latest romantic-comedy, Hitch, asserts that men are simple-minded, oafish, accident-prone, not nearly as smart as women, and freaking adorable! Why Hitch borrows its foundation from the numerous daytime commercials where men fail to properly use cleaning supplies, I?m not sure, but at least Will Smith is allowed to be charming without packing a machine gun, laser, or explosive device.Smith plays Alex ?Hitch? Hitchens, whose career is to assist helpless males catch the women of their dreams. No mention of his salary is made, but judging by his fancy, upscale apartment, he?s making a first-rate living. Hitch works through referrals only and is not interested in helping guys achieve one-night stands. Instead, he creates situations in which women can see past his male clients? goofy, obtuse exteriors and glimpse the sweet, romantic, gooey mess that lies inside them. Despite his vocation, however, Hitch is jaded about his own love life and chooses not to get attached.Problems arise when Hitch flips for gossip columnist, Sara (Eva Mendes attempting to channel the ghost of Jean Arthur). Sara is smart as a whip and is just as jaded about her own personal relationships. To further complicate matters, Sara is trying to get the scoop on Allegra Cole (Amber Valletta), the celebrity that Hitch?s newest client is trying to date. With so much going on, it?s no wonder that when Hitch is around Sara, he loses his cool and turns into Jim Varney. Will Hitch and Sara hook up? Will Sara discover what Hitch does for a living, and will she accept him for who he is? Will Hitch be able to help his newest doughy-boy client Albert (Kevin James) get together with the luscious Allegra Cole? Will they all live happily ever after? If you?ve ever seen a romantic comedy before, you know the answers to all these questions.The film is enchanting when Hitch is doing his job. Will Smith is captivating when he?s acting as a confidant and giving sage advice to hapless men. We can all relate to how frustrating the ambiguities of dating can be, and we all wish we had a self-assured friend like Will Smith guiding us through the process.It?s a shame that the romantic interludes don?t offer the same delight. Director Andy Tennant proved he had no inkling about how to do a romantic scene in Anna and the King, and together with writer Kevin Bisch, they create amorous moments that have the same effectiveness as old episodes of The Love Boat. The audience is forced to patiently wade through these scenes to get to the more likable male bonding.It?s ironic, isn?t it, that the strongest romantic chemistry in the movie is between Kevin James and Will Smith? They are charming, flirtatious, and share genuine feelings for each other. Perhaps a braver screenplay would have had these two dump their boring girlfriends, move to Vermont and get married. Too bad. Instead, Hitch ends with a drawn-out ending that will make you long for the credits.
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Friday, June 20th, 2008

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Replacements, The

The players of professional football go on strike with four weeks to go in the season and the owners decide to call in replacement players to finish out the year.  Gene Hackman (Under Suspicion, Enemy of the State) plays the coach of one of the teams, and he assembles a ragtag group, including a washed up superstar college QB (Reeves, The Matrix), an ex-con RB (Jace, Cradle 2 the Grave), and a bunch of others who have lots of raw talent but not the ability to have made it pro.  They have to win three of the next four games to make it to the playoffs.

The Replacements is a predicable comedy with little new to offer, but I do have a bit of a soft spot for these kinds of eccentric ensemble sports movies (Major League comes to mind).  It’s always fun to watch, even if it isn’t what one might call great, and it’s definitely entertaining enough for football fans who aren’t looking for anything other than some fun escapism. 

The cast is likeable, with Hackman and Jack Warden (While You Were Sleeping) giving relatively good performances despite some occasionally trite dialogue. Keanu Reeves and Orlando Jones (Liberty Heights, Bedazzled) aren’t as annoying as you’d expect since they don’t dominate screen time.  Terrific cinematography by Tak Fujimoto (The Sixth Sense, Devil in a Blue Dress) and a great score by John Debney (End of Days, Dick), along with solid use of popular music all enhance the look and feel of real football.  Cartoonish and hokey, but likeable all the same.

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Friday, June 20th, 2008

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In 10 Words or Less
Longer isn’t always better

Reviewer’s Bias*
Loves: “Strangers with Candy,” Stephen Colbert
Likes: Amy Sedaris, Principal Blackman
Dislikes: Jerri Blank
Hates: Being disappointed

The Movie
Excitement is not the emotion I, a fan of “Strangers with Candy,” felt
when I heard the series was being converted into a feature-length movie.
Only when the original source material is reimagined or used purely as
inspiration, like the satirical “The Brady Bunch Movie,” does the
transition from TV to movie usually work. The differences between the
two mediums are too substantial to overcome easily.

Here, the film acts as a prequel to the series, showing Jerri Blank (Amy
Sedaris) as she returns home from prison, and adjusts to her new life.
The time that passed between the series’ end and the film has resulted
in some changes to the cast, including the unfortunate replacement of
Jerri’s dad with Dan Hedaya, which changed the value of the character
entirely.

