FILMS AND MOVIES SEEN 2011 (18-19 y.o.) - early 2010s
I promised myself that I'd watch lots of films this year, since I wanted to be stimulated and inspired, and well, distracted. Movies are a great escape, and can serve as food for thought. Though they depict less than perfect worlds, nothing beats sitting in a dark room and just taking in the controlled chaos of a movie. 2011, here I come! /// audited January 2020, October 2020, January 2021
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- DirectorErik SkjoldbjærgStarsChristina RicciJonathan Rhys MeyersJessica LangeA young woman struggles with depression during her first year at Harvard.Actually watched this last year, during my first semester in my 2nd year in college. This movie was based on Lizzie Wurtzel's infamous memoir of the same title. It's about depression, it's about being young and being lost in a sea of privilege--it's a statement to the world about how you can have it all (go to Harvard, live in New York, get published in major magazines, win prizes, have a boyfriend) and still be deeply mired in paralysis.
NOTE--I have NOT finished this movie yet. Will complete this description once I do.
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Finished the movie as of September 2012. More than a year has lapsed and a lot has changed in my life, but the moods and issues that weave through Lizzie Wurtzel still haunts me. The movie is not as detailed nor as revelatory as the book. In the book, Lizzie delves into the mental hysteria and hopelessness that one experiences with depression; the film deals with the emotional and relational turmoil that explodes out of the condition: broken relationships with family, problems with intimacy, a deep longing for something else. The film runs like a one-act play: sparse sets, heavy dialogue, sparse characters (we merely see Lizzie's mother, father, and grandparents, Ruby her bestfriend, Rafe her boyfriend, intimate moments with her psychiatrist, etc). It's a deeply disturbing scenario in a sense that Lizzie just has to hold on for her dear life through only a couple of people (though those who love her deeply). Prozac Nation is recommended viewing, only for the fact that it can shed light on the debilitating illness.
Highlight: Christina Ricci's Oscar-worthy performance. Did not realize how beautiful and radiant she looked at twenty. A childish, feline sex appeal, beautiful almond eyes, cherry lips, the skin, the body. Of course what stands out ultimately is her acting talent.
Rating: 7.5/10 - DirectorRyan MurphyStarsJulia RobertsJavier BardemRichard JenkinsA married woman realizes how unhappy her marriage really is, and that her life needs to go in a different direction. After a painful divorce, she takes off on a round-the-world journey to "find herself".I have this weird inclination to watch movies with female protagonists lost in a confusing world--privileged, white, and JUST UNHAPPY (Prozac Nation please). So Eat Pray Love was quite a predictable choice for me, since I'm a sucker for feel-good travel films that grapple with the meaning of life and that kind of stuff.
This film is about Liz (hello Prozac Nation 2.0, jk) Gilbert, an NYU graduate who's a well-paid writer discontent with her marriage and basically her life, so she takes on a revolutionary personal journey to 'find herself' and be at peace. So she eats with gusto in Rome, goes to a sacred temple in India, and goes to Bali.
SO FAR I have not finished this film because the DVD I bought had a weird defect halfway through the movie (when Liz was in India) Will complete this description once I finish the movie.
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Okay, finished this film FINALLY (watched the Director's Cut). The movie, as expected, was cutesy-girly--perfect for women in their 30s/40s looking to find inspiration by observing a white woman DO IT--have sex/make out with men, eat a lot without feeling guilty, and meditate.
What made this movie a little less boring for me was the little moments in every locale. "Less boring", because in essence, the book/film is a self-indulgent tale. Yes, there's no conflict really--just a woman torn from herself, lost and fazed.
In Italy, it was surely the food moments. Eating pizza in Naples and pasta in Rome seems like a dream. Eating a full-course meal with new-found friends a very, very good dream.
In India, it was the wedding dance. Liz looks back on her own wedding, and we see the stark contrast between a Western ceremony and an Indian/non-Western one. Liz's was marked by monochrome, the Indian wedding by a blast of people, vibrant colors, sounds, smells, objects, rituals, etc.
In Bali, it was the rural spirit. The coconut trees, the rice paddies, the sun, the beaches, all reminded me of home. And oh yeah, the guy playing the drums and who stripped naked on the beach!
