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good Shadowboxer movies to watch

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

Download Shadowboxer

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Shadowboxer” is a sad, warped tale that pairs a young man and his stepmother as lovers, whose lives are forever entwined after she murders his father. Sadder and more warped still is the fact that Cuba Gooding Jr. and accomplished Shakespearean actress Helen Mirren agreed to appear in this mess. Directed by “Monster’s Ball” producer Lee Daniels, “Shadowboxer” is billed as film noir, but because it lacks any subtlety and accentuates gratuitous violence that is more in-your-face than it is implied, the movie is about as noir-ish as “Rocky.” ADVERTISEMENT The tie that binds Mikey (Gooding) and Rose (Mirren), besides their sordid past, is their sordid present. They make a terrific team … of contract killers, until Rose, who’s battling cancer, goes soft during a major assassination assignment and spares the life of one of her targets when said target’s water breaks. Rose delivers the bambino, Mikey’s not much of a dad to the boy — and, it turns out, not much of a lover to Rose. But by that point the story is stretched to such a point of absurdity that eventually Mikey finds redemption. If only the audience were so lucky. Shadowboxer MPAA rating: R for strong graphic violence and sexuality, nudity, language and some drug use A Teton Films release. Director Lee Daniels. Screenplay by William Lipz. Producers Daniels, Lisa Cortés, David Robinson, Brook Lenfest, Damon Dash. Director of photography M. David Mullen. Editors William Chang Suk Ping, Brian A. Kates. Running time: 1 hour, 32 minutes. In selected theaters.
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Shallow Grave full divx movie

Monday, September 8th, 2008

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Shallow Grave
MIcheal Beihn is Garnet Montrose, a wounded soldier who returns from the
war, horribly scarred, he now feels he is too hideous for his beloved,
Ann.
The only one who will see him is Quintus, played by Micheal Beach, the
black
worker who minds him and runs errands for him. For the early part of the
twentieth century, Garnet has taken a risk and taught Quintus how to
read.
Enter Daventry, played by Patrick Dempsey. An aimless, wandering soul,
Daventry becomes the third player in the Garnet-Ann relationship. As he
tells Garnet what to write to Ann, the passionate emotion he feels within
his heart, it becomes clear Daventry has fallen for Garnet. Now Daventry
must deliver messages to the woman Garnet loves.
This was an incredible Cyrano DeBergerac reversed story that while not
having scene stealing performances, due to its subtlety, it is a
compelling
saga to watch unfold. Further enhancing the forbidden love is Quintus,
who
while at times the very amusing comedy relief, his humor is very
realistic,
he also makes astonishing stabs at how it is to be black in the white
society.
Quintus stands at the amusing moments, such as the fall from the window
and
the storm destroying the furniture and not the house, but he is also at
one
of the most poignant times as well, such as when he tells Garnet that
Daventry is in love with him. Garnet refuses to believe him at
first.
The ending climax is a bit unclear as to what exactly happened, but the
rest
of the story, including the finale makes up for it. There just seemed to
be
nowhere else for the story to go.

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Sunday, September 7th, 2008

Download Men of Honor

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Men of Honor Reviewed By Erik Childress Posted 11/10/00 18:21:45

"Apparently All Men…Are…Created Equal" (Pretty Bad)