Though the faces have changed, the story has stayed the same, just with
a lot more time to tell it, time that they probably didn’t need. In fact
there’s nothing in this film they couldn’t have done in the series,
including the guest stars, which they had regularly. To be honest, I
can’t figure out why this movie exists, other than to allow the creators
to visit the SWC playground again.

The story is similar to the tales the series’ told, as Principal
Blackman (the wonderfully over-the-top Greg Hollimon) has to justify the
funds he’s been stealing from the school and sees the upcoming science
fair as his chance. To ensure the victory, he recruits superstar science
teacher Roger Beekman (Matthew Broderick), a move that frustrates
Flatpoint High science teacher Chuck Noblet (Stephen Colbert). It gets
worse when Noblet’s “friend,” art teacher Geoffrey Jellineck (Paul
Dinello) joins forces with Beekman, after being rebuffed by Noblet.

As would be expected, it comes down to Jerri to save the day, after
managing to ruin it in every possible way. In between, the bizarre
nature of high school and the Blank family is viewed through Jerri’s
hazy eyes. Though her home life, including late-series addition Stew the
Meat Man, doesn’t provide anything really new, Colbert, Dinello and a
host of others, including Allison Janney and Phillip Seymour Hoffman as
members of the school board and Sarah Jessica Parker as a grief
counselor, make high school funnier than it’s ever been.

While the movie is certainly enjoyable and should be welcomed by fans of
the series, it doesn’t reach the heights the show did, limited by the
time to fill and the slower pace dictated in film. If they tried to
replicate the feel of the show over 90 minutes of movie, audiences would
tire out quickly, and the filmmakers would run out of material just as
fast. Making a TV movie (bringing the parody closer in line with those
old afterschool specials) or a multi-episode arc would have made for a
better return to Flatpoint.


The DVD
A standard keepcase holds the one-disc release, which features an animated anamorphic widescreen main menu, with options to watch the film, adjust the set-up, select scenes or check out the special features. Language options include Dolby Digital 5.1 and 2.0 English tracks, along with Spanish subtitles and English closed captioning.

The Quality
The anamorphic widescreen transfer on this film looks great, with vibrant color and excellent detail. With no dirt or damage, nor any digital artifacts, there’s nothing to not like about the image on this movie.

The Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack is actually pretty impressive for a film that wouldn’t seem to need it. However the sides and rear speakers get a lot of work building atmosphere and enhancing music, while the dialogue comes across crystal clear. It’s a surprisingly dynamic mix for a film that’s mainly about people talking.

The Extras
The extras start off with a feature-length audio commentary by Sedaris, Colbert and Dinello. The trio works together very well, and their comfort results in a commentary track that’s fun, with a lot of good behind-the-scenes info and stories from the set, as well as comparisons between the show and the film.

18 deleted scenes provide quite a bit of entertainment, including some fun scenes with Parker, for whom I have some new-found respect. These can be watched separately or all together in a 20-minute block. There’s also a music video for “Atomic Car” by Delano Grove, starring Iris Puffybush, the Flatpoint High school secretary. It’s simply ridiculous.

The disc wraps up with the film’s theatrical trailer and a handful of other ThinkFilm trailers.

The Bottom Line
The rapid-fire pacing of “Strangers with Candy,” including the surreal word play, funny sight gags and great afterschool special parodies, have given way to higher production values and a bounty of cameo appearances, though the excellent comedic acting from Sedaris, Colbert and company remains firmly in place. Despite that, the film doesn’t quite work, most likely due to the tripled length which wrecks the pacing. The DVD presentation is spot-in, and the extras, though slim, are a nice complement to the film. If you like the show, you’ll probably enjoy the movie, but keep your expectations in check, unless you want to be disappointed.


Francis Rizzo III is a native Long Islander, where he works in Internet Publishing and also teaches journalism. In his spare time, he enjoys watching hockey, writing and spending time with his wife, daughter and Schnoodle.

