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2007 Film List

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American Gangster - 8 of 10

Really solid enjoyable film from Ridley Scott. It's got a great pair of central performances and a superb cast of supporting characters as well (including my favorite, the black guy with the blond moustache, but I have no idea what his character name was or who the actor was that played him, but he was outstanding).

Frank Lucas is the driver, bagman, and all around go to guy for the boss who has run Harlem for the last fifty years. Frank is with him when he dies, and Frank witnesses the chaos and illadvised greed that rules the streets following the death of the boss. So Frank does something about it. He's noticed that most of the heroin on the streets is cut drastically. Some of the supply comes from crooked cops who cut the seized heroin even more and redestribute it. Frank heads the Bangkok and sets up a deal to buy the heroin direct so he can distribute to new york himself--no middle man. He sets up an ingenious system to transport the dope and soon he's one of the most powerful underworld figures on the east coast. He's incredibly successful, he's sly, observant and intelligent--he's also violent, prone to fits of temper and not in control of his organization or his reputation because he has grown it so fast and at a high expense to others, making him many enemies. And he doesn't know when to quit. He doesn't scale his ambition or hold it in check, and he's tremendously proud. A terrific fascinating character for a film and Denzel Washington is phenomenal playing him, it's mesmerizing watching him play this character.

Russell Crowe is also excellent, but in a much less showy role than the scenes Washington has. His character doesn't fill a room the way that Lucas does, which is probably as it should be, but it lets Washington walk away with a film that is half Crowe's.

Scott and Zaillian use the two separate storylines superbly. All the major events in each storyline echo each other. So as Crowe is tearing apart planes looking for smuggled drugs you have crooked cops tearing apart Lucas' home looking for getaway money.

What the filmmakers really achieved though is getting into the humanity of what is essentially a monstrous villain role. Lucas may have been responsible for the deaths of countless lives and the misery of untold children because of his drugs, but much of what he did was for his family. The same sort of uneasy perspective that the Godfather achieves--sympathy with criminals that shows you they have 'good' motives for their crimes is taken here, though it's harder to support Lucas because he is in a more complex situation, and rather than making his money off of booze, gambling and prostitutes he's making it off potentially lethal narcotics. This film also doesn't dance around where the dirty money comes from the way the Godfather does.


Warning Spoiler! Click to show
On the other hand it's almost worth it to see Lucas nail the crooked pigs. In many respects corrupt police are worse than the actual dealers, suppliers and traffickers becaue their actions ensures continual hatred, contempt and fear of all police AND their actions encourages and generates more crime. So bringing down three quarters of the NYC DEA is spectacular, and one of the few things in the film you can really cheer about (because everyone has a societal indoctrinated fear of cops, but few are afraid of people like Frank Lucas because the latter is so much more rare and distant).
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#152
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"No Country for Old Men" earns my first 5 star rating of the year. Excellent movie and easily among the best the Coen bros. have ever made in my opinion. Javier Bardem is a lock for a Best Supporting Actor nod and I believe actor Josh Brolin gave what many may see as the best performance he's ever had. Big props go out to Tommy Lee Jones and actress Kelly Macdonald for their solid work here as well. Great, great movie.

My top five of '07 so far...
#1 "No Country for Old Men"
#2 "Michael Clayton" 1/2
#3 "The Bourne Ultimatum"
#4 "Stardust"
#5 "American Gangster"

"Quite an experience to live in fear isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave."

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#153
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Martian Child - 9 of 10

This surprising little film is a tremendously well handled relationship piece. Wonderfully paced, quietly witting and quite touching. It's sort of depressing that Martian Child has crashed, that's the sort of movie when my mom sees it she asks "why don't they make more great movies like this." it's tremendously well done, beautifully shot by Robert Yeoman and virtually flawless dialogue there is a bit of third act by the numbers bit to give the film a pseudo climax but the characters are so well drawn and the the relationships so beautifully and subtly handled throughout the film that I'm think the film more than earned that ending.
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#154
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No Country for Old Men - 7 of 10

maybe I just wasn't in the right mood, but I was overall fairly disappointed by the film. Josh Brolin was terrific, but I didnt feel that Bardem lives up to the tremendous hype, I wish there had been more of Kelly mcDonald.


Warning Spoiler! Click to show
I also feel somewhat cheated that we don't see the deaths at the end. I'm reasonably certain that mcdonald died (he checked his feet after leaving her house) but it was kind of anticlimatic to see Moss dead and then have another thirty or forty minutes to go. It's interesting how there are two turning points that did Moss in. One was the gallon of water, the other was his mother in law trusting a suit and a smile. but he did very little else wrong considering the semi-mythical types hunting him. This movie is a lot like Fargo, but I don't think it's as good (and that's far from my favorite Coens film). It's strong, but not a best of year, American Gangster is a much more satisfying film experience. this you kinda come up empty--much like our theatre the second the credits came out, no applause, nobody waiting around for the credits, everyone just anxious to leave, old and young alike, I don't think this'll have really great word of mouth, it just doesn't pack enough of a punch.
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#155
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Enchanted - 7 of 10

a charming film from Disney that pokes warm hearted fun at Disneyfication and how that particular brand of distorting of traditional stories is both oddly appealing and slightly repellant, and the film is also something of a tribute to the incredibly popular success of the Disney-version of stories.