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This film also gave me some food for thought. Thoughts on love, family, "truth", balance, etc.:
"Balance in life is power." -- Ketut
"Believe in love again." -- Richard from Texas
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Finally, it's so fascinating to me how white / caucasian people just love to travel and are drawn to places like India, Indonesia, etc. (Third World countries, lots of heat, lots of dirt, "spirituality"). Maybe it's because it's so different from what they've grown up with, and all they need is to separate themselves from the corporate, hygienic culture of the West to "find themselves"
And oh my, I didn't know Ryan Murphy directed and wrote the screenplay for this. It shows--the movie is very gay (exotic cultures, shirtless men, all that jazz).
RATING: 7/10 - DirectorRon HowardStarsRussell CroweEd HarrisJennifer ConnellyA mathematical genius, John Nash made an astonishing discovery early in his career and stood on the brink of international acclaim. But the handsome and arrogant Nash soon found himself on a harrowing journey of self-discovery.[Yet another film I haven't finished watching--to be completed]
So I get to watch this film for general psychology class--and I am STUNNED by just how gorgeous this film is. Really. I did not expect this film to get at me like it did--the way it opened in pitch-dark with a HAUNTING film score. I was that amazed.
This is the story of John Nash--a modern mathematical genius almost comparable to Newton--who's socially awkward and just...weird, but redeems himself because he is absolutely brilliant in math. He goes to Princeton, MIT, Harvard because his mind is in-demand, and is also recruited by the US Military (this was the height of the USSR-USA rivalry, I think). This is a movie about a genius, 'trapped' in his brilliance, and becomes a chased-after man, dangerous in his affairs, this is about a man who loves....
[description to be completed]
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FINALLY done watching the movie, and I am satisfied. I won't deny that this is a typical Hollywood production--why wouldn't it end with him winning the NOBEL PRIZE? Nevertheless, nothing takes away from the emotional core of the film, and that is John Nash's journey through madness, love and despair.
John Nash, you see, is not an ordinary man. He sees patterns in numbers, patterns in everyday things. Someone like him is bound to get a little bit loose in some areas of life. Schizophrenia was his Achilles heel--making him lose his mind in critical points of his life, threatening the relationships he's had.
"A Beautiful Mind" is about strength, and picking up the pieces and carrying on no matter how dark it may be on the inside. One like really struck a chord on me, spoken by Nash in the movie: "Why do we do?" Alicia replies that it's a way for people to find meaning in their lives...
And that's what I've always wondered. Why do we do things, plod, or run through day by day? I guess it's all for life and love. What a beautiful work!
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NOTE: I seem to be gravitating towards films / books who have mentally disturbed protagonists (Black Swan, this, Prozac Nation). Uhhh.
RATING: 8.75/10 - DirectorDarren AronofskyStarsNatalie PortmanMila KunisVincent CasselNina is a talented but unstable ballerina on the verge of stardom. Pushed to the breaking point by her artistic director and a seductive rival, Nina's grip on reality slips, plunging her into a waking nightmare.What is madness? What is art? How does it feel like to be so engrossed and on the brink of obsession for your passion that you just can't think of anything else? How does it feel to suffer for your art--to be perfect for your art?
'Black Swan', by ingenue director Darren Aronofsky, examines these questions with such a ferocious and feminine intensity that just left me breathless and literally, screaming like a girl.
This is modern New York, in a competitive dance company where perfection is required, and work is demanding. Nina Sayers is the new kid on the block--refined, sheltered, "frigid"--and fully immersed in her ballet work. Her world, as seen in the film, is the ballet studio, her room, her apartment and nothing else to distract her. Dedication is required, and she delivers in that department.
But what if perfection is not the only criteria? What about sex, seduction and letting go? As her director Leroy tells her: Perfection is also about letting go.
And so her fears take on the form of other women--her mother, Beth, the star she replaced, and Lily--liberated, no-care Lily. Nina is agitated, afraid to lose the thing she wants the most, and that is glory in her art.
And because of this agitation, obsession, passion--whatever you call it, Nina becomes a victim of her own mind, her own fears and gradually then quickly degenerates into a metaphorical black swan--dark, thrilling, seductive.
If Black Swan can teach us anything, it's about the how the cogent force of madness can transform us into haunting, "perfect", beautiful things, but also lead is into death (see: ending).
RATING: 9.9/10 - DirectorThomas CarterStarsCuba Gooding Jr.Kimberly EliseAunjanue Ellis-TaylorBiography of Ben Carson who grew up to be Dr. Ben Carson, a world famous neurosurgeon at Johns Hopkins.I watched this movie accidentally, since the TV had HBO on the whole night. It was awesome, and I am glad that I got to watch it at the beginning. I can relate to this movie in so many ways--especially in the protagonist's journey as a young boy.