Visit his MySpace page


*The Reviewer’s Bias section is an attempt to help readers use the review to its best effect. By knowing where the reviewer’s biases lie on the film’s subject matter, one can read the review with the right mindset.
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Crash movie download

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

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I’m not sure the best way to kick off a movie that wants to expose the dark heart of the true Los Angeles is to contrast it with “real cities” where “people walk, you brush past people, people bump into you,” but that’s what writer-director Paul Haggis does in the first few moments of “Crash,” a grim, histrionic experiment in vehicular metaphor slaughter. Graham Waters (Don Cheadle) and Ria (Jennifer Esposito), two detectives in love, are rear-ended on their way to a murder scene, and no sooner has the dazed Graham delivered his soliloquy on urban alienation (”I think we miss that sense of touch so much, we crash into each other just to feel something”) Ria and the other driver, a middle-aged Korean woman, start loudly trading racial slurs without even a four-letter preamble. So much for the urban brotherhood of man: In “Crash,” there’s no getting through a fender bender, casual conversation, business transaction, phone call to mom or naked love romp without someone’s ancestry taking a nasty beating. ADVERTISEMENT From here, Haggis, a veteran television writer who wrote the script for “Million Dollar Baby,” weaves no fewer than nine sets of characters into a suffocating tangle of ham-fisted ironies and belief-beggaring coincidences designed to reveal the latent racism that festers in the souls of all those who ever laid claim to a 310, 323, 213 or 818 area code. (Yes, you too.) The movie’s structure has drawn comparisons to “Short Cuts” and “Magnolia,” though it’ll feel familiar to anyone who submits to regular cudgelings by “hard-hitting” network TV dramas that wield messages like bludgeons. Every conflict in “Crash” — even lovers’ quarrels — is racially motivated, and having hit on this key to human inhumanity, the director pursues the line with extreme (sorry) prejudice. There may be a million stories in the naked city, but there are something like 20 principal characters in this movie, and they expend 90 minutes of screen time on roughly one topic of conversation. What really makes you want to screw up your eyes, clap your hands over your ears and belt out a show tune, though, is the nagging feeling that Haggis, a Canadian who has resided in this city for most of his adult life and who suffered a traumatic real-life encounter with a pair of armed carjackers a few years ago, seems to have experienced some misplaced guilt over his lingering low opinion of the gentlemen who took his car, followed by anger at the guilt, more guilt at the anger, and so on. I’m only guessing, of course, but upon meditating on the lives of his assailants — what were they like in their free time, when they weren’t sticking guns in people’s faces? — the director has written them a funny valentine. They are reborn in his imagination as a couple of charming, clever, philosophical, socially committed young car thieves who, when not busy jacking SUVs, enjoy ice hockey, Merle Haggard and liberating smuggled Asian sweatshop workers into the free market wonderland of downtown L.A. Anthony (Chris “Ludacris” Bridges) and Peter (Larenz Tate), black men in their 20s, come out of an Italian restaurant in a ritzy neighborhood where Anthony gripes that the black waitress has treated them shabbily. When Peter points out that black men have a reputation for being bad tippers, Anthony confesses that he didn’t leave one. This is just the first of about 1 1/2 hours worth of Buddhist conundrums on the nature of racist stereotypes. Anthony, a philosophical sort, sees racism lurking in every corner, even in the gesture of a white woman who takes her husband’s arm as they pass. “We’re the only black people surrounded by a sea of over-caffeinated white people and a trigger-happy LAPD,” he says. “Why aren’t we scared?” It sounds like a good question, until the considerably more chilled-out Peter ripostes with: “Because we have guns?” and within seconds, Jean (Sandra Bullock) and Rick (Brendan Fraser) are scuttling along the sidewalk, having been divested of their Escalade. If a generalization falls in the forest, and somebody who fits the description confirms it, is it really true? In the case of Rick and Jean, at least, it is. Rick happens to be the district attorney of Los Angeles County, a man apparently incapable of experiencing anything except through the prism of how it will play in the media. After the carjacking, the couple repair home to change the locks and spin the story. Rick frets that being robbed by black men will cost him either the black vote or the law-and-order vote and instructs his aides to locate an African American on whom he can pin a medal. The lonely, bitter, pathologically angry Jean, meanwhile, newly freed from the worry that her racism might have been unfounded, freaks out at the sight of the locksmith, whom she loudly takes for a gang member. Then she snaps at the maid. It’s around this point