11/30/2008

Rest in Peace - November 2008

.
Rest in Peace

Nov-28-2008
Bill Finnegan, 80, American television and film producer (The Fabulous Baker Boys, Hawaii Five-O), Parkinson's disease.

Nov-19-2008
John Michael Hayes, 89, American screenwriter (Rear Window), natural causes.

Nov-16-2008
Reg Varney, 92, British comedy actor (On the Buses).

Nov-08-2008
Joe Hyams, 85, American Hollywood columnist and author, coronary artery disease.

Nov-04-2008
Michael Crichton, 66, American writer (Jurassic Park, The Andromeda Strain, ER), throat cancer.

My November 2008 Viewings

Recommended DVDs marked with *. Underlined titles are direct links to review.

The Promotion 11/30/08 (B-)
The Good Life 11/29/08 (B-)

* Noise 11/28/08 (B)
Dedication 11/27/08 (B-)
* Death Sentence 11/26/08 (B)
The Ex 11/25/08 (C+)
Perfect Stranger 11/24/08 (B-)

* The Sea Inside 11/23/08 (B+)
* Boston Legal: 4:3 11/22/08 (B)
* Psych: 1:3 11/21/08 (B)
Heartburn
11/20/08 (B-)
* Resurrecting the Champ 11/19/08 (B)
* September Dawn 11/18/08 (B)
Flashback of a Fool 11/17/08 (B-)
Transsiberian 11/16/08 (B-)
Street Kings 11/15/08 (B-)
Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride 11/15/08 (B-)

* Goya's Ghosts 11/14/08 (B+)
* Last of the Summer Wine: 1 11/13/08 (B)
* Boston Legal: 4:2 11/12/08 (B)
* Sin City 11/10/08 (B)
* The Closer: 1:1 11/09/08 (B)
* Boston Legal: 4:1 11/07/08 (B)
* Black Snake Moan 11/06/08 (B+)
* Get Smart 11/05/08 (B)
88 Minutes 11/03/08 (C)

* Road to Perdition 11/01/08 (A-)

The Promotion (2008)

"We're all just out here trying to get some food.
Sometimes, we bump into each other."
Doug Stauber (Seann William Scott) is a grocery store assistant manager who has to do more than his share of dealing with problems on the premises, but he aspires to earn a promotion to manager of a new store under construction in a nearby Chicago suburb. Doug and his wife Jen (Jenna Fischer) are eager to start a family but Doug doesn't feel that's possible until he's finally established as a manager.

While trying to prove his merit, another employee of the chain transfers in from Québec and it's soon apparent that this Richard Wehler (John C. Reilly) also hopes for the promotion. He's arrived with his wife Lori (Lili Taylor) and their young daughter.

So what will it take to win this job? And what is each of the contenders willing to do to promote themselves -- and perhaps do to assure the other won't succeed?

Others appearing include Fred Armisen, Bobby Cannavale, Chris Conrad, Gil Bellows with Jason Bateman in a small role as a corporate retreat leader.

Written and directed by Steve Conrad.

Run time: 1 hour, 26 minutes

Rated R for language including sexual references, and some drug use.

My personal rating: B-

11/29/2008

The Good Life (2007)

Jason (Mark Webber), a young man from a disturbed family background, feels he's an outsider in his small town. He's very responsible and holds down a regular job at a gas station while also helping out at an old movie theater and trying to keep the theater owner, the sick and heavy-drinking Gus (Harry Dean Stanton), on track. Jason lives with his mother and also has to keep her on track and try to pay the bills so they won't be evicted.

Heading into deep despair, Jason is encouraged by a new friend, Frances (Zooey Deschanel), who is also troubled.

Also appearing are Chris Klein, Patrick Fugit, Drea de Matteo, Bruce McGill, Donal Logue, Deborah Rush, Michael Baxter.

Written and directed by Stephen Berra.

Run time: 1 hour, 30 minutes

Rated R for language.

My personal rating: B-

11/28/2008

Noise (2007)

.
NYC resident David Owen (Tim Robbins) is really a pretty decent fellow, but much to the dismay of his wife Helen (Bridget Moynahan), he's gone all vigilante because the noise of the city is driving him crazy -- particularly car security alarms.

Owen takes it upon himself to bust out car windows, reach in to pop the hoods, then cut through the alarm cables to silence them. He's grown tired of how everyone else, including the cops, ignore the deafening sounds.