There's so many inspiring quotes in this movie, especially coming from Ben's mother.
This movie touched me because at its core, it's all about claiming victory over something initially thought of as overpowering--poverty, ignorance, prejudice and discrimination, lack of education, etc. In the end, Ben defies everything that put him at a disadvantage compared and succeeds in his dreams to become a doctor. Not only does he succeed and exceed all expectations (being highest in his class at Yale, excelling over his white classmates), he also becomes a powerful instrument for the healing of broken creatures. He becomes renowned as a pediatric surgeon, bringing back to normalcy babies/children with debilitating conditions.
All of this he attributes to the power of God, and amidst all trials, he comes out with a strength that's hard to ignore.
RATING: 7.5/10 - DirectorWill GluckStarsEmma StoneAmanda BynesPenn BadgleyWhen Olive lies to her best friend about losing her virginity to one of the college boys, a girl overhears their conversation. Soon, her story spreads across the entire school like wildfire.I definitely expected 'Easy A' to be at the level of 'Mean Girls' or 'Clueless', and since a lot of my peers were raving or had something to say about it I decided to watch it one random evening.
All in all, it is an okay movie. Not too terrible writing, pacing and acting. Adolescent themes such as homosexuality, fitting in, popularity, sex in general and universal issues like gossip, double standards in society, etc. pop up.
If there's one thing "Easy A" had to offer, it was Emma Stone in her quirky girly glory. She's the one who moves this story forward and manages to carve a certain personality for the film--sexy but cute but not slutty. To some degree Emma's character SHOULD be labeled slutty. Uh, she spreads a rumor that she sleeps with EVERYONE. And with that, the character and the story annoys me a bit--advice: don't spread rumors about yourself if you don't want to be miserable.
Oh, I loved the part with Lisa Kudrow's character (the guidance counselor) having an affair with Cam Gigandet's character and having herpes! PRICELESS!
RATING 7.5/10 - DirectorRoger SpottiswoodeStarsArnold SchwarzeneggerMichael RapaportTony GoldwynA man meets a clone of himself and stumbles into a grand conspiracy about clones taking over the world.Watched this on a random day on HBO because I had nothing to do. It was okay. Typical action/thriller/sci-fi film, though what sets it apart for me is the fact that it tackled genetic manipulation in cloning in a 'cool' outlandish way. I mean really--re-constructing a human in a matter of hours? If science really ruled in this film, then it would take much more than that.
But anyway, watching the film led me onto more philosophical ideas: the desire for immortality, human identity and self, morality (Is it really okay to clone someone in the brink of death just because you want him/her to live on?), death and natural processes, etc. It's a lot of stuff to think about, once you get past the sci-fi gloss of it all.
RATING: 7/10 - DirectorAlfred HitchcockStarsAnthony PerkinsJanet LeighVera MilesA Phoenix secretary embezzles $40,000 from her employer's client, goes on the run and checks into a remote motel run by a young man under the domination of his mother.OH EM GEE I EFFING LOVE THIS FILM! Just watched it now (on an early Sunday morning -- weird, watching this kind of movie on a Sunday morning.
It's amazing how this 1960 film still manages to shock 50 years after (it just shows how good it is). By employing the classic techniques of musical score (Bernard Hermann is amazing), framing, and plot twists, "Psycho" is a cinematic tour de force.
The beginning plays out as a run-of-the-mill scenario, then eventually develops to become an unflinching and unnerving story when the female lead (Janet Leigh) becomes a victim of a mysterious woman (or man?)
The twist at the end (Norman Bates is actually the killer and he has a personality disorder!) left me really creeped out. Though predictable, it is stunningly effective. There are actually four iconic scenes in the film: the shower scene, the staircase scene where the detective gets killed instantly, the scene where we see Norman Bates in the wig (effing crazy) and the last scene where Norman just stares into the screen.
Alfred Hitchcock is a genius.
RATING: 8.9/10 - DirectorEdward ZwickStarsJake GyllenhaalAnne HathawayJudy GreerIn 1990s Pittsburgh, a medicine peddler starts a relationship with a young woman suffering from Parkinson's disease.Watched this film with my HS friends on a random Friday. Was expecting a cutesy rom-com but hell, this is a little bit different than that. Besides the actual cutesy romance and comedy, it has lots of sex and nudity and swearing. Any person planning to watch this with his/her mom/dad/rabbi/priest should really scrap the idea and watch it ALONE or with like-minded peers. 'Cause Jake G and Anne just bare it all--butt, chest, legs, every little thang.