that the theme of the movie, neatly summarized by one of its characters and encapsulated in the tagline, begins to emerge. “You think you know who you are,” the racist cop Officer Ryan (Matt Dillon) tells his green, uninitiated partner. “You have no idea.” Actually, in “Crash,” you do. Whatever flimsy layers cover the characters’ raging 24-hour xenophobia are swept away by the slightest breeze. It’s painfully clear to anyone but Jean, for instance, exactly who Jean is. The sensitive, sloe-eyed locksmith, meanwhile, like the warm and friendly domestic, bears his symbolic nobility like a cross. Daniel (Michael Peña) bears Jean’s insults silently, then goes home to comfort his traumatized child, who sleeps under the bed for fear of stray bullets. Soon, Daniel and his family will be victimized by a high-strung Persian patriarch, Farhad (Shaun Toub), driven to the edge by constant (and geographically inaccurate) race-baiting. Add to this daisy chain of bigotry a Korean who sells illegal Thai and Cambodian workers to sweatshops, a black HMO worker who denies coverage to a sick man because the man’s son is a racist, a white cop on his third African American murder, and a member of the D.A.’s office who wonders “what it is” with black people who “can’t keep their hands out of the cookie jar,” and the film’s characters stop seeming like they’ve been culled from a random cross-section of the citizenry so much as cherry-picked from the top of the class at the Pat Buchanan School of International Relations. The few characters who aren’t culprits are victims, the most discouraging among them Cameron (Terrence Howard), a successful black television director. Cameron and his wife, Christine (Thandie Newton), are returning home from an awards show when they’re pulled over by Dillon’s racist Officer Ryan and his conflicted young partner, Officer Hansen (Ryan Phillippe). Ryan, a virulent racist, humiliates the director and his wife by viciously molesting her under threat of arrest. At home, the couple implode. After hanging up the phone without reporting the assault (”Do you really think they’ll care about what you have to say?” says Cameron), Christine lashes out at her husband. “The closest you ever got to being black was watching ‘The Cosby Show,’ ” she yells. And he: “At least I didn’t watch it with the rest of the equestrian team!” Of course, what with all this horseback riding and “Cosby Show” watching, you’d think they’d have a lawyer too. But “Crash” is too heavily invested in the idea of race as class to allow these two even the slightest sense of security, entitlement or surprise at being so crudely mishandled by the establishment of which they are a part. Instead, Cameron quietly unravels as his whole life reveals itself for the sham that it is. Even Tony Danza, who plays an actor on his show, cows him into humiliating a black costar. How’s that for rock bottom? As another critic once said about another movie bearing the same title, ” ‘Crash‘ isn’t plotted, it’s programmed.’ ” The logarithm is fairly simple: Money plus power plus a pale complexion equals total inhumanity. (Jean learns the hard way that her only friend in the world is the woman who cleans her house.) Power plus pallor minus money fares slightly better. (Ryan’s bigotry is motivated by the suffering of his sick father, who lost his janitorial company when the city began giving preferential contracts to minority-owned businesses, and he gets his moment of slo-mo redemption.) Pallor minus power minus money plus small-town idealism (as embodied by Hansen) gets a kick in the head. Any glimpse of emotional honesty comes courtesy of the actors, who manage to do a credible job despite the material. The smart, sexy spark between Esposito and Cheadle is all but extinguished by the airlessness of the script, and Cheadle manages to squeeze in some quietly affecting moment as the unloved son of a drug-addicted mother. Howard, an actor who radiates intelligence and sensitivity, fills out his maddeningly reductive character as best he can, though he’s never given the chance to do anything but react to the trumped-up pressures around him. Similarly, Newton is never allowed to come down from the ledge of hysteria, just as Bullock is systematically barred from entry into the human race. Tate and Bridges, as the loquacious carjackers, provide the only breath of fresh air in the movie, but given the film’s bird’s-eye point of view and its pretensions at objectivity, their charm feels assigned at random. The cast members more than pull their weight, it’s just too bad they had to get together for this. Crash MPAA rating: R for language, sexual content and some violence. Times guidelines: Crude as the language is, it pales next to the noxious message. A Lions Gate Films release. Director Paul Haggis. Producers Cathy Schulman, Don Cheadle, Bob Yari. Executive producers Andrew Reimer, Tom Nunan, Jan Körbelin, Marina Grasic. Screenplay by Paul Haggis. Director of photography J. Michael Muro. Editor Hughes Winborne. Costume designer Linda Bass. Music Mark Isham. Production designer Laurence Bennett. Running time: 1 hour, 47 minutes.
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Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Download Open Range