Giselle is a Disney Princess from Andalasia. She lives in Sleeping Beauty's cottage (the opening title of Walt Disney presents is also in Sleeping Beauty's font, the set up introduction through the book invokes several Disney films, and the expositions via stills (pop up book) reminds one of Beauty and the Beast), and is patiently waiting for her prince to randomly appear and carry her off to be married (and kissed, but that's all). Her prince is nearby hunting ogres, and he just happens upon her, then saves her from an ogre, and a slightly bewildered and skeptical looking Giselle is carted off to be wedded and bedded (scratch that last bit, this is Disney we're talking about). The ruling queen, the prince's wicked stepmother, doesn't want to be dethroned so she disguises herself as the Snow White crone and sends/curses Giselle into the real world, New York to be exact. The Queen even has a bumbling assistant. Likewise Giselle has furry animated friends, led by a chipmunk. The chipmunk clues the prince into Giselle's banishment and the duo pursue Giselle, the Queen quickly sends her bumbling assistant to thwart them, but only provides him the tools to do it with later.

Meanwhile Giselle is lost in NYC in her wedding dress. she comes across a divorce attorney, Robert, and his daughter on their way home, and somehow she ends up staying. This puts a bit of a crimper when Robert's soon-to-be fiancee arrives bright and early. Robert soon has to deal with an apparently delusional and chipper woman (Giselle) interfering with his family, relationships, work and experience of NYC in general. Because around Giselle, critters do her bidding, people burst into synchonized song and dance, and she can mend a hardened heart with a platitude and some wide eyed sincere honesty. Soon enough Robert is falling in love with her--in one day!

The concept and overall execution of the film is brilliant, the actors are tremendously talented and are working with excellent dialogue, and a fairly decent plot. But they're also hampered by story construction and some weak links, haphazard jumps and poor pacing throughout. the pacing problems are especially apparent in the animated section at the beginning of the film. Tremendously dull, it has bits of wit, but they're completely buried under the lethargic pacing and tone-deaf ear for the nuances of successful satire, and it simply fails completely as a satisfying exposition.

And the animation is also pretty substandard for 2d as well. Very lifeless.


Warning Spoiler! Click to show
on the other hand the final animated segment of the film is one of the best


Most of the rest of the problems with the film have to do with motivating the plot, and the writers 'solve' these problems mainly by just having an unconnected scene comes next and you logically assume that since you saw A and B and now we're at E, that C and D happened somewhere in between. There's also a serious problem in how they executed the bumbling idiot and wicked queen. They could have been a tremendous pair, instead we have a castrated queen who essentially does nothing for the first 4/5 of the film, because she will randomly show up in some water and give another order. there is no sense of threat or danger from her throughout the film or when she finally shows up, the filmmakers really missed the element that a good villain will have on the effect of the story, of keeping the audience on the edge of their seats even if they know a happily ever after is coming. Sadly the evil queen is more of a moustache twirler than an Ursula, Wicked Stepmother, Maleficent, or The Queen. The role the Queen plays in the story is more Shere Kahn than anything, she shows up at the end and there's a heroic battle, but it works for the Jungle Book because like Bruce the Shark or the velociraptor, we never actually see or encounter Kahn until the very end. And Susan Sarandon is so excellent as the complete live action embodiment of a Disney villainous that it's a crying shame her live action role wasn't as meaty as that of the bumbling assistant. It also would have provided an excellent way to counterpoint the way Giselle and her Prince interact with the real world with how she interacts with the real world.

But despite all that, Amy Adams makes this film soar far above the limitations of the script and lack of vision for the material. By sheer star power and a tremendously sincere, pitch perfect performance she turns a watered down Disney variant of Shrek into a very fun gentle and appealing satire instead.

her's is probably the best Disney Live action performance since Julie Andrews (excepting the Pirates movies) in Mary Poppins.

--------------------------------------------------
Beowulf - 6 of 10
in Imax 3d.

This is my first experience with Imax 3d and while it's superior to the other 3d methods, by no means is it worth the several dollar premium on top of a regular 3d premium.

They wanted to get to photoreal on Beowulf and they're about 98% of the way there on facial closeups of only one character (the lead) and about 90% there on the other major roles and wide shots of Beowulf, and only about 75% of the way there on all the background roles. The problem of inconsistency with how 'real' the various people in the film are is one of the most distracting and detracting of the film experience. The fire also looks terrible animated--very fake, as did the food and water.
To a certain extent the 3d really exaggerates the descrepancy because the background characters tend to look like Southpark figure cutouts standing out separated from the background. And as an animated film it overall fails in the animation department with so much of the background action being rudimentary or non existent.

As much as I dislike 300 they took the more appealing route, a nearly entirely computer generated pseudo photo real environment (and crowds) into which they dropped real actors. Anthony Hopkins doesn't look that different from Hrothgar. And it was just unpleasant to look at the women in the film, they were so stiff and unnatural, more akin to polar express than this film. a better route would to have taken the 300 route, shot live actors with some live props and a cgi Beowulf integrated the way that Gollum was. This would have focused more resources on the lead and may have gotten him all the way to photo real.

On the other hand the script sparkles and the performances by Ray Winstone and Brandon Gleeson are superb. John Malkovich hams it up and tries to impersonate Bette Davis with his role, which is completely off the tone of the script that Winstone and Gleeson so perfectly nailed. Angelina Jolie does a terrible accent and has been animated to look like a barbie doll and therefore her nudity will avoid the terrible ire of the MPAA ratings comittee. How they got away with just a pg13 I'll never know but they somehow did with all the sexual innuendo and brutal violence seen throughout the film. Hopkins sleepwalks through his role but doesn't try to actively sabotage the film the way that Malkovich seems to be doing.

Grendel is also a disappointment, he seems more ugly and deformed than monstrous. but his design even fails to really carry that off since I spent most of his screentime trying to figure out what the heck was wrong with his exoskeleton/skin/ etc, and why he essentially looked inside out--not especially scary or satisfying, and pretty ridiculous and not in tone with the dialogue imo. The design really fails.

Still the action is wonderfully made, the story is extremely well put together and the 3d is quite fun if a little gimmicky. better directed than 300 (better everything than 300, but that's not particularly hard, almost all films in the action-fantasy genre are) the film is mainly hurt by the failure of the process to deliver a consistent result.
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#156
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Re: 2007 Film List

Just added August Rush, which I was hesitant to see after a real drubbing from critics.