This is obviously a very mainstream Hollywood product. Two A minus-list stars cast in a movie with in-your-face product placement (Pfizer, Prozac, Zoloft)--but eh, it's a good flick to pass the time by. It's very predictable (Surprise! They love each other so much? No way!).
What was more interesting, to me anyway, was how the film incorporated some medical stuff in here--like how the drug boom developed in the mid-90s, the actual "business" of the pharma industry and how it recruits ambitious young people to sell its products, the politics of the sales-rep/doctor relationship, and lastly, Parkinson's disease.
Anne's character undergoes a pretty bad degenerative state in the film and we see as an audience how this affects her relationship with Jake's character. Just goes to show how something so biological/medical can have interesting effects on ones emotional/social state. (Also, it gave me a glimpse into what kind of people I might be working with someday. Woah)
RATING: 7/10 - DirectorEric BressJ. Mackye GruberStarsAshton KutcherAmy SmartMelora WaltersEvan Treborn suffers blackouts during significant events of his life. As he grows up, he finds a way to remember these lost memories and a supernatural way to alter his life by reading his journal.Okay, I'm watching this in Psychology class and started 15 minutes (I think) through the movie and didn't finish it yet so I can't make a complete review.
This movie is a *beep* That's the word used to describe that horrible excuse of a movie 'Inception' but I think it applies more appropriately to this. It's total, out-there, in-your-face psychological drama. You're a witness to Evan's (Ashton Kutcher)'s growth as a young boy then a young man, being a victim of blackouts, strange dreams, alternating plots, horrible people.
You see, Evan was a victim of sexual abuse. As a man, this has left him broken and looking for answers...
By the way, I kinda hated the beginning (the scenes with Evan at 7 and 13) because it was just really confusing and jarring. However it's a good thing I'm starting to get engrossed in 20-year-old Evan's story because he's looking back at his past trying to resolve his deep-set issues.
More to come.
---------- - DirectorNeil BurgerStarsBradley CooperAnna FrielAbbie CornishA mysterious pill that enables the user to access 100% of his brain's abilities transforms a struggling writer into a financial wizard, but it also puts him in a new world with many dangers."Limitless" is a fresh, modern take on the Icarus myth--the one where you push your boundaries too much ("fly higher and higher") until you bear the consequences. Except in this film, the main character, after all the thriller shebang, is rewarded for his ambitious albeit selfish actions.
Who is the main character? He's everyone of us--us living in the "real world", living lives by default, in monochrome. The lead symbolizes who we are, and the man he is transformed to after he takes that lethal pill NZT is what many of us want to be. Who wouldn't?
Choose a life of being broke and not being able to pay the rent, or of traveling exotic beaches, driving fast cars, making huge amounts of money, getting anything you want... Humans are humans, and most of us would take the chance to have everything we desire and much more.
Of course, the little "limitless" pill is the center of all the drama here. It's the magic potion, the fuel that drives the main character in all his motivation, focus and scarily, power. We see him learning foreign languages in a matter of days, making millions in weeks. In the end we see him running for political office.
Worth it? Perhaps--except there ARE some dangerous side effects, physically and socially. Your body gets really weird. You die, sometimes. You get sick when you withdraw from the pill.
The lead bypasses that in the end, though going through many, many hoops before becoming the "ultimately" successful, well-bred, rich, handsome man that he is.
Truly, limitless.
PS. Great visual impact.
RATING: 8.5/10 - DirectorPeter ChelsomStarsJohn CusackKate BeckinsaleJeremy PivenA couple search for each other years after the night they first met, fell in love, and separated, convinced that one day they'd end up together.Is destiny real? Or is it our choices that determine our life and who we love? This movie, starring the both gorgeous Kate Beckinsale and John Cusack. Set in modern New York, "Serendipity" examines the absurdity of life, its "mess", and its difficult twists and turns. In essence, the movie speaks to us about love, and how people, no matter how righteous, can go reckless--blinded by its promises of a lifetime of fulfillment.
The movie leaves you questioning: Is life merely a planned existence? After all, the scenarios we see the main characters go through seem to be a little too...intertwined to be coincidences.
Never mind--the ending shows us that it kinda is. You lay on an empty skating rink and then your true love comes to you just like *that*. But oh, you still have to get stressed out and do an Amazing Race-like performance before you get to her/him.