The media dubs him "The Rectifier" and he becomes somewhat of a hometown hero to others who are sick of the noise. He even takes on the scurrilous Mayor Schneer (William Hurt).

William Baldwin, Ekaterina Filippovna, Lou Carbonneau, David Margulies, Helen Hanft also appear.

This story is based on Henry Bean's true experiences; he not only wrote the screenplay, he also directed this film.

Run time: 1 hour, 58 minutes

Not rated my MPAA.


My personal rating: B

11/27/2008

Dedication (2007)

"I've spent my whole life wanting something and doing my very best not to find it. Never even going near the places it might be, and suddenly I got the god damn thing practically chained around my neck."
Billed as a romantic comedy, this is the quirky story of neurotic children's book writer Henry Roth (Billy Crudup) who is chronically in writer's block and a frustration to his only friend and long-time collaborating illustrator Rudy Holt (Tom Wilkinson).

When Rudy dies, Henry is devastated and uncertain he can continue on the book whose deadline is looming. But his editor (Bob Balaban) demands that he settle in with a new collaborator and get the job done.

The obsessive-compulsive, misanthrope Henry, who is also a misogynist, is not at all happy about working with the unproven young illustrator the editor sends over to Henry.

Lucy Reilly (Mandy Moore) just wants to sink herself in her work to help her get over the boyfriend who dumped her two years before. When the former lover, Jeremy (Martin Freeman), returns to tempt her, Lucy must decide what she's going to do while also dealing with Henry's annoying idiosyncrasies and the deadline approaching.

Also starring Christine Taylor, Amy Sedaris, Dianne Wiest.

Directed by Justin Theroux.

Run time: 1 hour, 35 minutes

Rated R for language and some sexual content.

My personal rating: B-

11/26/2008

Death Sentence (2007)

"The equation.
Sometimes it's...
just chaos.
That's all there is."
Nick Hume (Kevin Bacon) seems to have it all. He's an insurance executive living in a nice neighborhood where he's a devoted family man. He and his wife Helen (Kelly Preston) have two teenage sons, Brendan (Stuart Lafferty) and Lucas (Jordan Garrett).

One night while Nick and his oldest son Brendan are returning from the boy's hockey game, they travel through an unfamiliar neighborhood and they stop at a convenience store so Brendan can get a smoothie.

What Nick witnesses then, an act of gang ritual and violence by a pack lead by Billy Darley (Garrett Hedlund) and perpetrated by his brother Joe (Matt O'Leary), causes Nick to go in total protection mode of his family, facing off with the Darley's thug father Bones (John Goodman), and seeking vengence.

Aisha Tyler is Detective Wallis.

Directed by James Wan.

Run time: 1 hour, 46 minutes

Rated R for strong bloody brutal violence and pervasive language.

My personal rating: B

11/25/2008

The Ex (2007)

aka Fast Track

When NYC attorney Sofia Kowalski (
Amanda Peet) wants to be a stay-at-home mom after the birth of her first child, her slacker cook husband Tom Reilly (Zach Braff) feels he's ready to stand up to the plate to take care of his family. Instead of getting the promotion he expected, he gets fired. So Sofia can stay home with the baby, Tom agrees to move to Sofia's hometown in Ohio where her parents (Charles Grodin, Mia Farrow) can help them out and Tom can work at her father's ad agency.

Tom is assigned to learn the business from Chip Sanders (
Jason Bateman) who happens to be Sofia's high school boyfriend. Chip sets about to make Tom's work life a nightmare hoping Tom will fail again so Chip can swoop in and capture Sofia's heart.

Also appearing are
Donal Logue, Amy Poehler and Fred Armisen.

While there are some clever spots, this film plays out fairly predictably.

Directed by
Jesse Peretz.

Run time: 1 hour, 29 minutes

Rated: PG-13

My personal rating: C+

11/24/2008

Perfect Stranger (2007)

Journalist Rowena Price (Halle Berry) is hellbent on avenging the murder of Grace (Nicki Aycox), a childhood friend. Posing as a temp worker, Rowena gets a job in the office of Harrison Hill (Bruce Willis), a wealthy and cunning businessman, who Rowena thinks murdered Grace because he wanted to silence their affair. Hill can't afford for his wife Mia (Paula Miranda) to find out about the affair as Mia holds all the money in the business her father built. With the help of her computer geek friend Miles Haley (Giovanni Ribisi), Rowena sets about to investigate Hill and get the goods on him.