Is it sappy and sacchrine? Absolutely, but it's execution of the Oliver Twist story through music is one of the best I've seen in years. A truly top notch family film that tells kids they should believe in something again. One of the most heartfelt climaxes I've seen in a long time. Much better than most of the hip, cynical fare that passes for family entertainment these days.
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#157
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Juno - 10 of 10

Wow, three tens for the year so far, and not even halfway through december.

The dialogue is pitch perfection amazing, the performances all around are absolutely wonderful and Ellen Page in particular is spectacular. A tremendous and wonderful film.

Juno is pregnant, and she's not happy about it. She's sixteen, a junior, and mainly just getting by duking out her quirky path through life. She plans on aborting, even goes to the clinic, but she doesn't go through with it.

Instead she finds some upper middle class suburnites to adopt her baby, and she likes both parents quite a lot, the husband is a former rocker, and the wife is uptight from being unable to fulfill her maternal instincts the way she has succussfully managed her career and professional desires.

The film is such a wonderful, compact, beautiful jewel of a movie that I don't want to say any more and feel I've already said too much. but EVERYONE should see this film, it's one for the ages. Brilliantly funny, emotionally moving and with none of the scatological vulgarity of Knocked up to sugar-coat the pill for cynics.
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#158
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Glitch post. Disregard.
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#159
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Just added The Golden Compass, one of the best straight adaptations I've ever seen of a children's movie - yes, even with the ending chopped off. That unfortunately doesn't make as great of a movie as it might sound. The first third and change is burdened by exposition that is tiring when the same information was conveyed gracefully and intriuging by Pullman on the page. Otherwise, the film's shortcomings are the book's shortcomings: in particular an episodic nature that never quite justifies itself to the reader/viewer. Much like C.S. Lewis's Christian fantasy epic, the rules of the universe never quite convalesce into a solid cohesive hole. Just when we've bought souls that live as animal daemons, we're introduced to seafaring gypsies, witches, balloon-flying Texan cowboys and finally talking polar bears. The book made all of the induvidual elements work staggerly well, and the movie also succeeds with immaculate casting. The characters felt like they leaped out of my imagination. In addition to staggering newcomer Dakota Blue Richards, who perfectly balances all of the facets of Lyra's character, Nichole Kidman puts in a performance as Mrs. Coulter that is a character best. She was born to play this role, and the result feels like the character lept out of the book. We don't see much of Lord Azrael as a result of the abridged ending, and he doesn't visually match what I imagined, but he does a good job of capturing both Azrael's passion and recklessness. He's the opposite of Mrs. Coulter's uptight rigidity, but no less dangerous feeling even though Lyra seems blind to his imperfections. Sam Elliot is, of course, fantastic as Lee Scoresby. And the visuals are magnificent.
The dry, exposition-heavy first half hurts my opinion of the film. As it is I'm leaning between 3 and 3 1/2 out of 4 stars. I marked a 3 for now, but that might change.
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#160
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Grace is Gone - 8 of 10


superb little film with John Cusack giving a wonderful, awards type performance. I think I preferred him in Martian Child but he transforms here.

The story is that both he and his wife were in the army, met fell in love married, but he was eventually kicked out when they found out he was cheating on his eye tests. Now Grace has shipped out to Iraq, leaving him to care for their 12 and 8 year old daughters, and managing a Home Depot.

She is killed and he can't deal. They just drive, to disney world.

the performances by the little girls are excellent, they are superbly directed, with pitch perfect business and dialogue. Likewise the adults in the film are all good, and the overall a quite powerful story that is exactly as long as it needs to be.

except the film is hampered by us never quite understanding why he deals with his grief like this, why he continually runs away from it. this is only redeemed by the script causing the elder daughter to follow along with her father's method of grief, there is understanding in her eyes and bearing, and she flees from it. She knows everything, but chooses not to know anything. so it makes the moment when she is explicitly told the truth all the more heartbreaking. That moment is worth the frustrations earlier in the film, but it results in a film that isn't cohesive or consistent. But it is wonderful, and worth seeking out.
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#161
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Just added National Treasure: Book of Secrets which proves that this has the makings of a great series. It's not that any of the induvidual movies are particularly great, but the treasure hunters concept is a cinematic standard and all of the characters are extremely likable. It's like a well-oiled big budget sitcom on the big screen, only a bit more earnest. I'd definitely be back for any future installments.
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#162
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I'll dump a bunch of stuff here tomorrow. Too tired right now. But I do have to catch up here and in the S&S thread.


2007 film list 2005 film list 2004 film list 2003 film list 2002 film list
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#163
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The Golden Compass -6 of 10

As a fantasy movie this isn't too bad, it's aided greatly by just how great a character Lyra is. Unfortunately the script is limp and the direction completely inadequte, most of the film is shot in closeup, and this is especially problematic for the battles. Add to the this the boneheaded decision to lose the tragic ending and Lyra's mistake at bringing roger to Asriel and you just have a completely frustrating experience, constantly seeing what the film could have been and knowing that it is so thoroughly mediocre when it could have been great. The closest approximation is the abysmal adaptation of Hearts in Atlantis which was a fair movie but it could have been so much more so much greater.

Dakota Blue Richards is excellent as Lyra and Nicole Kidman is an outstanding Mrs. Coulter. And the daemons are fine, but those are the only high points, Sam Eliot is perfectly cast, but there's too little of Lee in the film to really help things out.

--------------

Sweeney Todd - 5 of 10

ahh, this film could be so much better. The singing all sounds like American Idol rejects, not the god-awful appalling AIers but like the semi-talented mediocre contestants who just don't get that they're not good enough for people to pay to hear their voice. Helena Bonham Carter is about 90% there vocally, but Depp is only about 60% there. Rickman and Spall are just bad enough to be funny.