Rating: 7.5/10 - DirectorPuttipong Pormsaka Na-SakonnakornWasin PokpongPuttipong Promsaka Na SakolnakornStarsPimchanok LuevisadpaibulMario MaurerTangi NamontoLife of a 14 year old girl Nam, who falls in love with her senior of tenth grade P'Shone and tries desperately to win his attention.P'Shone is the star jock of his high school. Nam, the ugly dark girl and the protagonist of this story, naturally falls in love with the athletic, handsome boy.
We all know this story. It's been told a million times in a countless different ways, yet it never loses its potency to tug at the hearts of every adolescent-at-heart. The "invisible" protagonist desiring the socially loved prince/princess is a myth for the ages--and this Thai movie delivers another take on that.
The movie is set in high school--yes, the the immemorial hotbed of stories like this. Who could forget their high school infatuations?
The "ugly" lead, Nam, wants P'Shone so bad that she does everything to capture his attention. She goes to great lengths to improve herself--from whitening her skin to becoming a drum major. As the story progresses, we realizes that P'Shone was already in love with Nam long before she became "beautiful." We see empathize for both characters.
Basically, "A Little Thing..." encapsulates the madness that we go as we experience the amazing highs and lows of love. It's crazy. Crazy, that you would wait 9 years just for the person you love to reciprocate how you feel.
Highlights: Mario Maurer, the cheesiness of it all
Rating: 7.1/10 - DirectorGus Van SantStarsRobin WilliamsMatt DamonBen AffleckWill Hunting, a janitor at M.I.T., has a gift for mathematics, but needs help from a psychologist to find direction in his life.How exactly would you live your life if you had an extremely superior mathematical mind--rivaling that of an MIT professor? For Will Hunting, it's working in construction and just being a "normal" Southie. But Gerry Lambeau, a Fields medalist and the man who notices Will's talent by accident, believes in Will more than Will himself--and will do anything to pull the talented boy out of the depths of almost-poverty in urban Boston, with the help of washed-out psychology prof Sean Maguire.
BRILLIANT. Get out there, love, take the risk, DO NOT BE AFRAID to take the first step.
Rating: 8.999/10 - DirectorIvan ReitmanStarsNatalie PortmanAshton KutcherKevin KlineA guy and girl try to keep their relationship strictly physical, but it's not long before they learn that they want something more.What do you get when you pair up an overrated douche-y actor with an Oscar-winning actress in an obviously contrived romantic comedy? A silly product that runs for an hour and a half and that makes ka-ching ka-ching. This movie is so mainstream it hurts. It had its moments, but in the end, it's nothing more than a mindless, sex-filled tale. It's about love, hurt, and forgiveness--three things that never go away in our lives.
Rating 6.1/10 - DirectorMarc WebbStarsZooey DeschanelJoseph Gordon-LevittGeoffrey ArendAfter being dumped by the girl he believes to be his soulmate, hopeless romantic Tom Hansen reflects on their relationship to try and figure out where things went wrong and how he can win her back.A perfect postcard ode to the City of Angels, (500) Days of Summer is the epitome of a postmodern love story, where there are no rules, being hurt can only mean being better in the end. But more than being a love story, 500 Days is about finding yourself--finding yourself in other people, finding yourself getting lost in a sea of questions whether "fate" is real or not. This is what life is about, and this movie gave a damn good glimpse of it.
Rating: 8.889999/10 - DirectorDarren AronofskyStarsMickey RourkeMarisa TomeiEvan Rachel WoodA faded professional wrestler must retire, but finds his quest for a new life outside the ring a dispiriting struggle.What do you call the testosterone-filled counterpart of 'Black Swan'? 'The Wrestler'. In this Aronofsky opus, we witness the same ordeal Nina Sayers had to go through, but this time in the geography and body of an aging wrestler--Randy, Robin, 'Ram the Man', or whatever. 'The Wrestler' is pure grit--it defines the true spirit of an invisible society--those marginalized out of a world where youth and luster reign, where they are left to pick up the remaining pieces of their lives.
Rating: 8.7/10 - DirectorMark RomanekStarsKeira KnightleyCarey MulliganAndrew GarfieldThe lives of three friends, from their early school days into young adulthood, when the reality of the world they live in comes knocking.In a parallel universe where select children are prepared to live a life of donating organs under the British National Donor Programme, we see a reflection of our humanity. Even in artificially cultured bodies--humans, in every way possible, are determined to love: even if closed off from the "real world", even if protected from everything that might hurt them. 'Never Let Me Go' tells us that one great thing about us, and that is we are willing to sacrifice who we are for something greater than ourselves.
