March 30, 2006

Weeds (TV) - 4.5 stars

Weeds is a new tv series from Showtime about a suburban housewife selling pot in a wealthy California town. Really, it's about how to survive in suburbia. For example, the theme song is all about how every house and ever suburbanite is the same. Then you dig into the content of the show and the people are all distinguishing themselves in unique ways. It stars the rockin' Mary-Louise Parker (Fried Green Tomatoes, Angels in America), plus a bitchy Elizabeth Perkins, an actually clever Kevin Nealon, and a big ensemble cast. Excellent show. I can't wait for season 2.

March 19, 2006

Arrested Development (TV) - 4 stars

Arrested Development is a tv show starring one of my favorite then-teen stars, Jason Bateman. I know this isn't a movie, but I rented it on netflix and I make the rules, so I'm reviewing it here. This is a very dry, dark comedy about a family filled with overpriced losers and a straight-man, Bateman. It gets funnier and funnier the more I watch it. I recommend renting the first disk, and watching a few episodes from the beginning. One episode probably won't do it for you. Portia DeRossi and Jeffrey Tambor star with a variety of newcomers. One taste of the humor is the characters have names like Maeby, Gob which is pronounced like Job of the Bible and stands for George O. Bluth, and George Michael.

Thanks to Seraphim for recommending this.

Without Limits - 3 stars

Without Limits is a solid biopic/athlete flick. It's the story of strong-willed runner Steve "Pre" Prefontaine. There is another movie about him called Prefontaine starring the amazingly hot Jarod Leto. My favorite role of Jarod's is as a totally drugged out Harry in an awesome drug movie called Requim for a Dream. This is an amazing film that's not for the faint of heart. (Jim won't watch it.) Leto co-stars with Ellen Burstyn & Jennifer Connelly.

Anyway, the great Donald Sutherland plays the strong-willed coach trying to have an impact on the even more stubborn Pre. There are some good speeches, life lessons, and it's a generally good movie.

March 12, 2006

The Dinner Game - 1 star

The Dinner Game is the pathetic predescesor to the adorable French movie The Closet. A group of friends have dinner each week with the biggest losers they can find. Pierre finds a loser who ends up caring for him after causing an accident. The main actor is in both of these films, playing different characters, and the name of the loser is the same. Skip the Dinner Game, it's lame. Rent the Closet instead. It's in French with English subtitles about a guy who is so boring he's lost his wife, his kid, and about to lose his job. His neighbor convinces him to perform a stunt to make people take notice. It's very sweet and cleverly done.

Spirited Away - 3 stars

I had never seen Japanese anime before Spirited Away. I enjoy the form of animation because it can capture your imagination in ways that live action can't. You already have to suspend your disbelief to the extent to absorb the cartoon, so why not throw in some spirits and other characters or actions impossible to convey with actual actors. I enjoyed the Japanese cultural references and style. I also was riveted by the style for the first 45 minutes. After that, it started to drag. At that point we had been introduced to the main characters, the main challenges, and the main story. All that was left was resolving the conflicts, which took another 75 minutes. This is the same major flaw that I find in many stories, primarily in books.

Wallace & Gromit in The Curse of the Were-Rabbit - 2 stars

This was really disappointing to me because I LOVED Chicken Run, which was made by the same people in the same claymation style. This Wallace & Gromit story should have stayed as a short. There wasn't a story that supports an hour and a half of film. Other than the lack of a continually engaging story, it was adorable.

By the way, a Were-rabbit is the rabbit form of a werewolf. It took me until the end of the film to figure that out...

March 10, 2006

Domino - 2.5 stars

Domino Harvey is Keira Knightley in a sort of true story of a model turned bounty hunter. She's smart, beautiful, and fearless. She's accompanied by her mentor, played by Mickey Rourke, and the very, very hot Argentinian Choco played by Edgar Ramirez. The movie is almost worth watching just to see him strip down to his skivvies in the laundromat. Overall it's fun and filled with eye candy, but the ending isn't as clever as it could have been.

March 06, 2006

Barbarian Invasions - 2.5 stars

Barbarian Invasions was a mixed experience. It's a great idea, well acted and well told, but totally drug out. You can turn the movie off half-way through the film and not miss anything. It's a story about the relatioships surrounding a French-Canadian man who is dying of cancer. His son, ex-wife, and many friends care for him and reminisce as he lays in a hospital bed.

Smoke Signals - 1 star

Smoke Signals is "Native American 101." They amiteurishly walk you through what it is like to be an Indian. They use lines like, "We're Indians. We barter." to obviously explain why the characters like to trade stories or other goods instead of using paper money. Another memorably bad line after Thomas tells a story was "That's an excellent example of our oral tradition." It's storytelling style is probably a good film for a 12 year old audience, but not for adults. I fell asleep.

North Country - 4 stars

This is a wonderful story of the first sexual harrassment class action suit in the US. Charlize Theron provides a fine performance, but the reason the film is a winner is because of the whole package. The story is believable - she struggles against opponents and potential allies, plus I appreciate the omission of the obligitory love scene. The acting is nuanced - Woody Harrelson provides some wonderful moments, plus we get to see the always rockin' Frances McDormand (check her out in Laurel Canyon!). There's something for everyone in this film.

Capote - 4 stars

Capote was chilling. This is the story of Truman Capote, writer for the New Yorker, as he researches and writes In Cold Blood, the story of 3 murders in Kansas. The murders are creepy, and murderers were frighteningly calm, but it's Capote's reaction and manipulation of the killers that is chilling. I recommend watching it during the day, so you have time to digest all of the creepy maniuplations and killings before going to bed.

Capote was played by Phillip Seymour Hoffman is one of the best actors of my generation. He transforms himself into Capote, just as he transformed himself into the slimy reporter in Red Dragon, Mr. Lebowski's weenie assistant in The Big Lebowski, depressed divorcee Wilson in Love Liza, drag queen Rusty in Flawless, shy writer Joseph Turner White in State & Main, and so on. I recommend any of his films.

Hoffman is the center of the film, but is ably backed by Catherine Keener, paying Harper Lee, and several newcomers. The only knock against the movie is it was a bit long.