But it's really Burton that made this film so bad. The cinematography is quite simply, awful. The production design is pretty good, but you can't really see any of the production, costumes etc because everything is desaturated. Depp's white face paint makes him look like a mime most of the time, and the deep sunken eyes look is tiring after a while since it's Sweeney, Loveitt, and Toby all with the identical eye makeup.

Nothing is cohesive in the film, and it's sort of schizophrenic about wondering if it wants to be a comedy, a theatrical adaptation, a musical, or a parody of a musical. And none of the four work.
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#164
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I just added Sweeney Todd, too, and I have to disagree with the other Adam's assessment of it. This was one of the best stage to screen adaptations I've ever seen, in terms of material making the transition intact. Laura Michelle Kelly has had an extensive and acclaimed career in West End musicals, including a standout performance in the title role for "Mary Poppins." I'm not a big fan of sopranos, but Jayne Wisener is classically trained and did nailed what she was given. I don't know anything about Jamie Campbell Bower or Ed Sanders, but their performances of "Johanna" and "Not While I'm Around" respectively are the best renditions I've ever heard of those songs. Helena Bonham Carter was hit or miss vocally, but she enfused Mrs. Lovett with such character and life that I found myself not minding in the slightest. It's the first time one of her performances has really had me sit up and take notice. Alan Rickman wasn't anything special vocally, but he didn't have to be. His character is supposed to grate, after all. Both he and Timothy Spall were utterly at home with the theatrical vibe required, a perfect midpoint between the broad strokes necessary in the theater and the more subtle performance enabled by the screen.
Which leaves Johnny Depp as Sweeney Todd. He was vocally mediocre, there's no doubt about that. But there's no doubt he carries the film, and carries it effortlessly. Making Mrs. Lovett younger than is customary meant that she should have been a viable match for Sweeney. Depp's performance eliminates that as an issue.
The cinematography, very similar the the kind I hated in the fifth Harry Potter movie, works splendidly here. Both bringing to mind a Dickensian soot-covered London and London as filtered through Sweeney's crazed and obsessive perspective. The flashbacks are telling, revealed the same places and people, but impossibly if subtly not the same. It's the blackest of comedies, with a suitably tragic ending, so the look fit it like a glove.
The biggest boon, however, was bringing in the stage show's original orchestrator, Jonathan Tunick, to map out the score for the screen. Most film adaptations take an orchestra score that broad and powerful and minimize it into something more intimate — when indeed they use it at all. Tunick took the theater orchestra and nearly tripled it. In the front row of the multiplex, I felt like I was just behind the orchestra pit. Considering how twisted and out-there Burton's film was visually, it helped having a traditional score to anchor the film.
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#165
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the other singers were adequete, but not special. Depp did manage to make the duet he sings with Rickman pretty special and his performance was suitably intense/one note enough to bring off the character (I suppose). But then I have no familiarity whatsoever with the stage show, score, or music to the film (other than The Ballad of Sweeney Todd, which I know somewhat well). The film very much reminded me of the strengths and weaknesses of Porgy and Bess, though I'd give that film an edge for having more interesting characters and better music, but it's an equally problematic adaptation, and overall a fairly weak film.

should Sweeney Todd be tedious to someone who doesn't know the story or characters, doesn't know how it ends and pretty much all he's heard is the opening number from the play and seen the trailer? because my overall experience consistently throughou the film was 'this is very tedious.' and there were few standout moments that I thought were really good, Depp and Carter calling the ointment piss was one of the highlights.
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#166
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I'm going to reply in the Sweeney Todd discussion thread, so as not hijack this one. You've posed a worthwhile question.
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#167
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Don't think I ever started a list this year....
Here it is for theatrical viewings:

Movies Seen: 168
Trips to the Movies: 170
*2006 Movies Seen: 9

Best of 2007: Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Worst of 2007: Epic Movie

January: 15
*01/05: Children of Men ****
01/06: Happily N'Ever After *.5
*01/12: Curse of the Golden Flower ***
*01/13: Pan's Labyrinth ****
*01/13: Arthur & the Invisibles **
*01/16: Dreamgirls ***
*01/19: The Last King of Scotland ***
01/19: The Hitcher ***
01/20: Primeval *.5
*01/26: Volver ***
*01/28: Notes on a Scandal ***.5
01/29: Smokin' Aces ***
01/30: Catch and Release **
01/31: Blood & Chocolate *.5
*01/31: Letters from Iwo Jima ****

February: 12
02/01: Epic Movie *
02/02: The Messengers **
02/02: Because I Said So ***
02/09: Hannibal Rising ***
02/10: Norbit *.5
02/16: Ghost Rider ***
02/17: Bridge to Terabithia ***.5
02/18: Breach ***.5
02/19: Music and Lyrics **.5
02/23: Reno 911!: Miami ***
02/23: The Abandoned ***.5
02/24: The Number 23 **.5

March: 13+1=14
03/02: Wild Hogs ***
03/02: Black Snake Moan ***.5
03/03: Zodiac ****
03/10: Amazing Grace ***
03/10: 300 ****
03/17: Premonition **.5
03/17: Dead Silence ***
03/18: 2nd time: 300 ****
03/23: Reign Over Me ***.5
03/23: The Hills Have Eyes II **.5
03/24: TMNT ***.5
03/24: Shooter ***
03/30: Meet the Robinsons *.5
03/31: Blades of Glory ***

April: 14
04/06: The Reaping *.5
04/06: Are We Done Yet? **.5
04/10: Grindhouse ****
04/12: The Lookout ***.5
04/12: The Namesake ***
04/13: Perfect Stranger *.5
04/13: Disturbia ***
04/13: Slow Burn *.5
04/14: Pathfinder **.5
04/20: Vacancy ***
04/20: Fracture ***
04/27: Hot Fuzz ****
04/27: The Condemned *.5
04/28: The Invisible **