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Open Range

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Open Range Reviewed By Scott Weinberg Posted 08/15/03 15:01:45

"Costner’s only as good as his last movie, and this one’s damn solid." (Worth A Look)

Following Kevin Costner’s most recent directorial effort (1997’s "The Postman"), moviegoers could surely be forgiven their lack of anticipation for the actor/director’s newest project. This is, after all, a guy behind (and in front of) recent flicks like "Dragonfly", "3,000 Miles to Graceland" and "Message in a Bottle". But one thing Costner has proven over the years is a remarkable sense of resiliency.In between several late-90’s speed bumps, he impressed many with his participation in movies like Tin Cup and 13 Days. Add to that a body of work that includes titles like Field of Dreams, Bull Durham and Silverado. Put another way: any actor/director who can run the gamut from Waterworld to Dance with Wolves is quite simply not an easy guy to bet on (or against).So when you spend a few minutes perusing the Weekend section and Costner’s name catches your eye, it’s best to think of that Kevin Costner that you DO like and not that other one who pops up every so often. Because if you do, you’ll end up seeing Open Range - and it’s a pretty damn good movie. Kevin’s now done three baseball movies and four westerns; in these genres he’s batting a thousand. (Yes I liked Wyatt Earp; there’s a darn good 2-hour movie nestled within its 190 minutes.) Love the guy or loathe him, Costner (when working on a movie "hands-on") has clearly evolved over the years, and if Open Range isn’t the best film he’s directed yet…it comes pretty darn close. (Yeah go on and hate me; Dances with Wolves is overrated in my book.)What Costner’s learned in the case of Open Range is this: take a step back, assume a supporting stance, let your screenplay tell your story, and find one phenomenal actor to fill the screen. And while the story offered in Open Range may not be the newest Western conceit under the sun, Costner approaches the project with an earnest nobility that’s quite impressive - mainly because "earnest nobility" can often become "unintentional hilarity" when coaxed too adamantly, but also because the guy presents a warm, fluid and frankly beautiful film.Open Range is basically a 2-cowboy character study, sort of a milder take on Clint Eastwood’s brilliant Unforgiven, that moves at an intentionally (and entertainingly) deliberate pace while supplanting kinetic action sequences for moments of thoughtful discussion between endearing characters. Though Costner may seem to be the Big Star on Display here, Open Range clearly belongs to longtime Acting God Robert Duvall. That Costner the director opted to give Duvall top billing (and nearly all of the film’s best lines) is a reliable indicator. Not that the opinions of a faceless mass (i.e. "The Academy") amount to all that much, but I suspect Duvall will be earning a seventh Oscar nomination for his work here. And damn if the old rascal wouldn’t deserve it.Boss (Duvall) and Charley (Costner) are longtime partners in the ‘freegrazing’ business, and as the 1800s draw to a close these two cowboys find their profession in a precarious state. Out on the open plain with two young apprentices, a few horses and a whole lot of cows, Boss and Charley seem quite content with their lot in life. As is nearly always the case in a Western (even the ones aiming for something more than "a lotta shootouts"), there’s a nearby town full of nefarious lawmen and evil cattle barons. That our two heroes cross paths with these villainous types is certainly no surprise; the thoughtful restraint with which Costner tells his tale surely is.Yes, there IS a healthy dose of gunslinging action to be found in Open Range. Actually, the big shootout at film’s end is one of the finest sequences I’ve seen in a long time…but if non-stop carnage and pithy one-liners are what you’re looking for I suggest you look elsewhere. Open Range is about not much more than the end of the Old West as seen through the eyes of two particularly introspective and decent cowpokes. And I mean that as high praise.Certainly there are a few spots in which Costner pushes the "aw shucks" factor a bit too far; an ongoing obsession with the importance of canine friendship skirts dangerously close to Sappy-Land, and a late-in-the-game Romance Angle seems squeezed a bit too ardently. But by the time those few minor speed bumps show up, Open Range has already earned more than enough respect. 85% honest sincerity is always worth 15% of near-schmaltz.So I say Good Job to Kevin Costner. As one who’s loudly berated the guy in the past for churning out some painfully bad movies, I’m thrilled to see the guy prove my expectations wrong this time out. Open Range is a welcome return to form for a filmmaker who’s weathered more than his fair share of big-time blunders. If a film like The Postman represents a filmmaker at his most self-adoring and insular, then Open Range displays a true evolution. By letting his movie (and his star) take center stage and assuming the moody sidekick role for himself, perhaps Costner was able to approach this project from a previously unfamiliar perspective; that of a filmmaker and not a movie star.Old complainers like myself will find themselves commenting appreciatively that "Open Range" is a throwback to the old-time Westerns that don’t come around too often anymore. Anyone with a soft spot for mild-mannered and stately Horse Operas should surely find much to appreciate in this one.
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Dances with Wolves movie to watch

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Download Dances with Wolves

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Dances with Wolves

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Dances with Wolves
Dances With Wolves Reviewed By Slyder Posted 12/16/02 14:52:43

"Costner?s Finest Moment" (Awesome)