Here’s something I wasn’t aware of. Apparently everyone who has their life story made into a movie has shared the exact same experiences with every other true-to-life character ever brought to the screen. Is this true or do filmmakers just look for any story about a guy fighting against the odds against people who think who doesn’t belong? Guys who are able to make one friend who is more enlightened or color blind, one who usually dies or is severely maimed? Guys who must fight than embrace their leader while a more powerful, one-dimensional villain holds their fate in their hand in a final courtroom battle? Men of Honor is a film that joins those ranks.Our latest underdog seeks to gain acceptance into the Navy’s diving training program. Have no fear because Carl Brashear is here. The son of a poor sharecropper, Carl (Cuba Gooding Jr.) takes to the white man’s Navy to make his father proud. Reduced to being nothing more than a cook, we meet Carl’s future diving instructor, Billy Sunday (Robert DeNiro) disobeying the orders of his future lifelong adversary, Capt. Hanks (David Conrad), in going after the members of a downed helicopter. Sunday is then, himself, reduced to teaching the new recruits of deep sea diving bringing him face-to-face with determined Carl.“Careful what you wish for,” he tells Brashear. I wish the film could have a better script, but this is not my movie. It’s Carl’s. And, as par for the course in these kinds of movies, no white man will bunk with a black. Except for one, Private Snowhill (Michael Rapaport). He’s colorblind and a stutterer to boot, so he knows about being an outcast, I assume. No, he doesn’t die, but he might as well as he disappears almost as quickly as he’s introduced. Thus begins the standard underdog life story treatment as Carl is ignored by one-dimensional racists. He saves a guy during a training mission, and gains a little respect, but not enough. He bests his Master Chief, gaining a little more respect, but still not enough. At least not enough to appease Mr. Pappy (Hal Holbrook), the diving school head who spends more time in his little hut than the Unabomber. His whole purpose is to play the ultimate white devil that must tempt Sunday to keep the chains on Carl, leading to more questions as to where Sunday’s racism stems from. He doesn’t act like a racist initially and actually seems to somewhat admire the spunk of this young kid who breaks the color barrier to race Mark Spitz-style to a buoy. DeNiro calls Gooding “Cookie” so many times that I kept waiting for Bozo the Clown to show up with the Grand Prize Game. So why can’t they just get along? Because the script says its not time yet.Even if the saccharin level is raised to gargantuan heights, the diving scenes are exciting, right? Wrong. The one thing that should be preventing people from dozing off during this long, drawn-out, leisurely-paced, been there/done that story, is the diving footage. Sorry to break the hearts of those looking for a career in diving, but apparently all the Navy divers do are reassemble machine parts on the ocean floor. The real Brashear recovered a batch of hydrogen bombs, as we see in the film, but nothing we see during the training process gives us an understanding of how any of these officers would be prepared for such a daunting task.This is one of the too-numerous-to-count areas of the screenplay that sacrifices depth for composition. Any film labeled with the “based on a true story” stamp is bound to fictionalize or condense moments and characters for dramatic purpose, but c’mon. Showing Carl as a young boy who likes to swim is a little too simplified for a profession that isn’t about swimming. How can you in suits that weigh over 200 pounds with a giant umbilical cord attached? Billy Sunday is a composite of a couple of Carl’s superiors. So which one had the beautiful wife (Charlize Theron) young enough to be mistaken for his daughter? Theron’s character only shows up sporadically to hate how her husband acts and then leave the scene crying. A decent speech she gives to DeNiro towards the end suggests a deeper history and deserved its day in court. It will likely appear back on the DVD in a deleted scenes section, but isn’t it too late then.Carl’s relationship with his girlfriend/future wife is never developed beyond the getting-to-know-you and concerned stick-by-your-man phases. And was the real-life nuke recovery (only a few years after the Bay of Pigs) broadcast on live TV during the middle of a Cold War? It’s an interesting way to open a film, as a non-existent composite character watches his ex-student, all grown up, on a televised event that I would never believe be broadcast even if you told me. And why is Billy Sunday sitting there with his face beaten charged with desertion. He gets into a lot of fights, sure. A lot of fights. But when does he desert? And why? And why is allowed back in? We’re never told in what’s just another chapter in the series of disjointed movie timelines.So many questions and so few answers in a film that amounts to nothing more than a showcase of two fine talents in DeNiro and Gooding. DeNiro’s performance doesn’t quite match his scary portrayal of a family-abusing dad in This Boy’s Life, a role that he pulled off the stratosphere of hateful characters and still managed to edge out a snag of sympathy in the end. But DeNiro (who may be the greatest actor who ever lived) makes it watchable even as we can see the script controlling his mood swings more than he can. And Gooding is equal to the game turning Carl into just the kind of hero we want to see triumph in the end.Every other performance in the film is shortchanged. Poor Charlize Theron is wasted once again. No other member of the training corps is given any chance to develop more than a half-note character, including Rapaport. And does David Keith have to be in every movie dealing with the Navy? An Officer and a Gentleman, U-571 and now here as the officer who gets to look concerned as Carl is dragged by a Russian submarine.Perhaps my cynicism flows more freely than a Democrat in Florida, but I can forgive thin characterizations and a by-the-numbers plot if the film affects me in some way. Remember the Titans is a perfect example of a film that used its audience-pleasing “true” football story as a metaphor for creating characters in various shades of gray on both sides of the color fence. Men of Honor is full of the kind of uplifting underdog syndrome that audiences not expecting much tend to applaud out of a knee-jerk response to their sweet tooth. But shouldn’t we be getting more than just the parsley? Where’s the meat and potatoes in-between the tasty dessert? This film is on such a collision course with a screenplay 100 class (it hasn’t quite graduated to 101 yet) that I kept expecting the little kids from Patch Adams to show up in the final courtroom scene with their red clown noses. Filmmakers in Hollywood have continually been accused of being too liberal and unaware of the true hardships that real people in the world experience on a daily basis. That may be an arguable point, but with the way screenwriters and directors continue to churn out standard, predictable messes like Men of Honor, the movies may be the only place you can go that puts forth the idea that all men are created equal.
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Saturday, September 6th, 2008