May: 10
05/02: Next *.5
05/04: Lucky You ***
05/05: Spider-Man 3 ***
05/11: Georgia Rule **.5
05/11: The Ex **.5
05/12: 28 Weeks Later ***.5
05/18: Shrek the Third **.5
05/25: Waitress ***.5
05/25: Bug ***.5
05/26: Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End ***.5

June: 16
06/01: Mr. Brooks **.5
06/02: Knocked Up ****
06/08: Ocean's 13 **.5
06/09: Hostel Part II ***
06/10: Surf's Up ***
06/16: DOA: Dead or Alive **
06/17: Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer ***
06/17: Ratatouille ****
06/22: A Mighty Heart ***.5
06/23: Evan Almighty **.5
06/24: The Last Mimzy **
06/25: Nancy Drew **.5
06/26: 1408 ***
06/28: Live Free or Die Hard ***
06/29: Sicko ***.5
06/29: You Kill Me **.5

July: 11+1=12
07/03: License to Wed **
07/05: Transformers ***
07/06: Delta Farce *
07/11: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix ***
07/20: Hairspray ***
07/20: Captivity ***
07/21: I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry **
07/24: 2nd viewing Transformers ***
07/27: The Simpsons ***
07/27: Sunshine ***.5
07/28: No Reservations ***
07/28: I Know Who Killed Me *.5

August: 17
08/03: Hot Rod ***
08/03: Underdog **
08/04: The Bourne Ultimatum ***.5
08/10: Stardust ***.5
08/10: Becoming Jane **.5
08/11: Rush Hour 3 **
08/16: Rescue Dawn ***.5
08/18: Superbad ***.5
08/24: Resurrecting the Champ **.5
08/24: Illegal Tender ***
08/27: The Invasion **.5
08/27: Mr. Bean's Holiday *.5
08/28: The Nanny Diaries **.5
08/29: Death at a Funeral ***
08/29: War **.5
08/29: Balls of Fury **.5
08/31: Hlloween ***

September: 14
09/01: Death Sentence ***
09/07: 3:10 to Yuma ***.5
09/08: Shoot 'Em Up ***.5
09/08: Paprika ***.5
09/14: Mr. Woodcock **.5
09/14: Dragon Wars **
09/15: The Brave One ***
09/21: Eastern Promises ***.5
09/21: Good Luck Chuck **
09/22: Across the Universe ****
09/22: Resident Evil: Extinction ***
09/28: In the Valley of Elah ***.5
09/28: The Kingdom ***.5
09/29: The Game Plan ***

October 14
The Heartbreak Kid ***
The Seeker: The Dark is Rising *.5
Sydney White ***
Michael Clayton ***.5
We Own the Night **.5
Elizabeth: The Golden Age **
30 Days of Night **.5
Rendition **.5
Things We Lost in the Fire **
Gone Baby Gone ***.5
Lars and the Real Girl ***.5
The Darjeeling Limited **.5
Saw IV **.5
Dan in Real Life ***

November 20
Martian Child **.5
Bee Movie ***
American Gangster ***
Fred Claus ***
Lions for Lambs **.5
P2 ***
the Deaths of Ian Stone ***
Tooth and Nail ***
Borderland ***
Nightmare Man **
Mulberry Street ***.5
Before the Devil Knows Your Dead ***
No Country for Old Men ****
Beowulf ***.5
Southland Tales **.5
Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium ***
Hitman **
Enchanted ***.5
August Rush ***.5
The Mist ***.5

December= 9
Awake **
The Golden Compass **
I Am Legend ***
Alvin and the Chipmunks ***
National Treasure: Book of Secrets **.5
Charlie Wilson's War ***.5
Juno ****
Sweeney Todd ****
Walk Hard ***.5
The Great Debaters ***
PS I Love You ***
Aliens vs Predator: Requiem **.5
2009 Film List | 2009 Complete List | 2008 Film List | 2007 Film List | 2006 Film List | 2005 Film List | 2004 Film List
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#168
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Re: 2007 Film List

Updated my list with the following:

Superbad 4 Stars
Waitress 3.5 Stars
I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry 2 Stars
Bourne Ultimatium 3.5 Stars
Harry Potter: Order of the Phoenix 3.5 Stars
Charlie Wilson's War 3.5 Stars
Live Free or Die Hard 3 Stars
American Gangster 4 Stars
Gone, Baby, Gone 3.5 Stars
Transformers 3.5 Stars
Simpsons Movie 3.5 Stars
Hot Fuzz 3 Stars
Number 23 2 Stars
Bridge to Teribithia 3.5 Stars
The Great Debaters 3.5 Stars
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#169
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Re: 2007 Film List

Does anyone know if There Will Be Blood ever have a wide release? I can't find a release schedule that has it in the near future? It's the 2007 film I still haven't seen!

Live Free or DIE!!!!!

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#170
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Re: 2007 Film List

I saw Juno today, one of the best films of the year, and contains the best performance of the year in Ellen Page.

4 Stars
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#171
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Re: 2007 Film List

Back into the fold a bit. Weekend tally (over 4 stars).

Juno
Highly recommended.

I am Legend
Decent but I rated it a bit higher because I am predisposed to like the premise, setting, art direction. The film needed a better script in the second half.

Atonement
Walked in knowing very little and enjoyed the beginning and the conclusion. The middle drags quite a bit. A rather depressing affair.

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#172
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Re: 2007 Film List

Das Leben der Anderen (The Lives of Others) - 10 of 10

WOW. perhaps the best German film since Das Boot, the Lives of others is a superb piece of filmmaking, an instant classic. Incredibly compelling, it's a thriller without any chases or gun battles, but it's every bit as intense as one containing those.