But can it be as simple as that? And what really are Rowena's motives?

Also appearing are Richard Portnow, Gary Dourdan, Patti D'Arbanville, Clea Lewis, Tamara Feldman, Heidi Klumm, and Michael Tolan.

Directed by James Foley.

Run time: 1 hour, 49 minutes

Rated R for sexual content, nudity, some disturbing violent images and language.


My personal rating: B-

11/23/2008

The Sea Inside (2004)

Mar adentro

"A life
without freedom
is not a life."
Based on the story of Ramón Sampedro (Javier Bardem), a quadriplegic Spaniard, and his true life 20-year battle for his right to euthanasia. His lawyer, Julia (Belén Rueda), has a degenerative disease herself and great empathy for Sampedro, but Rosa (Lola Dueñas), an abused woman, tries hard to teach both Sampedro and Julia that all life is worth living.

A powerful and touching film that makes us all think about life and death.

Also appearing are Mabel Ribera as Sanpedro's sister-in-law and primary caretaker; Tamar Novas as his beloved nephew; Celso Bugallo and Joan Dalman as his brother and father who are opposed to his wishes; Clara Segura as a woman who advocates freedom of choice to die; and Jose Maria Pou as a quadrapalegic priest who tries to convince Sanpedro to live.

Directed by Alejandro Amenábar, who also co-wrote the screenplay.

This film won the 2005 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film plus 59 other awards around the world.

Subtitles.

Run time: 2 hours, 5 minutes

Rated PG-13 for intense depiction of mature thematic material.

My personal rating: A-

11/21/2008

Psych (TV Series)

Shawn Spencer (James Roday) is basically a slacker at heart, but he possesses powerful Monk-like observational skills thanks to his demanding, former cop pop, Henry (Corbin Bernsen). Seems Henry drilled the child Shawn (Liam James, and others at younger ages in flashback) at every opportunity as he was growing up. Shawn was expected to have instant recall of all manner of obscure detail. Henry also was super critical of nearly everything young Shawn did.

As an adult, Shawn realizes that his observational skills might just land him a job as a consultant to the Santa Barbara police department. But he needs a gimmick to persuade them so he fakes psychic abilities and persuades the police chief (
Kirsten Nelson) to let him in on cases.

Shawn recruits his best old childhood friend Gus (
Dulé Hill), a pharmaceutical rep, to be his partner despite Gus' protests. Shawn is definitely Detective Carlton Lassiter's (Timothy Omundson) nemesis while Detective Juliet O'Hara (Maggie Lawson) seems to have a big crush on Shawn.

This clever series premiered on USA-TV in 2006.

My personal rating: B

11/20/2008

Heartburn (1986)

Food writer Rachel Samsat (Meryl Streep) and political columnist Mark Forman (Jack Nicholson) meet at a wedding and soon it's their own wedding day despite Rachel's apprehension at a second marriage, move from NYC to DC, and just general worry that it will all succeed.

Everything turns upside down when Rachel discovers that Mark has been having an affair.

Also appearing are Jeff Daniels, Maureen Stapleton, Stockard Channing, Richard Masur, Catherine O'Hara, Milos Forman, Kevin Spacey (as a subway thief), Mercedes Ruehl, Joanna Gleason, Jack Gilpin, Yakov Smirnoff.

Directed by Mike Nichols. Based on a semi-autobiographic novel by Nora Ephron about her marriage to Carl Bernstein. The song "Coming Around Again" is sung by Carly Simon.

Run time: 1 hour, 48 minutes

Unrated by MPAA.

My personal rating: B-

11/19/2008

Resurrecting the Champ (2007)

Based on a true story.
"I went the distance
with Floyd Patterson.
I broke Marciano's nose."
A Denver boxing beat journalist Erik Kernan, Jr. (Josh Hartnett) lives in the shadow of his late, great sports journalist father. His editor, Ralph Metz (Alan Alda), has been passing Erik's articles because he feels they are lackluster.

Frustrated and annoyed, Erik takes a story concept to a Denver newspaper and get the assignment to write a cover article about Bob Satterfield (Samuel L. Jackson) a once great boxer from the early 1950s who was covered by Erik's father and who Erik has found homeless on the streets of Denver. The magazine article is an enormous success and Erik has the gratitude of his new editor (David Paymer) and an offer from Showtime's sports casting director (Teri Hatcher) to go on air covering the fights.