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Originally a book by Mary Rodgers, later made into a popular 1976 movie with Jodie Foster, you’ve probably heard of Freaky Friday before and understand the concept.  A quibbling mother and daughter trade personalities, with each inhabiting the body of the other for a period, learning what it’s like to be in each other’s shoes.  It’s been done in a variety of forms in film, but rarely, if ever, as good as this latest incarnation, which is about as perfect in its delivery as I’ve seen.

Once in a while, although not nearly as often as I’d like, a pure-entertainment film comes along that exceeds my every expectation.  Many of these films have the label "Disney" attached to them, and now I’m beginning to finally catch on to what countless others have already known long before me.  Sometimes "broad appeal" doesn’t always equate to "unpalatable to savvy filmgoers," and Disney’s formula for family film success is long-standing because they are just so damned good at it.

Disney not only frequently adheres to a certain formula, but they also know not to be afraid to remake a kids classic, which they have been doing with increasing fashion these days.  It would seem a no-brainer.  Parents are attracted to the name of a movie they remember seeing when they were kids, and the kids of today want to see a more updated version, as old movies aren’t always appealing to the youth.  What you have is a movie that everyone wants to see, and judging by the reaction of the audience at the theater I went to, appeals across every generation.  Parents relate to Jamie Lee Curtis (Virus, True Lies), teenagers relate to Lindsay Lohan (The Parent Trap, Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen), the older viewers relate to the grandfather (Gould, The Master of Disguise), and the youngest of children to the conniving little brother (Malgarini, How to Eat Fried Worms).   It was interesting to see how certain groups could find humor in almost everything involving a particular character, which only goes to show there’s lots of truths hidden underneath the fun atmosphere that people can relate to their own lives.

That’s not to say that it will appeal to everyone equally, as the female characters are far more interesting and more acutely developed, as you’d probably expect from a mother/daughter story written by two woman adapted from a woman’s book.  The male counterparts in the film are more drawn from fantasy, with Mark Harmon (Local Boys, Wyatt Earp) playing the idealized father and husband, Chad Michael Murray (A Cinderella Story, House of Wax) as the token "cute guy," with the funny, out-of-it grandfather and cute little boy thrown in the mix.  Yet for a film primarily of interest to women and girls, I have to say that an adult male like me still found it to be highly enjoyable all the same.