Wiesler works for the GDR secret service (set in the mid eighties) and teaches classes on interrogation in their school. He is an expert surveillance man. He and his superior, friend and colleague attend a new play. The play supports the GDR, but Wiesler is suspicious he thinks the playwright should be put under surveillance to monitor for subversive activity. his colleague is skeptical, but is astonished when he floats the idea in front of a party leader who leaps eagerly at the idea. It turns out this same leader is using his stature to force the playwright's girlfriend, Christa, to have an affair with him, imprisoning the playwright due to a discovery on surveillance would remove a rival. Wiesler becomes the main operator on the stakeout, and he becomes deeply drawn into this couple, where the playwright in particular represents all the values he himself believes the party embodies. The film gets more intricate and intense, weaving a fascinating web of a story and film. superb, I want to watch it again, every aspect of craft on display in the film is of the highest caliber--yeah, this deserved to beat Pan's Labyrinth.

Wow.
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#173
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Re: 2007 Film List

I counted this movie for 06, but perhaps it should have been 07. It had a couple of festival showings in 06 in the US, but only opened in limited release here last year.

For the purposes of this thread, I am now thinking it is an 07 film. It's 06 AA nom and win kinda threw me off but aparently rules are different for foreign flicks (no NY/LA requirement?).

Fantastic movie. It's win over PL looked like an upset until I saw it.

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#174
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Re: 2007 Film List

it's worldwide release was in 2006, but it was not given a theatrical release in the United States until march. Since the film was chosen by it's country to submit for the 2006 best foreign film award it didn't have to screen publically, only for the relatively small foreign language films nominating comittee. Had it not been nominated in 2006 it would have been eligable in all categories for 2007 (much like City of God, which wasn't nominated for foreign film in 2002, but earned many surprise nominations in 2003, when it had it's US theatrical release). Since Lives of Others was nominated and won it's disqualified from competing in other categories this year, but for all intents and purposes (ie non academy members) for americans it's a 2007 release. Only two htf members put Lives of Others on their top ten list last year, this year we already have three or four.
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#175
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Re: 2007 Film List

The Savages
Over the years, indies have developped their own cliches and this film is definitely one of them. We've seen these characters before, in similar situation, perhaps played by the same actors even (indie juggernauts Philip Seymour Hoffman and Laura Linney). The good this is that this is what these actors do best. They are effortless and always a pleasure to watch in a fine, "mainstream indie" flick.

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
The most original movie I've seen all year. And a lot more fun and whimsical than a movie about a paralized man has any right to be. A powerful true story. But in many ways, this may be my Pan's Labyrinth of 07: I liked it a lot but didn't love it.

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#176
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Re: 2007 Film List

Diving Bell and the Butterfly - 8 of 10
performances, cinematography, editing - 10 of 10

Welcome to France, the land where no one has ever heard of morse code.

Jean Do, editor of Elle magazine, had a massive stroke, he was resuscitated, but left paralyzed other than one eye and eye lid. He learned to communicate by blinking for yes or no and later for which letter of the alphabet said in a string. This is his story and the story of him writing that book letter by letter.

This is an astonishing production with amazing performances and especially photography by Janusz Kaminski (expect him to win the oscar, yes even over Roger Deakens, sadly). The editing is also superb. But it's ultimately a very boring, if touching, film. It is more upbeat than you expect a film about a paralyzed person to be, but by and large it's still a sad story. Very very good, but not one of the year's very best, except in the technicals department.
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#177
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Re: 2007 Film List

Quote:
Originally Posted by Adam_S
Welcome to France, the land where no one has ever heard of morse code.


I do take offense to that since my brother suffered the same type of stroke and had to learn the same way to communicate while he was recovering. Apparently, North America doesn't know morse code either.

Live Free or DIE!!!!!

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#178
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Re: 2007 Film List

no offense was meant, merely a flippant remark. it's possible that morse code isn't very effective with blinking, but it certainly works for Steven Hawking's single finger he has control over.
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#179
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Re: 2007 Film List

Better late than never, I figure-

There Will Be Blood (****)

The boundaries of cinema are now slightly bigger. 'Blood' is like nothing you have ever seen, or heard. Every element of it, from Day-Lewis's blistering, rightly lauded performance to (Radiohead) Jonny Greenwood's dissonant score- if ever there was a film that defied superlatives, this is it. Anderson's long takes highlight the performances, and his writing establishes a unique vernacular quite unlike anything I've heard, which he slowly escalates to something way beyond tipping point in the final scene, an ungodly stunner that flies in the face of categorization or even description, but must simply be seen to be believed. Everyone knows Day-Lewis is great, but nobody's ever seen like this before. Steven Spielberg has stated that Anderson is his favorite director of the new generation, and I am inclined to agree. Easily one of the towering cinematic achievements of the new decade.

No Country For Old Men (****)

It's the ending that raises this film to the level of masterpiece. For the first two acts, the Coens make a measured, tense thriller rooted in physicality, with riveting but easily comprehendable situations. Then, the film takes a sharp left turn in its viewpoint, but not its subject matter, forcing us to reevaluate the thematics of what we've seen in a way we wouldn't have expected- it's about a man's change in worldview, and how he achieves peace with himself internally, by changing the way he sees things, instead of finding closure physically. It's a cerebral ending, and a challenging one for most audiences; at first glance it feels unresolved, but in reality it couldn't be moreso. The film is not exactly very approachable or entertaining, but the execution of the scenes, performances, and in particular, the script, really couldn't be any better.