Erik views this as an opportunity to maybe win back his estranged wife and fellow journalist, Joyce (Kathryn Morris) and hopefully make a solid bond with his six-year old son (Dakota Goyo).

But when Bob Satterfield, Jr. (Harry Lennix) steps forward and says his father, the boxing legend, has been dead for many years, Erik is forced to deal with the truth while making some peace with his father's memory and his own son's future.

Peter Coyote also appears as an aged sports journalist who knew Erik's father.

Directed by Rod Lurie.

Run time: 1 hour, 52 minutes

Rated PG-13 for some violence and brief language.


My personal rating: B

11/18/2008

September Dawn (2008)

"May the children of Satan go to hell."
Based on a true incident.

Pioneer wagons from Arkansas and Missouri arrive in Utah in September 1857 to be scrupulously eyed by Jacob Samuelson (Jon Voight), Mormon bishop, captain of the local militia, and mayor of the town. With 900 head of cattle, 200 fine Kentucky horses, and tired people, the caravan leader Capt. Fancher (Shaun Johnston) asked Samuelson for a place where they can rest and restore themselves and their stock. Samuelson grants them permission to encamp in Mountain Meadow.

Samuelson, suspicious of these Gentiles and angry that some were from Missouri where the Mormon leader Joseph Smith was murdered, claimed he received direction from the most powerful man in the American West, Mormon president Brigham Young (Terence Stamp), and visions of Joseph Smith (Dean Cain) and Hyrum Young (Ron Webber) to slaughter the pioneers.

By telling the Indians that the pioneers were a threat to both the Indian nation and the Mormons, Samuelson incided the natives to run rage upon the pioneers. After the attack, the Indians are angry that the pioneers had succeed in killing many of the Indians after Samuelson had assured them that God was on their side and none of their braves would die.

Samuelson then ordered the reluctant adopted son of Brigham Young, John D. Lee (Jon Gries), to murder the remaining pioneers.
In all, more than 120 men, women and children were lead to slaughter on that September dawn. The only survivors were the children too young to speak and remember. They were taken in by Mormon families in the area. Eventually, with the intercession of the American government, those children were returned to their families.

Interwoven through the factual information of the film, Samuelson's son Jonathan (Trent Ford) falls in love with Emily Hudson (Tamara Hope), daughter of the pioneer preacher (Daniel Libman).

Lolita Davidovich, Krisinda Cain, and Taylor Handley also appear.

Co-written and directed by Christopher Cain.

Run time: 1 hour, 50 minutes

Rated R for violence.


My personal rating: B

11/17/2008

Flashbacks of a Fool (2008)


Joe Scott (Daniel Craig), a hyped up drug user, low down drinker, womanizing actor, is just about to the washed up point. Despite the best intentions of his personal assistant Ophelia (Eve), Scott just can't keep himself together. His LA life is out of control and spiralling down rapidly.

When his mother calls from England to break the news that his childhood pal Boots has died, Scott is shaken to the core and despondently looks back over his youth, relationship with Boots, his earliest sexual encounters, and a tragic accident that he could have prevented from happening if he'd not been such a callow youth.

After much reflective thinking, Scott returns to England too late for Boots' funeral but he needs to make right things from his past as best as he can so he can pick up the pieces of his current life.

Harry Eden does a commendable job as young Joe Scott. Also appearing are Miriam Karlin, Jodhi May, Helen McCrory, Olivia Williams, Felicity Jones, Keeley Hawes.

For the most part, I really enjoyed the soundtrack with an eclectic blend of music mostly from the 1970s, however the words to the song on the closing credits fit the theme in some ways but the fact that it was rap just didn't fit the tone of this film.

Written and directed by Baillie Walsh.

Run time: 1 hour, 50 minutes

Rated R for strong sexual content, nudity, language and some drug use.

My personal rating: C+

11/16/2008

Transsiberian (2008)

.
Almost
Hitchcock-esque
This thriller is set on the legendary Transsiberian Express train running between China and Russia.

Iowa couple Roy (Woody Harrelson) and Jessie (Emily Mortimer) are returning to the USA after a two-week missionary project in Beijing when they realize that the legend has been tarnished since the fall of the USSR. The glamor and romance the train has been tarnished with no remnent left of the old glory.

