It's fun going back to see the reviews I had to skip until I saw the film. Amazing how much we tend to agree on the aspects of the films, even if we vary in how much it bothers us or thrills us.
Hustle and Flow
9 of 10
It only loses the 1 point because it has moments where its a bit too amateurish, Qualls and Anderson are both in a bit over their heads, and the story just can't quite avoid being a happy H'wood narrative for a little bit. But for the most part this is a story with a ton of truth in it, and in the characters. If you come from the streets and try to make it big, this is much more like what you went through than the glamor versions usually sold to us.
Let me borrow from Edwin and repeat that is was "an infectious and absorbing tale with a breakthrough performance from Terrence Howard." Definitely, Howard is just so amazingly powerful here. Glad to see him earn the Oscar nom for this as it would be a shame to have the effort overlooked. I also loved the songs and will be pulling for "Hustle and Flow" to win I think.
Murderball
9 of 10
Yet another great documentary. It was a very good year for creative docs and they spanned a wide range of topics too. What makes this powerful besides the filmmaking itself (which is solid) is the fact that instead of being about the sport it becomes about the people and how the paralysis fails to alter who they are as people at the core. Yet it also shows that at first it does affect people in just that way and puts them in a real identity crisis.
Those are 2 views on the subject that often get overlooked. It brings a humanity to the film that goes beyond the cliched version of "humanity" that these docs often focus on, becoming no better than manipulative H'wood scripts cloaked in the aura of "documentary".
Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room
8.5 of 10
I do agree with Brook on the stripper club stuff, it just seemed manipulative. In fact as FILMMAKING goes, this isn't a great doc. It is much more like the type I just complained about in my Murderball review above, with painfully obvious metaphors and a tendancy to go begging with the audience.
However, I also agree with Adam about the presentation of the facts. Perhaps for Brook the Enron situation was always clear, but I didn't follow it closely enough myself, and so I found the narrative of facts to be extemely powerful. It's the story that holds all the weight here, and it is a story that smacks you in the face and scares you a bit. Many things in the world today feel like "1984" come to life, but this is one of the worst.
It would have been better in the hands of a better filmmaker, but its still a vital tale that will grab your attention, at least if you aren't already overly familiar with the details of every facet.
Into the Blue
3 of 10
Well, after seeing this and F4 within a few weeks I realize quite clearly that Alba is a dreadful actress and her work should be avoided at all costs. I mean really terrible. Of course Paul Walker ain't much to write home about himself. Both are awful
I have no problem with a remake of The Deep (even though its not

), but it ends up being a great example of everything that's wrong with dumb, poorly written cinema today. It's an F'n thriller, and yet the surprise find of drugs has to be given away with the very first, totally unnecessary scene of the drug plane crashing.
Better to just start with the characters, remove the excess plot devices and manipulation, and leave the audience in the dark most of the time. This is exactly what people mean by check your brain filmmaking because the writer assumes you won't get it...ever. So they toss aside the edgy, confused grit of the original film and turn it into a cotton ball soft script that refuses to ever challenge, and therefore interest, the viewer.
It probably gets all its points from just the general overall story, as nothing else in the film warrants any rating points. It does make me want to watch The Deep again though, just to clear the palette.