Zodiac (****)

Another reviewer wrote that if if Fight Club was Fincher's rock n' roll masterpiece, this is his twelve-part symphony. Like Oliver Stone's JFK, the film mines its subject matter for all it's worth, thereby becoming the definitive last word on its subject (the investigation of the Zodiac murders in 1970s San Francisco). Certainly serial killer movies will continue to be made, but they will be difficult to take seriously in light of this film, which, finally, exposes the true nature of investigative police work and journalism- it is tedious, exhausting, sometimes never-ending- an arduous numbing of the soul. The film is not so much about the Zodiac himself, but about the people who fell to the psychological toll of pursuiing him; one by one they drop out of the picture, until only one (Jake Gyllenhal) is unable to give up, having lost the rest of his life long ago. It's a bleak picture, but a valuable and cautionary one. Writers will take pleasure in its detail and measured pacing, and especially for its unique inverted-pyramid structure.

American Gangster (****)

Ridley Scott's so good that when he turns in another masterpiece, people shrug their shoulders. His new film is as good as any of his others, and well worth the time of any serious filmgoer; the film's incredibly dense, intricate plotting is reminiscent of JFK. Indeed, Gangster holds the record for the film with the most locations (180). Steven Zaillian's script takes a unique approach- dozens (about 350, in the shooting script) of very short scenes, many of them without dialogue, sketch together a detailed portrait of two like-minded workaholics on very different career paths.

The two characters seem similar to others we've seen before, but there are subtle differences that make them very different. Lucas (Washington) is oblivious to the glamourous side of 'the life,' seeing it merely as a lucrative but exhausting business venture; he has conversations with associates not about fast cars or women, but about exclusivity rights and trademark infringement. Roberts is of the same breed, with a little more humanity; both of them define themselves by what they do. Contrary to popular consensus, Crowe's character is almost more interesting than Washington's- we wonder what makes him so doggedly honest. Could it be the same vision of the possibilities of America that he shares with Lucas, but from a different angle? A film that stimulates such questions should not be ignored.

I should also note the tremendous performance by Washington; watch him at the moment when he first sees Russell Crowe. You can read a dozen emotions on his face in the space of a few seconds. And then there is the direction- each successive film Ridley makes further cements his status as one of the premier visual stylists of our time. The communicative power of the cinematography, the use of music, the layered but followable script, the sheer size of the picture- it's all impeccable, and very much deserving of the iconic title. Still not sure why this got passed over.

The Assassination of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford (***3/4)

What lingers in the mind is not the story or plotting, but the atmosphere. This is a film about that which is nearly intangible- the unspoken inner thoughts of others, the gradual shifts in the mind that lead a man to do something he originally couldn't dream of. Scenes drift past us, at first appearing inconsequential, but in hindsight revealing exactly what we needed to know. The title of the picture tells the what and who; the film tells us the how and the why. The performances by both leads are award-worthy.

I'm Not There (***1/2)

The film is just like Bob Dylan- frustrating but brilliant, complex but engrossing, always at the cusp of being comprehendible. Most importantly of all- it's completely uncategorizable. The more you know about Dylan, the more comprehensible the film is, and the more one can appreciate the novel approach (six actors, including an 11-year black boy and Cate Blanchett, portray various sides of the Dylan persona). The fact that the movie actually manages to make any sense at all is a testament to the talent of the filmmakers. Todd Haynes' direction is highly energetic and hugely ambitious; the visuals are many and varied in their approach. You don't watch this movie so much as wander around in it- and that's a good thing. The performances are uniformly excellent, especially Blanchett as the 1960s-era Bob Dylan.

The Diving Bell and The Butterfly (***1/2)

Large portions of the film are shot exclusively from the point of view of the protagonist's left eye- the only part of his body that hasn't been paralyzed. There are lots of movies about parapalegics; you've never seen one like this. Vibrant colors and beautiful compositions leap off the screen; American painter Julian Schnabel's direction is in-your-face outstanding. Somehow, the film manages to be very uplifting, despite its subject matter. The film concerns the man's coming to terms with his new state of living, somehow still finding some humor and joy in life. The picture is based on the life of a French editor of Elle magazine, who, upon being paralyzed, dictated his entire autobiography by blinking his left eye.

Into The Wild (**** - I think)

A fantastically involving picture. Penn's direction is remarkably fluid, and the questions the story posits are relevant to so many of us; we are allowed to consider the character's ideas and actions on their own terms, and come to our own conclusions about life. One of the most thought-provoking and deeply rewarding cinematic experiences of the year.

Juno- (***1/2)

How rare- a comedy made with attention to human nature, exploring its characters not just for laughs but for the same insight we gain from watching dramas. There is a humanity lurking under the too-cool exterior of Juno, and you can sense traces of it in the nuances of Ellen Page's incredible performance; her quirkiness and ironic attitude conceal something that is never shown in the film, but clearly sensed. It's a remarkably difficult role. Also rare in a teenage comedy- Juno actually seems like her parent's child, and we can see where she learned to be the smartass that she is. The drama of the story is real, and earned, and by the end, we feel we've been somewhere. The same can't be said for most comedies today. (Also worth noting: when was the last time you saw a *cool* stepmom in a movie??)

Michael Clayton / Atonement / The Bourne Ultimatum (all ***1/2)
All three films are pitch-perfect examples of their respective genres, and represent filmmakers working at the top of their craft. Gilroy's Michael Clayton is the best legal picture since Mann's The Insider, and is astonishingly well written and directed for a first timer; Atonement is a period piece with a very unique story focus (neither of the lead actors are the main characters) and very, very sharp editing and direction; with Bourne Ultimatum, Greengrass has all but perfected his style, shooting a studio tentpole sequel as if it was an indie docudrama; the film is made of three chase sequences, and he injects them with a realism that can't be achieved any other way. His editing is disorienting but intricate; notice how flows of motion are started in one shot but are almost never continued in the next. The best action picture in several years.