On board, they meet Carlos (Eduardo Noriega) and Abby (Kate Mara) , a couple who travel the world giving language lessons and selling handcrafted items like Russian nesting dolls.

After one stop, Roy gets separated from Jessie and doesn't get back on the train in time for the departure. Concerned about him, Jessie gets off the train at the next stop to wait for him. Carlos and Amy opt to wait with her. When Carlos makes untoward advances on Jessie, she accidentally kills him but their were no witnesses.

Rejoined by Ray, the couple goes on ahead with their train trip but neither realize that Carlos was a drug runner and now Ray and Jessie are being persued by the corrupt police team that had been chasing Carlos.

Trapped on the train with no escape, Ray and Jessie are at the mercy of the thugs tracking her down lead by the evil and Grinko (Ben Kingsley) and Kolzak (Thomas Kretschmann).

Co-written and directed by Brad Anderson.

Run time: 1 hour, 51 minutes

Rated R for some violence, including torture and language.

My personal rating: B-

11/15/2008

Street Kings (2008)

"You went toe to toe with evil.
And you won"
Like all the cops in his unit, Tom Ludlow (Keanu Reeves) bends the rules of conduct on a regular basis.

Ludlow, who has a drinking problem since the death of his wife, is now being investigated by Internal Affairs as a result of a disgruntled former detective's snitching. The snitch is Ludlow's own former partner, Washington (Terry Crews).

Despite warnings from Ludlow's captain, Jack Wander (Forest Whitaker) to stay away from Washington,

When Washington is killed, Internal Affairs Captain James Biggs (Hugh Laurie) starts an investigation of Ludlow because circumstances heavily implicate him in the murder.

Ludlow feels Washington was killed in deal gone bad with two thugs who are buying drugs from Washington -- drugs he'd stolen from the department's evidence room. Ludlow recruits the assistance of Detective Paul Diskant (Chris Evans) who has been assigned to the case to investigate the circumstances surrounding Washington's murder. Posing as corrupt cops during their off-duty time, Ludlow and Diskant set out to revenge Washington's death.

What follows is intense and complex as other officers are drawn into the ruse leaving Ludlow to fit the puzzle pieces together.

Cedric the Entertainer, Jay Mohr, Naomie Harris, Martha Higareda, Grace Garcia, John Corbett and Amaury Nolasco also appear.

Directed by David Ayer.

Run time: 1 hour, 49 minutes

Rated R for strong violence and pervasive language.

My personal rating: B-

Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride (2006)

Hunter S. Thompson of Film

At the top of the mountain,
we are all snow leopards.

In many ways, Hunter S. Thompson was to the late 1960s and 1970s what William S. Burroughs was to the 1950s.

A number of actors, directors, writers, journalists, and politicians speak about the impact of Hunter S. Thompson and clips from interviews with Thompson also appear.

Some of my favorite commentaries include:

In the labyrinth that America became in the '60s and '70s, Hunter S. Thompson just might have been at the center. And in a way, that center still holds. Straddling the worlds of journalism and literature, politics and rock and roll, sports and film, Thompson found himself at the intersection of some interesting times. But interesting times are the oldest of curses and mazes have monsters in them, too. Eventually the permanent address for the good doctor became Owl Farm at Woody Creek, Colorado. A literary salon and a firing range.
~narrator Nick Nolte

Open letter to the youth of America, 1955
Oh youth of America, awake from your slumber of indolence and harken to all of the future! Do you realize that you are rapidly becoming a doomed generation? Do you realize that the fate of the world and of generations to come rests on your shoulders? ...Oh ignorant youth, the world is not a joyous place. The time has come for you to dispense with the frivolous pleasures of childhood and get down to honest toil until you are sixty-five. Then and only then can you relax and collect your social security and live happily until the time of your death. -signed fearfully and disgustedly, yours, John J. Righteous Hypocrite
~prophetic words by Hunter S. Thompson as read by a childhood friend

It was a beautiful rural location [Thompson's Owl Farm] where Hunter could get away with a lot of stuff he couldn't do downtown. Like target practice, blowing up dynamite, blowing up cars. Hunter got a big rush out of putting a half a case of duPont dynamite, 25 pounds of black powder, five gallons of gasoline inside an old Jeep Cherokee and blowing it 300 feet in the air. You can't do that across the street here.
~sheriff of Pitkin County, Colorado

