Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Fargo

"So, uh, you married old Norm son-of-a-Gunderson?" (huge laughs all around when he said that... No joke)
1996
Directed by Joel Coen
Date Viewed: Tuesday July 27, 2010 (second viewing)

It's been so long since the last time I saw this movie, so it was basically new to me. Here's a basic plot in case you don't remember, or if you're my mom and hasn't seen it... :) Jerry Lundegaard needs money. He hires a couple of guys to kidnap his wife so that his rich father in law will cough up the cash to get her back. He tells the henchmen that he'll ask for $80,000 and they'll split it 50/25/25. Well really he tells his father in law the ransom is $1 mil. Anyways, the henchmen screw up, end up killing 3 people in Brainerd so police get involved and we follow Marge Gunderson around doing some investigating.

This is definitely a dark comedy. I love the Minnesota accents. They're hilarious, especially since I know people who actually talk like that... I also love that my brothers noticed that some characters were walking out of Embers without there being any mention of the restaurant name or a sign... True Trygg fashion (Btw, it was the Embers off of 494 and something else... my dad is obsessed with Embers). But I like darkly funny things... I think this is my favorite Coen Bros. movie too. The cast is perfect. William H. Macy and Frances McDormand are very underrated actors. I love both of them in pretty much every movie I've seen them in. I did feel bad for Jerry when things started falling apart which was kind of weird since he did want his wife kidnapped which wasn't very nice of him... But William H. Macy made him so likable and Minnesotan with his little accent and his MN niceness. So anyways, great movie. A

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Now and Then

Roberta: You can't get pregnant from french-kissing! 
Chrissy: I know that, beetle-brain, but it's common knowledge that if you tongue-kiss a boy, he automatically thinks you'll do the deed with him. They can't help it. They're driven. 
Samantha: Oh? And what deed would that be? 
Chrissy:You know... planting the seed and watering the flower. Isn't that how it works?

Directed by Leslie Linka Glatter
1995

A review in 5 words:

Goofy cheesy nostalgic chick flick

B+


Monday, July 12, 2010

The Last Airbender

Directed by M. Night Shyamalan
2010
Date Viewed: Tuesday June 29, 2010
Let me just preface this by saying that I'm not a huge fan of the cartoon that this movie is based on. I've only made it through 1 1/2 episodes (which has taken me more than a month to get through) and I just cannot stand the goofy cheesiness. One of the things that I liked about the movie is that is was darker and more serious than the cartoon seems to be (granted, I am only 1 1/2 eps in, so I don't know if the tone changes later on). There were a few super cheesy parts, but that was kind of to be expected (and one of them was right away in the beginning and made me wonder how I was going to sit through the entire movie if it went on like that). So for those of you who don't know the story line, I will try to sum it up as best as I can... The Avatar is someone who can "bend" air, earth, water and fire. (to bend means to control basically) The Airbenders have been killed off by the Fire Nation (fire benders) and so the last airbender (who has been lost for 100 years) is the Avatar. Katara and Sokka (brother and sister from the southern Water Nation) stumble upon Aang who, they discover, can bend air. He reveals that he is the Avatar, but he ran away before he could learn to bend the other elements. So Katara, Sokka and Aang travel to the Northern Water Nation so that Aang can learn to bend water (Katara is a mediocre water bender, and the only water bender in the Southern Water Nation). Meanwhile, the Fire Nation is searching for Aang and enslaving other elemental bending villages. Also, Prince Zuko, who is the exiled son of the Fire Nation's king is trying to get to Aang to win back his father's favor.... Basically this movie crams a lot (an entire season) into one film...

After talking with Nate (who hated the movie by the way) I will post some of his objections to it.
1. There were quite a few voice overs, which is a huge film no no. You're supposed to show it, not say it. I felt like the voice overs were used because they couldn't cram a whole season into one movie and so they couldn't show us EVERYTHING because it would've been way too long. So they used Katara as a storyteller for the most part. There was one lame/weird scene in which Prince Zuko's backstory is told by him asking a boy what he knows about him....
2. It cut too much out. Well, I don't know what it cut out, but I do know that what it kept in made for a good intro to the series.
3. The 3d was HORRIBLE. Yes, I agree. Don't see a movie in 3d unless it was filmed in 3d or unless it's CGI.
4. M. Night Shyamalan is a horrible director.... Well, Nate and I have quite a few differences of opinions on M. Night's movies......

All in all I think I'd award this movie a B

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Bridge To Terabithia

"Just close your eyes, but keep your mind wide open."
Directed by GaborCsupo
2007
Date Viewed: Monday June 14, 2010

This movie was waaaaaayyyy different than I thought it would be. I thought it was going to be the standard children's fantasy movie where two kids fall into a hole in the space time continuum and fall into some other dimension and they have to escape or something like that... But it's totally not. Jess is a maybe 6th grader with 4 sisters who lives on a farm and who's parents struggle to make ends meet. He's a total loner and kind of a sad boy. Then he meets Leslie who moved in next door and is very unique and full of imagination. Together, they discover a secret forest that comes alive in their imagination. I loved how they used imagination to occupy their time and all the adventures they had there. So much better than watching tv or playing video games. It brought me back to all the ways that I used my imagination as a kid with my siblings and how we'd play together for hours with nothing but a bucket, some weeds, some water and a shed (we were orphans who lived in a shed and made weed soup...) The two lead actors are so great and sweet and the supporting actors are lovely as well for the most part. This movie definitely gets a solid A