With exceptional direction by Mark S. Waters (The House of Yes), an insightful script by Leslie Dixon (Mrs. Doubtfire, The Thomas Crown Affair) and first-time screenwriter Heather Hach, and great cast selection, with especially impressive performances by Curtis and Lohan, Freaky Friday adds up to being one of the most entertaining, fun, and in many ways, touching, films of 2003.  It’s not going to wow you with depth, or achieve great artistic significance, but as a dessert film, it hits the spot just right.

Qwipster’s rating:
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Friday, September 5th, 2008

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The Movie:



Once again last year, producers Robert Zemeckis and Joel Silver pulled together a horror movie in time for Halloween. The two have done so the past few years. None of the three movies have been particularly noteworthy or original, but the producers have attracted a talented cast each time out and, made for cheap, the movies continue to turn a profit. “Ghost Ship” isn’t as horrible as “13 Ghosts”, but it doesn’t manage the creepy, B-movie fun of their 1999 remake of “House on Haunted Hill”. While “Ghost Ship” does manage a decent scare or two, it’s certainly not as memorable as the picture that beat it at the box office: Gore Verbinski’s American remake of “The Ring”.



Ghost Ship” offers a somewhat new (I guess “Deep Rising” and “Virus” were sort of similar) take on a fairly old formula (the picture takes pieces of “The Haunting”, “Event Horizon” and other films both new and old). The film focuses on a salvage crew (Gabriel Byrne, Juliana Marguiles and others) in the Bering sea who nearly smack into a lost ship in the middle of the night. Seeking rewards, the crew ventures in, only to find that the ship - you guessed it - is haunted. In this case, it’s haunted by the passengers who were killed in its last voyage.



Unlike Beck’s debut with “Ghosts”, I actually found aspects of “Ship” to appreciate. The giant luxury liner of the title is remarkably creepy. The film’s production design is fantastic, with every last detail of the abandoned ship thought out perfectly. The ship itself, unlike the rest of the movie, is often truly creepy. The film’s production design is terrific, while the cinematography Gale Tattersall (”Pushing Tin̶ ;) works with shadows and light quite well. Some of the effects are good, too - I especially like one scene where a party from the ship’s past recreates itself from scratch. Unfortunately, the creepiness of the ship about as scary as “Ghost Ship” gets. After a pretty freaky opening, the next thirty minutes of the film are awfully talky, but there’s still no character development here. The second half does get going, but the film never really realizes its potential nor does it realize that, like “The Ring” or “X-Files”, what we don’t see is scarier than what we do.



The characters we get here are generally stereotypes, not livened up much by good actors who seem bored. It’s especially depressing to see that Byrne has gone from his award-worthy role in “The Usual Suspects” a few years ago to this. Byrne, Margulies, Ron Eldard and others are stuck with some rather silly lines and goofy plot twists. Overall, “Ghost Ship” isn’t good, but it’s not entirely terrible, either. It’s simply pretty forgettable fare.




The DVD



VIDEO: “Ghost Ship” is presented by Warner Brothers in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen. The presentation is certainly one of the finer ones by Warner Brothers recently, as the picture boasted what I would call extraordinary clarity and detail. Throughout the film, the picture boasted an almost three-dimensional appearance and impressive fine detail.



A few issues do present themselves, but they’re really not much of a distraction. Some light compression artifacts were visible during a couple of scenes. On a pleasant note, no edge enhancement was seen and the print used appeared crystal clear. The film’s dark, muted color palette looked accurately presented, while black level remained solid.



SOUND: “Ghost Ship” is presented by Warner Brothers in Dolby Digital 5.1. The presentation is pretty aggressive at times, but doesn’t equal the kind of sonic assault of the producer’s “House on Haunted Hill” remake. Talky for the most part, the surrounds really do kick in nicely during a few of the more intense action sequences. While not always aggressive, this was certainly a dynamic soundtrack, with occasional instances of strong bass. Dialogue remained clear and easily understood, while the score (and the random heavy metal songs) sounded crisp and, in the case of the heavy metal, appropriately loud.