Say what you want about Kevin Costner today but be honest and admit that you loved this movie back then too. Sure, nowadays he?s a fucking hack, and I really hate him from wasting my time now and then, but I respect Costner for his earlier works, and admire him for films like Bull Durham, Field Of Dreams, The Untouchables, JFK, among others, and last but not least, this little gem, which arguably is his masterpiece. One of the best films ever made, Costner?s directorial debut is outstanding, along with its awesome cinematography, solid script, strong performances and a careful eye for detail, and it deservingly beat out heavy favorite Goodfellas for Best Picture Oscar. Anyone who dismisses this film as rubbish or just as ?another one of Costner?s ego-inflated floperoos? is either a cynic, a racist, or is biased in his anti-Costner diatribe or is brain-dead.During the final stages of the Civil War, Lieutenant John J. Dunbar (Costner) from the Union Army tries to kill himself riding off into the Southern Army enemy lines (The reason being that he?d rather die than loosing his leg through amputation), but unintentionally he manages to distract the Southern Army enough for the Union Army to charge and defeat them on the spot. So unintentionally, Dunbar becomes a hero, and after his recovery, he?s allowed to be transferred into any post he would like. Dunbar decides to be transferred into any Fort that is near the ?Indian Frontier? since it?s his wish to see it before its gone and overtaken by white civilization. He?s then transferred to Fort Sedgewick, in South Dakota, which is the furthest outpost of the realm, only to find that the Fort is completely deserted. He then decides to stay anyways and wait for the arrival or word of the Commander there. While he?s waiting, alone, he immediately makes friends at first with Mother Nature in the form of a wolf he calls Two Socks, as well as with his loyal horse Cisco. But soon, imminent contact with the local Sioux Indians begin to take place, among them his meeting with Sioux holy man Kicking Bird (Graham Greene), Indian woman with a ?white past? Stands With A Fist (Mary McDonnell) whom Dunbar would later fall in love with, fierce warrior Wind In His Hair (Rodney A. Grant), and ultimately the Chief of the Sioux village Ten Bears (Floyd ?Red Crow? Westerman). At first Dunbar is defiant (Indians stealing his horse), but then he decides to take the risk and try to convene with them, at first only for negotiation purposes, but then he soon realizes that the Sioux want more from him, they want to know more about the white people, since it seems they?re coming to stay. While this unfolds, Dunbar soon is immersed with the huge traditions of the Sioux culture, and soon begins to realize within himself how wrongly stereotyped the Indians have been and how wrong his views were about himself and his world around him.This film is so impressive I can?t find any words to describe it. The cinematography by Dean Semler is marvelous in depicting the glorious South Dakota landscape, and also sets the tone of the film. Many people have criticized this film for being boring, slow and uninteresting. Boring in what sense? Isn?t a subject of Indian tribe depiction an interesting subject? Especially the way the Indians have been treated over the years. The film?s pace is deliberately slow yes, but it?s never boring, besides it takes that approach so it can appropriately develop it?s story, and it does excellently, with every element falling into place, we never miss any single detail. Neil Travis?s editing is crucial since it gives us a very concise product and no scene is there without a point. Dunbar?s gradual transformation from white soldier to an Sioux Indian is quite something to admire and brings out some interesting points that target our ways of life and our views towards other races, the Indian cultures included. It asks you a striking question of who is more savage, the White man or the Indian man? Sure, Dunbar?s last encounter at final act of the movie with the Union Soldiers seems somewhat stereotyped, but that?s the whole point, to see how stereotyped our views of Native Americans are and how do we feel when we are at the other side of the coin. Now you know how Native Americans feel when racists everywhere bash them. Thus, this helps the film towards its shattering climax and to give out its message more strongly. Many people may find a few plot components somewhat coincidental, while others find his marriage with Stands With A Fist completely unconvincing, since he didn?t marry an Indian woman. Well, that?s the whole point of the movie, Einstein. The character of Stands With a Fist is extremely important to the story since it forms a bridge between the White Culture and the Native American Culture. Without it, the story would fail to keep developing and keep us bringing us deeper into the Sioux culture. It?s a ?what if? type of character, but a very important one. Like critic Roger Ebert points out: Dances With Wolves is a sentimental fantasy, a "what if" movie that imagines a world in which whites were genuinely interested in learning about a Native American culture that lived more closely in harmony with the natural world than any other before or since. But our knowledge of how things turned out - of how the Indians were driven from their lands by genocide and theft - casts a sad shadow over everything. How true this remark is. You see them hunt for Buffalos to supply themselves in the winter, celebrate their rituals at night, fight off the rival Pawnee Indian tribe not for politics or whatever kind of shit, but to preserve their food supplies and defend the many women and children living in that Sioux village, and smoking weed not for getting high or whatever, but as a ritual ?salute? between one another amongst other traditions. These are things that the average man?s ignorance would never understand unless they placed some interest to it and Costner did just that. It was really a wise move for Costner to let Michael Blake write the screenplay based on his own novel. I am not personally a fan of someone who adapts somebody else?s work since they at times tend to leave out many important things in the novel that would?ve helped the screenplay more and to the extreme, even miss the point of the original novel. I prefer the people that adapt their own books simply because they know the material better than anyone else and would know how to choose better the most important things out of the book. That is one of the reasons I admire many novelist-screenwriters like Stephen King, John Irving, Arthur Miller and James Dickey to name a few. Blake?s Oscar was well deserved. Many people have said that this movie is a western, well, technically it isn?t, since it breaks out the many traditions that the traditional westerns tend to have on the subject (Cowboys and Indians). You can call it a revisionist western, but I rather fit it on the adventure/drama genre.One of the most interesting things in the technical aspect of the movie is of course Dean Semler?s cinematography and Costner?s direction, which makes this film work on it?s path, and along the way there are some impressive standouts. Costner?s insistence on historical accuracy in the costumes and makeup of the Indians, the extremely wise move of casting Native American actors and letting them speak their own language rather than have them speak English, the aforementioned glorious landscapes (one of the reasons why it?s necessary to watch this film on wide screen), and of course the famous buffalo hunt scene, which is the films best and most remembered moment, beautifully shot and orchestrated and also a pivotal plot component in Costner?s transformation from White man to a Sioux Indian. Another eerie standout is that at times, the film plays more like a documentary rather than a film, and the scene where preparations are being made for the buffalo hunt give the strongest impression of it, and it helps the film, it helps it a lot. Praise for Costner and his cinematographer Semler for their work here, as well as everyone in the production design crew.The performances are fantastic. Costner gives out probably the strongest performance of his career, and I praise him for it. Sure there are a few signs of blandness, but his own characteristics and body language fit his character very well. Mary McDonnell is exceptionally well casted as Stands With a Fist and her character is well on the spot. Graham Green, Rodney A. Grant and Floyd ?Red Crow? Westerman automatically fill their roles like gloves and not one of their performances is wasted since they, as well as the rest of the Indians are pretty much the real stars of the movie, while Costner?s Dunbar is our guide.In the end, this film is highly recommendable. It hit me in the face hard when I saw it for the first time and has never failed to impress me the many times I?ve watched it over the years. Costner nowadays is a hack and I feel sorry for him now thanks to his over-inflated ego, but in the end I don?t give a shit. I paid to see him in this movie and he delivered, perhaps more than any of his other films. I will always respect him for this film, which is truly a milestone in modern American Cinema. See it!!!
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Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

