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  Movie and Reviews
 
(Page 5 of 7)   « Back  | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | Next »
Man on Fire: How Sound Tells the Story
* WARNING: SPOILERS FOLLOW* “I’m the sheep that got lost, Madre.” And so goes the description John W. Greasy offers of himself in Tony Scott’s Man on Fire (2003). John Greasy (Denzel Washington) is a lost soul trying to find his way back to the light, back to living. He is a man seeking redemption for the atrocities he committed in the past as a black ops agent for the government. His light comes in the form of Lupita Ramos (Dakota Fanning) the young charge he is set to protect. As he slowly finds his way again, finds a reason for living, it is suddenly and violently lost to him as a heinous kidnapping plot goes array and the young girl is ripped away from him. Scott’s use of sound acts as a way to document Greasy’s evolution through the film and highlights major turning points in the movie.
Tamika Johnson | Published 05/6/2005 | Unrated
A Look at the Heart of American Beauty
Sam Mendes’ darkly comic portrayal of suburbia in his first movie, American Beauty (1999) takes a hard look at what happens when you’ve accomplished the American Dream only to realize that it isn’t enough. Lester, the film’s anti-hero wakes up one morning deep in a mid life crisis and decides that he wants something more then the life he has carved out for himself and proceeds to search for that something and in the process, disrupts the lives of those around him, particularly his wife Caroline. Through his use of color and surrealist elements Mendes shows how passionless and unhappy Caroline and Lester are in their seemingly perfect world and how true happiness lies not in doing what’s expected or in material goods but in finding the beauty in being true to yourself.
Tamika Johnson | Published 05/6/2005 | Unrated
Heart of Platinum
In the film \"The Hitchhiker\'s Guide to the Galaxy,\" the actors, director and screenwriters (including the late Doug Adams, author of the book) all manage to be fairly competent. And in its own way this film is a legitimate take on the “Hitchhiker’s” story, especially if you like happy endings. But at its heart, it’s more platinum than gold, it’s just not the “Hitchhiker’s” that we all know and love.
Carl Shirley | Published 05/2/2005 | Unrated
A Lot Like Love
Ashton Kutcher isn’t a great actor. Let’s face it he isn’t going to win any acting awards anytime in the near future. However he is quite competent at playing variations of Kelso the character that made him famous on the hit FOX series That 70’s Show. Kelso is bumbling, inept and manages to posses an uncanny combination of insecurity and confidence. Kutcher’s film roles don’t stray much from that formula and his character Oliver in his new movie A Lot Like Love isn’t an exception to the rule. While being light-years ahead of Kelso in the intelligence department he has all the other characteristics that make him just as endearing and lovable and fun to watch.
Tamika Johnson | Published 05/1/2005 | Unrated
The Hitchhiker\'s Guide to the Galaxy
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy had the potential to be the best movie of the year. And yes, I sincerely mean that. Really, look at all it had going for it: it’s based on a classic book that has a cult following that could rival the Lord of the Rings trilogy. A very funny and talented cast that includes Tim Freeman (BBC hit series The Office) as everyman Arthur Dent, Sam Rockwell as the two headed, split brain, charming President of the Galaxy Zaphod Beeblevrox, Alan Rickman as the voice of the paranoid android Marvin who incidentally resembles an oversized storm trooper and Mos Def as the quirky and lovable, towel wielding alien and author of the guide, Ford Perfect. Throw in the fact that Jim Henson’s Puppet Shop created all of the aliens and creatures in the film so none of them end up looking like bad CGI you should have a innovative, funny, and ingenious movie on your hands….but that’s not what happened, not quite anyway.
Tamika Johnson | Published 05/1/2005 | Unrated
Don\'t Let Them Sell You Sin
I have found nothing more surprising in recent days than the torrent of ultra positive reviews for Robert Rodriguez’s interpretation of Frank Miller’s Graphic (with a capital G) Novel Sin City. It literally astounds me. I wonder now if I didn’t accidentally wander into the wrong theater, in the wrong alternate dimension to see a movie only half as good as the one everyone is raving about. But the clips they show, and the elements they describe seem consistent with what I saw, so the theory that I saw the wrong movie won’t hold up.
Carl Shirley | Published 04/29/2005 | Unrated
Persuasion Through Needs is Achieved in the Film Fargo
The film Fargo, an Academy Award winner for Best Picture in 1996, has several characters that exemplify the first process premise of needs, in turn making this film persuasive. This film is based around the life of a man named Jerry Lundegaard, whom is deep in debt and is married to a woman whose father has no respect or admiration for him. His typical day at work involves ripping customers off at the car dealership where he works as the head sales manager.
Scott Fish | Published 04/11/2005 | Unrated
Beauty Shop a Blast from the Past
Beauty Shop tells the story of Gina (Queen Latifah) as she moves to Atlanta so her daughter can go to an exclusive music school. She finds a job as a stylist at a high end salon but after a confrontation with her boss leaves and opens her own beauty shop
Tamika Johnson | Published 04/4/2005 | Unrated
Guess Who: Not Great but Not Bad Either
A mix of “Meet the Parents” and “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner,” Guess Who is just funny enough. Starring Bernie Mac and Ashton Kutcher, Guess Who tells the tale of Simon Green (Kutcher) as he travels home with his girlfriend Theresa (Zoe Saladana) to meet her family. Of course she has failed to mention to anyone, particularly her father (Bernie Mac) that her new boyfriend is white.
Tamika Johnson | Published 03/27/2005 | Unrated
Miss Congeniality 2 : Unfunny and Inept
Well, it’s not awful. And that is the best I can say for Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous, the sequel to the surprise hit of 2000 Ms. Congeniality. Sandra Bullock reprises her role as Gracie Hart, the bumbling FBI agent who is skilled as an agent but woefully inept socially.
Tamika Johnson | Published 03/27/2005 | Unrated
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