EXTRAS: We get featurettes on the film’s FX, production design and an overall “making of”. The trailer and bios are also included.



Final Thoughts: “
Ghost Ship” seemed like nothing more than a very average horror film, lifted above being poor or mediocre by the film’s strong production design and cinematography, both of which create fairly good atmosphere. Warner Brothers has put together a fine DVD, with excellent video quality, very nice audio and a few supplements. Those in the mood for a good horror film should check out “The Ring” first. “Ghost Ship” may make for a decent rental, but only if expectations are low.



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Thursday, September 4th, 2008

Download Cinderella

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Cinderella Man” tells James J. Braddock’s story, but it does not share the boxer’s confidence. While the real-life Braddock had enough belief in himself to accomplish miracles in the ring, this filmed biography’s reluctance to have faith in its intended audience undercuts its chances to deliver complete satisfaction. Certainly this true story of a heavyweight champion so unlikely he lifted Depression-weary hearts, a saga already being referred to as “Fistbiscuit” because of its parallels to a certain celebrated horse, is hard to improve on for innate drama. The Times of London said “it makes ‘Rocky’ look like reality TV,” and writer Damon Runyon, who knew a tale or two himself, insisted, “In all the history of the boxing game, you’ll find no human interest story to compare.” ADVERTISEMENT With Russell Crowe in the title role, “Cinderella Man” also has an actor you never want to bet against, no matter what the odds. In fact, Crowe’s impressive work as Braddock, his ability to bring integrity as well as skill to his performance, demonstrates why he’s the most accomplished actor of his generation’s major stars, someone whose ability makes this film succeed more than it should. Set against the virtues of story and star are “Cinderella Man’s” other, more problematic elements. For one thing, the fighter was far from dramatic (”not a very interesting guy” is producer Brian Grazer’s candid description) outside the ring. For another, so much time is spent inside the ring that viewers may start to feel battered themselves. And then there is costar Renée Zellweger, who gives one of her more mannered, unconvincing performances as Braddock’s loyal and loving wife, Mae. But the real difficulty is the sensibility of director Ron Howard. After a brief flirtation with the dark side with his sadly underrated western “The Missing,” Howard is back making feel-good movies, and doing so with an earnestness that is counterproductive. Like the stereotypical Jewish mother who hampers appetites by insistently prodding children to “eat, eat,” Howard hurts our ability to enjoy this good story by pushing its plot points too insistently. While it is in the nature of the filmmaking process to manipulate the audience, working with his screenwriter of choice, “A Beautiful Mind’s” Akiva Golds-man (who here rewrote original writer Cliff Hollingsworth), Howard pulls strings so obviously it makes even reality resemble a setup. “Cinderella Man’s” key emotional moments feel as if they’ve been predigested for an audience that can’t be trusted to feel things for itself but needs to be firmly albeit lovingly pointed in the appropriate direction. This overprotectiveness even extends to the film’s look. Though cinematographer Salvatore Totino says in the press notes that “Ron wanted to draw out the grittiness of the period,” the beautifully shot Braddock family never look other than glossy Hollywood poor no matter how dire their circumstances get. The setting brings to mind one of biographer A. Scott Berg’s stories about producer Samuel Goldwyn, who was observed removing trash from the set of the Lower East Side drama “Dead End” and muttering, “There won’t be any dirty slums — not in my picture!” Things are considerably less grim when “Cinderella Man” begins in 1928. The economy is booming and so is the career of Braddock, New Jersey’s celebrated “Bulldog of Bergen” who happily returns to his wife, three kids and cozy single family home after another victory under the tutelage of manager-trainer Joe Gould (a solid Paul Giamatti). Cut to 1933. Four years into the Depression, the Braddocks, though still in love, are living hand to mouth in a dingy basement flat. Bad as things are, they soon get worse. After a particularly unimpressive performance in which he breaks his right hand, the fighter is dramatically told by promoter Jimmy Johnston (Bruce McGill) that his license to box is being revoked. In reality, the injured Braddock retired, possibly because he heard a revocation was in the offing, but nuances like those are not what a film like this is about. Determined to feed his family no matter what, Braddock gets work at “On the Waterfront”-type shape-ups on the Jersey docks, where his hands get strengthened and he meets Mike Wilson (Paddy Considine), a down-on-his-luck leftist who is meant to stand in for all the radicalized regular guys who lost their jobs in the Depression. And just because times are tough, don’t think Braddock is the type to walk away from his parental responsibilities. He’s the kind of father we all wish we had, progressive enough to teach his little girl how to box but still deeply committed to traditional values. “No matter what happens,” he lectures his oldest son, “we don’t steal. Not ever.” No matter how conventional “Cinderella Man’s” dramatic situations are, Crowe has the gift to make them convincing. He is the rare matinee idol who can transform, can actually become other people. The situations may be cornball or contrived, but if Crowe is selling, we are buying, no questions asked. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for Zellweger, who does not bring the same level of conviction to the fighter’s spouse. Not the first actress to have trouble staying on the screen with Crowe (only “Beautiful Mind’s” Jennifer Connelly really succeeded), Zellweger’s Mae gets more twitchy and irritating as her husband’s fortunes improve and a championship fight with the threatening Max Baer (an engaging Craig Bierko) looks possible. The actress ends up trying too hard to be believable in situations that ought to be second nature. But then, going too far in restating the obvious is what shortchanges “Cinderella Man’s” virtues from the opening bell to the close. Cinderella Man’ MPAA rating: PG-13 for intense boxing violence and some language Times guidelines: More boxing battering than audiences may be expecting A Universal Pictures release. Director Ron Howard. Producers Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, Penny Marshall. Screenplay Cliff Hollingsworth and Akiva Goldsman. Story by Cliff Hollingsworth. Cinematographer Salvatore Totino. Editors Mike Hill, Dan Hanley. Costumes Daniel Orlandi. Music Thomas Newman. Production design Wynn Thomas. Art directors Peter Grundy, Dan Yarhi. Set decorator Gordon Sim. Running time: 2 hours, 24 minutes. In general release.
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Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Download Third Wheel, The