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Dances with Wolves
Dances With Wolves Reviewed By Slyder Posted 12/16/02 14:52:43

"Costner?s Finest Moment" (Awesome)

Say what you want about Kevin Costner today but be honest and admit that you loved this movie back then too. Sure, nowadays he?s a fucking hack, and I really hate him from wasting my time now and then, but I respect Costner for his earlier works, and admire him for films like Bull Durham, Field Of Dreams, The Untouchables, JFK, among others, and last but not least, this little gem, which arguably is his masterpiece. One of the best films ever made, Costner?s directorial debut is outstanding, along with its awesome cinematography, solid script, strong performances and a careful eye for detail, and it deservingly beat out heavy favorite Goodfellas for Best Picture Oscar. Anyone who dismisses this film as rubbish or just as ?another one of Costner?s ego-inflated floperoos? is either a cynic, a racist, or is biased in his anti-Costner diatribe or is brain-dead.During the final stages of the Civil War, Lieutenant John J. Dunbar (Costner) from the Union Army tries to kill himself riding off into the Southern Army enemy lines (The reason being that he?d rather die than loosing his leg through amputation), but unintentionally he manages to distract the Southern Army enough for the Union Army to charge and defeat them on the spot. So unintentionally, Dunbar becomes a hero, and after his recovery, he?s allowed to be transferred into any post he would like. Dunbar decides to be transferred into any Fort that is near the ?Indian Frontier? since it?s his wish to see it before its gone and overtaken by white civilization. He?s then transferred to Fort Sedgewick, in South Dakota, which is the furthest outpost of the realm, only to find that the Fort is completely deserted. He then decides to stay anyways and wait for the arrival or word of the Commander there. While he?s waiting, alone, he immediately makes friends at first with Mother Nature in the form of a wolf he calls Two Socks, as well as with his loyal horse Cisco. But soon, imminent contact with the local Sioux Indians begin to take place, among them his meeting with Sioux holy man Kicking Bird (Graham Greene), Indian woman with a ?white past? Stands With A Fist (Mary McDonnell) whom Dunbar would later fall in love with, fierce warrior Wind In His Hair (Rodney A. Grant), and ultimately the Chief of the Sioux village Ten Bears (Floyd ?Red Crow? Westerman). At first Dunbar is defiant (Indians stealing his horse), but then he decides to take the risk and try to convene with them, at first only for negotiation purposes, but then he soon realizes that the Sioux want more from him, they want to know more about the white people, since it seems they?re coming to stay. While this unfolds, Dunbar soon is immersed with the huge traditions of the Sioux culture, and soon begins to realize within himself how wrongly stereotyped the Indians have been and how wrong his views were about himself and his world around him.This film is so impressive I can?t find any words to describe it. The cinematography by Dean Semler is marvelous in depicting the glorious South Dakota landscape, and also sets the tone of the film. Many people have criticized this film for being boring, slow and uninteresting. Boring in what sense? Isn?t a subject of Indian tribe depiction an interesting subject? Especially the way the Indians have been treated over the years. The film?s pace is deliberately slow yes, but it?s never boring, besides it takes that approach so it can appropriately develop it?s story, and it does excellently, with every element falling into place, we never miss any single detail. Neil Travis?s editing is crucial since it gives us a very concise product and no scene is there without a point. Dunbar?s gradual transformation from white soldier to an Sioux Indian is quite something to admire and brings out some interesting points that target our ways of life and our views towards other races, the Indian cultures included. It asks you a striking question of who is more savage, the White man or the Indian man? Sure, Dunbar?s last encounter at final act of the movie with the Union Soldiers seems somewhat stereotyped, but that?s the whole point, to see how stereotyped our views of Native Americans are and how do we feel when we are at the other side of the coin. Now you know how Native Americans feel when racists everywhere bash them. Thus, this helps the film towards its shattering climax and to give out its message more strongly. Many people may find a few plot components somewhat coincidental, while others find his marriage with Stands With A Fist completely unconvincing, since he didn?t marry an