The word is "gonzo." It helped push Hunter Thompson into prominence. And it dogged him to the very end. He created a character, an attitude, a voice, and arguably, a genre to deploy it, an audience to enjoy it, and an entire air to go along with it. In a pivotal moment in the American experience, he minted sentence after sentence that were more furious, funny, and just plain fast than anything else you could get. Many of us discovered him in Roling Stone magazine where Thompson formed a fruitful but combative relationship with editor Jann Wenner.
~narrator Nick Nolte

I think he was a beacon for dissent throughout his whole life. He was a place people could turn to get a moral argument from an immoral outlaw.
~John Cusack

For years I regarded Nixon's very existence as a monument to all the rancid genes and broken chromosomes to corrupt the American dream. He was a foul caricature of himself, a man with no soul, no inner convictions, with the integrity of a hyena and the style of a poison toad. I couldn't imagine him laughing at anything except may a paraplegic who wanted to vote Democratic but couldn't quite reach the levers on the voting machine.
~William F. Buckley reading (with a smirk) from Thompson's Presenting the Richard Nixon Doll

Just as Hunter Thompson intuited the last days of the '60s as the end of the beginning, something about the late '70s must have felt like the beginning of the end. In Hunter Thompson had always been a movie waiting to happen. Released in 1980, Where the Buffalo Roam appropriates the life of one Hunter S. Thompson from the campaign trail to the Super Bowl. Hunter's hottest property to this point was himself.
~narrator Nick Nolte

Hunter Thompson never acted his age a day in his life. He was born old and he remains forever young. "Buy the ticket," he once counseled, "take the ride. But the ticket costs more all the time. And the ride gets a little slower. A little shorter every year."
~narrator Nick Nolte


Sean Penn, Johnny Depp, Bill Murray, Benicio del Toro, Harry Dean Stanton, Tom Wolfe, Ed Bradley, Gary Hart, Leonard Maltin, George McGovern, and many others are also interviewed.

Excerpts from films made from his works include Fear and Loathing in Los Vegas and Where the Buffalo Roam.

Directed by Tom Thurman. Made for Starz TV.

This film would have been better without the brainless prima dona Gary Busey's attempt to direct the interviewer. Looks like he was having yet another of his many gonzo actor moments. But otherwise this was an interesting insight into HST.

Run time: 1 hour, 13 minutes.

My personal rating: B-

11/14/2008

Goya's Ghosts (2006)

.
Some things
never change:
greed, ambition, violence

Despite the fact that Francisco de Goya (Stellan Skarsgård)has been commissioned to paint the portraits of Spain's King Carlos IV (Randy Quaid) and his wife and some of the Church leaders, including the monk Lorenzo Casamares (Javier Bardem), Goya is the focus of a witchhunt lead my none other than the loathesome Casamares. Some of Goya's interpretive prints have been judged to be "demonic filth" and he's labeled a heretic. The Church, striving to return to "the God-fearing ways of the past," dictates much in this era.

Targetted even more than Goya is his favorite model, Ines Bilbatúa (Natalie Portman), who is accused of practicing Jewish rituals simply because she doesn't care for pork. Ines' father Tomás Bilbatúa (José Luis Gómez), a very wealthy man, tries to curry favor with Casamares to find and release his daughter who has been imprisoned. When Bilbatúa finds his daughter has been tortured to force a false confession, Casamares is put to "The Question" by Bilbatúa in the same way that Ines was tortured.
Years later, when Napoleon's army liberates Spain from the horrors of the Inquisition, a worn and misshapen Ines is released from the prison dungeon and recruits Goya to help her find the child she bore while in prison.

Co-written and directed by
Milos Forman.

Run time: 1 hour, 54 minutes.

Rated R for violence, disturbing images, some sexual content and nudity.

My personal rating: B+

11/10/2008

Sin City (2005)

My tastes generally don't run to films made from popular comic books. Some of them are okay but generally I take a pass. However this film, based on Frank Miller's graphic (comic book) novels, is so noir, so bizarre, so filled with some of my favorite actors, that I loved it. This ain't your ordinary movie, Joe!

Filmed in black and white with frequent splashes of bold color.