Rating: 8.2/10 - DirectorDanny BoyleStarsJames FrancoAmber TamblynKate MaraA mountain climber becomes trapped under a boulder while canyoneering alone near Moab, Utah and resorts to desperate measures in order to survive.The more sinister, more British counterpart of 'The Wrestler', '127 Hours' is a tour de force...of nature. James Franco, in his most gut-wrenching (almost literally) work, shows to us the visceral aspects of survival, and how much we put everything on the line just to live and nothing else. '127 Hours' is a brilliant exposition of what are the bare essentials of humanity--that is: love, memories of the little things, family, friends...
Oh, and that amputating scene was totally gross.
Rating: 8.1/10 - DirectorDean DeBloisChris SandersStarsJay BaruchelGerard ButlerChristopher Mintz-PlasseA hapless young Viking who aspires to hunt dragons becomes the unlikely friend of a young dragon himself, and learns there may be more to the creatures than he assumed.Featuring the (very distinct) voices of Jay Baruchel and Gerald Butler, 'How To Train Your Dragon' is a Dreamworks film done right. Set in macho medieval era of the Vikings, this movie tells of a loser-ish teenager named Hiccup and how his being different (read: having compassion for animals!) from all the other Vikings catapults him into being sort of a dragon-master and redeemer of the village-kingdom of Berk. Loved the scenes between him and his cute Night Fury dragon, Toothless. A nice story about staying true to your values, and showing respect for all beings.
Rating: 8.05/10 - DirectorMarc ForsterStarsKhalid AbdallaAhmad Khan MahmoodzadaAtossa LeoniAfter spending years in California, Amir returns to his homeland in Afghanistan to help his old friend Hassan, whose son is in trouble.I cried during one scene in this movie--the one where adult Amir reads a letter from his childhood friend Hassan, showing that their lives have been unraveled and can never go back to the way it was. "The Kite Runner" is a beautiful story of friendship, and how it can make people do things beyond them--sacrificing one's dignity, sacrificing one's life (going through a Taliban camp!). It tells of that timeless quality of human relationships, amidst the turbulence of political and social forces.
Rating: 8.3/10 - DirectorTom HooperStarsColin FirthGeoffrey RushHelena Bonham CarterThe story of King George VI, his unexpected ascension to the throne of the British Empire in 1936, and the speech therapist who helped the unsure monarch overcome his stammer.Set in 1930s Britain right before the ravage of the Second World War, "The King's Speech", behind its historical context, is a look into a deeply personal journey of a man forced into national spotlight--his slow transformation from a literally mumbling "extra" of family royalty, to a STILL mumbling, but more persistent "King." A tad bit overrated for my taste, "The King's Speech" still delivers. Highlight: Geoffrey Rush's performance. First time I noticed he's real cute. And, Michael Gambon and Timothy Spall and Helena Bonham-Carter! (Harry Potter yay)
Rating: 7.5/10 - DirectorFrancis LawrenceStarsRobert PattinsonReese WitherspoonChristoph WaltzJacob takes a job as an animal caretaker in a traveling circus. There he meets Marlena, a beautiful circus performer. Their shared compassion for a special elephant Rosie leads to love, but Marlena's cruel husband stands in their way.
- DirectorJim Field SmithStarsJay BaruchelAlice EveT.J. MillerAn average Joe meets the perfect woman, but his lack of confidence and the influence of his friends and family begin to pick away at the relationship.Okay, she's not really a 10, and he's not really a 5 (looking back watching the movie, I thought the character of the hot girl was really...boring). But what I got out of this was a (quoting Jay Baruchel) a "tremendous" lesson: You really need to love yourself, and see the greatness and awesomeness and 10-worthiness of yourself before other people love you. We are all 'ten's, and we're wasting our lives thinking otherwise.
Rating: 6.5/10 - DirectorMartin CampbellStarsRyan ReynoldsBlake LivelyPeter SarsgaardReckless test pilot Hal Jordan is granted an alien ring that bestows him with otherworldly powers that inducts him into an intergalactic police force, the Green Lantern Corps.Watched this with my mom and half-sister. Chose to watch this 'cause I've been feeling friendly towards mainstream pop fluff movies. I honestly didn't expect anything "OMG AWESOME," so I was pleasantly surprised with the whole motif of the movie--the whole concept of "everything is energy" and "in order to be a hero, YOU MUST HAVE NO FEAR" and that "WILL" matters. That's what I liked about it. Cool CGI too. Love the alien worlds. Liked Blake Lively's look. And what more can I say 'bout my man Peter? :>
Rating: 7.7/10