Indian woman. Well, that?s the whole point of the movie, Einstein. The character of Stands With a Fist is extremely important to the story since it forms a bridge between the White Culture and the Native American Culture. Without it, the story would fail to keep developing and keep us bringing us deeper into the Sioux culture. It?s a ?what if? type of character, but a very important one. Like critic Roger Ebert points out: Dances With Wolves is a sentimental fantasy, a "what if" movie that imagines a world in which whites were genuinely interested in learning about a Native American culture that lived more closely in harmony with the natural world than any other before or since. But our knowledge of how things turned out - of how the Indians were driven from their lands by genocide and theft - casts a sad shadow over everything. How true this remark is. You see them hunt for Buffalos to supply themselves in the winter, celebrate their rituals at night, fight off the rival Pawnee Indian tribe not for politics or whatever kind of shit, but to preserve their food supplies and defend the many women and children living in that Sioux village, and smoking weed not for getting high or whatever, but as a ritual ?salute? between one another amongst other traditions. These are things that the average man?s ignorance would never understand unless they placed some interest to it and Costner did just that. It was really a wise move for Costner to let Michael Blake write the screenplay based on his own novel. I am not personally a fan of someone who adapts somebody else?s work since they at times tend to leave out many important things in the novel that would?ve helped the screenplay more and to the extreme, even miss the point of the original novel. I prefer the people that adapt their own books simply because they know the material better than anyone else and would know how to choose better the most important things out of the book. That is one of the reasons I admire many novelist-screenwriters like Stephen King, John Irving, Arthur Miller and James Dickey to name a few. Blake?s Oscar was well deserved. Many people have said that this movie is a western, well, technically it isn?t, since it breaks out the many traditions that the traditional westerns tend to have on the subject (Cowboys and Indians). You can call it a revisionist western, but I rather fit it on the adventure/drama genre.One of the most interesting things in the technical aspect of the movie is of course Dean Semler?s cinematography and Costner?s direction, which makes this film work on it?s path, and along the way there are some impressive standouts. Costner?s insistence on historical accuracy in the costumes and makeup of the Indians, the extremely wise move of casting Native American actors and letting them speak their own language rather than have them speak English, the aforementioned glorious landscapes (one of the reasons why it?s necessary to watch this film on wide screen), and of course the famous buffalo hunt scene, which is the films best and most remembered moment, beautifully shot and orchestrated and also a pivotal plot component in Costner?s transformation from White man to a Sioux Indian. Another eerie standout is that at times, the film plays more like a documentary rather than a film, and the scene where preparations are being made for the buffalo hunt give the strongest impression of it, and it helps the film, it helps it a lot. Praise for Costner and his cinematographer Semler for their work here, as well as everyone in the production design crew.The performances are fantastic. Costner gives out probably the strongest performance of his career, and I praise him for it. Sure there are a few signs of blandness, but his own characteristics and body language fit his character very well. Mary McDonnell is exceptionally well casted as Stands With a Fist and her character is well on the spot. Graham Green, Rodney A. Grant and Floyd ?Red Crow? Westerman automatically fill their roles like gloves and not one of their performances is wasted since they, as well as the rest of the Indians are pretty much the real stars of the movie, while Costner?s Dunbar is our guide.In the end, this film is highly recommendable. It hit me in the face hard when I saw it for the first time and has never failed to impress me the many times I?ve watched it over the years. Costner nowadays is a hack and I feel sorry for him now thanks to his over-inflated ego, but in the end I don?t give a shit. I paid to see him in this movie and he delivered, perhaps more than any of his other films. I will always respect him for this film, which is truly a milestone in modern American Cinema. See it!!!
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