Featuring Jessica Alba, Carla Briggs, Rosario Dawson, Benicio Del Toro, Michael Clarke Duncan, Josh Hartnett, Rutger Hauer, Nicky Katt, Michael Madsen, Brittany Murphy, Clive Owen, Mickey Rourke, Nick Stahl, Bruce Willis, Elijah Wood, and many others.

Directed by Frank Miller, Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino.

Run time: 2 hours, 4 minutes

Rated R for sustained strong stylized violence, nudity and sexual content including dialogue.

My personal rating: B

11/06/2008

Black Snake Moan (2006)

Heartbroken loner, farmer and bluesman Lazarus (Samuel L. Jackson) rescues the nymphomanic young Rae (Christina Ricci) who has been beaten and left to die by her boyfriend Ronnie (Justin Timberlake) as he leaves for the Army.

In his attempt to rehabilitate and protect Rae from herself, Lazarus uses a long, heavy chain to keep her in his rural home and yard. Some pretty dramatic and touching scenes revolve around that chain.

Can these two tragic misfits find redemption by what they learn from each other?

Also appearing are S. Epatha Merkerson, John Cothran Jr., David Banner, Neimus K. Williams.

Some really fine blues in this film.

Written and directed by Craig Brewer.

Run time: 1 hour, 56 minutes

Rated R for strong sexual content, language, some violence and drug use.

My personal rating: B+

11/05/2008

Get Smart (2008)

Forty-three years later, it stands up to the test!

I was skeptical about this old TV turned into movie but I have to say, for camp value alone this is worth the viewing!

Steve Carell definitely channels Don Adams' bungling Maxwell Smart and Anne Hathaway is a commendable Agent 99 in this satisfactory tale of CONTROL vs KAOS.

Also appearing are
Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson as Agent 23, Alan Arkin as The Chief, Terence Stamp as Siegfried, Terry Crews as Agent 91, David Koechner as Larabee, James Caan as the President, Bill Murray as Agent 13, Patrick Warburton as Hymie.

Directed by
Peter Segal.

Run time: 1 hour, 50 minutes

Rated PG-13 for some rude humor, action violence and language.

My personal rating: B

11/03/2008

88 Minutes (2007)

Tick Tock
Tick Tock

Seattle forensic psychiatrist and college professor Dr. Jack Gramm (Al Pacino) has 88 minutes to figure out who is trying to kill him and stop the murder from taking place.

Targetted by Jon "The Seattle Slasher" Forster (Neal McDonough), a serial killer who is condemned to be executed later that day thanks to expert testimony Dr. Gramm gave, Gramm must find who Forster recruited to commit copy-cat murders and carry out Forster's plan to murder Gramm.

Others appearing include Alicia Witt, Leelee Sobieski, Amy Brenneman, William Forsythe, Deborah Kara Unger, Benjamin McKenzie, Leah Cairns, Stephen Moyer, Christopher Redman, Brendan Fletcher, Michael Eklund.

Directed by Jon Avnet.

Run time: 1 hour, 48 minutes

Rated R for disturbing violent content, brief nudity and language.

My personal rating: C

11/01/2008

Road to Perdition (2002)

There are many stories about Michael Sullivan. Some say he was a decent man. Some say there was no good in him at all. But I once spent 6 weeks on the road with him, in the winter of 1931.
This is our story.

Sometimes it's best that children not find out what their parents do for a living.

When young Michael Sullivan, Jr. (Tyler Hoechlin) can't contain his curiosity and hides in his father's car one night, he witnesses his father (Tom Hanks) and his father's friend commit a Chicago gangland hit, murdering several men.

When Hank's Irish godfather, John Rooney (Paul Newman), finds out about the young witness from Sullivan's fellow henchman, an edict is issued and Rooney's son Connor (Daniel Craig) and other goons are dispatched to annihilate Sullivan and his family. While the senior Michael Sullivan is away from home with the junior Michael Sullivan, Sullivan's wife and other son (Jennifer Jason Leigh. Liam Aiken) are executed. When this is discovered, the father and surviving son must go on the lam to escape being murdered themselves.

Can Sullivan save his son's life?

A powerful, poignant, and emotional tale told with great brilliance.

Others appearing include Ciarán Hinds, Craig Spidle. Ian Barford, Stephen P. Dunn, Paul Turner.

Directed by Sam Mendes.

Run time: 1 hour, 57 minutes

Rated R for violence and language.

My personal rating: A-