Sicko (***)

Great, mostly non-partisan documentary that makes you want to move to France;

Transformers- (***1/2)

The fulfillment of Michael Bay's promise to cinema- beautiful, exquisitely photographed wall-to-wall kinetic movement, complete with laughable dialogue and story. It's fantastic.

Gone Baby Gone- (***1/2)

Ben Affleck's (co)writing and direction is confident and mature, and best of all, understated. The script uses a crime drama as a template for exploring different, complex points of view on a certain aspect of the human condition.

La Vie En Rose- (***1/2)

Nearly the best recent musical biopic that still uses the musical biopic template (that is, struggling artist makes big, takes drugs, does one last show); the overwhelming advantage here is total non-linearity, connecting scenes not by time but by emotion. Cotllard's performance is outstanding. Also worth noting is the presence of some incredible dynamic tracking shots.

3:10 To Yuma- (***1/2)

another genre picture that works very well without breaking out of the bounds of its mold. The film is about as good as it could be as such. Worth mentioning is the humanity of the Christian Bale character, and the dynamic between the two leads.

Reign Over Me- (***)

A brilliant first hour, very affecting in its realistic approach of a unique dilemma studiously avoided in the movies; the remainder of the picture unfortuantely dissolves into typical studio melodrama. A massively unrealistic courtroom scene near the end takes the cake.

Across The Universe- (***1/4)

well worth it for its ambition and creativity;

Hot Fuzz- (***1/2)

another excellent comedy with good characters, albeit a good deal more frivolous, and gory, than Juno; it kicks into high gear in the last half hour. A good number of unmissable scenes.

300- (**)

Glorified nihilism at its worst. The film wallows in stereotypes and prejudices, positing psychotic violence as a premier problem-solving tool and worse, a cause for glory. It isn't that the film's characters are morally repuganant, although they are; it's that the film takes a stance that glorifies their outlook. Only in post 9-11 America could a picture like this be so well-received. I recognize its many strong points (the visuals are undeniably great), and want to like the picture, but am unable to get past its non-relation to reality. I should stress that despite that, it is not, however, a bad film by any means.

Beowulf- (*1/2)

People will laugh about this film in times to come- indeed, some already are. Zemeckis has miraculously forgotten how to make the masterpieces for which he is famous, choosing instead to turn a piece of epic literature into a short, action-fluff piece that doesn't even work on its own terms. 3D effects are particualrly risible, essentially emphasizing foreground/background contrasts, throwing the swishing arrow in every now and then. The novelty wears off fast, and 3D shots thrown in for their own sake will seem extraneuos and oddly paced on the 2D dvd.

The Kingdom- (**)

A surprising disappointment. The film dares to simplify America's involvement in Iraq, and all the complexities involved, into a big-budget version of CSI. The story and imagery, at times, smacks of blatant wish-fulfillment, particularly in the climactic gun battle. The opening credits set us up for a story that builds upon the complicated, violent history of Saudi Arabia, but only offers us a peek in the film's final 30 seconds. The rest is a (very) well-executed version of a mediocre and irrelevant story- not something promised in the film's opening.

Grindhouse- (***1/2)

Ebert writes, "This evocation of a grindhouse may have existed somewhere, sometime, but my movie-going reaches back to before either director was born, and I have never witnessed a double bill and supporting program much like the one they have created.... "Grindhouse" is an attempt to re-create a double feature that never existed for an audience that no longer exists." He is right, but the films stand on their own, even if their origins don't. Rodriguez understands the appeal of the "good bad film," and offers an excellent one with Planet Terror, which involves zombies, Bin Laden assassins, barbeques and small motorcycles; Tarantino's segment is actually intended to be a good movie- which it is- and focuses on too-hip dialogue, female feet, a kinetic car chase, and some fairly disturbing violence that is ambiguous in its intent on the viewer. An excellent, unique package, overflowing with its filmmakers' creativity and love for their medium.

The Savages- (***1/2)

Hoffman nails it, again. Linney proves herself once more. Tamara Jenkins' script moves well, exploring an unexplored but universal topic (what do we do with our aging parents?) with detail and good humor.

Eastern Promises- (***1/2)

Cronenberg's non-direction appears as a missed opportunity at first sight, but upon further reflection is quite effective. His use of slightly wider-angle lenses and compositions that center shoulders instead of heads doesn't even register on first viewing. He infuses a subtle sense of dread through mostly undiscernable means; he pointedly asks us to wonder what the different characters are thinking, a task many filmgoers may not be accustomed to. Note the way he reveals that one of the characters is homosexual. The use of readings from a diary, peripherially related to all the characters, is timed to suggest the inner motivations of the characters then onscreen. A unique filmgoing experience. Worth mentioning is the climactic (and unending) bathhouse fight, which shows us the visceral vulnerability of close combat in ways we've definitely haven't seen before.

Regards,
Nathan

Public Enemies / Michael Mann / July 1

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#180
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Re: 2007 Film List

Spider-Man 3 - 2 of 10

Just about every ten minutes on the dot I said. "I didn't think it could get any worse." and it kept getting worse. And worse. And worse. All the way up until the closing narration it kept finding and sinking to a new low I didn't think was possible.

This is the danger of movie by comittee where you throw everything plus the kitchen sink at a script and hope it turns into a good movie. Damn this sucked hard. The equivalent of Batman and Robin but with worse dialogue, awful performances and a more limp and pathetic plot.

And holy shit, the film should lose an additional grade for the haircuts. awful.

I even thought the cgi was mediocre and chop up buildings bits was laughable in its over-the-topness.

Such a wasted effort. Bad in every sense of the word, but some of the fights were cool.

And holy shit. Peter Parker does jazz and dances might be the single funniest thing I've seen all year (but not in a good way).

Awful x3. All the crap that didn't make it into the first two movies apparently got excreted into this movie, resulting in a giant, putrid bowel movement.
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