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Third Wheel, The

Filmed way back in 1999, The Third Wheel was kept in movie limbo for many years, finally seeing some theater action in Europe in 2002, years before heading straight to video in the US in 2004.  Shot in about a month, this is a low-budget excursion that just so happened to have some modest star power, and many of the actors would eventually turn into even bigger stars in the interim.  Matt Damon (Rounders, Dogma) and Ben Affleck (Forces of Nature, Armageddon) would serve as executive producers thanks to a deal they signed to develop films with Miramax, and would also have small bit roles themselves, and would give a co-starring nod to the relatively unknown Jay Lacopo, who is also the screenwriter, and previous star of Ben Affleck’s first directorial gig, a short entitled, I Killed My Lesbian Wife, Hung Her Her on a Meat Hook, and Now I Have a Three-picture Deal at Disney.  It’s all a very nepotistic affair; although with all of the celebrities involved, it’s amazing it never did see any theatrical release in the United States.

Luke Wilson (Rushmore, Home Fries) stars as Stanley, popular in the office but still inept with the ladies.  When hotshot new employee Diana Evans (Richards, The World is Not Enough) enters the scene, it’s love at first sight, but Stanley can never find to gumption to ask her out.  Finally, several years later, he makes his belated move, and she accepts.  Although he describes it as two work friends going out, the chemistry feels like it might lead to more, and soon the whole office is abuzz with how far it might go, including an office betting pool as to what base, if any, Stanley gets to.  The date starts off awkward, only to slowly take a left turn when Stanley hits hits a loony homeless man named Phil, who wants a little cash for his damages and looks like he might need a trip to the hospital, which Stanley obliges.  Phil, realizing that he has probably ruined the date, offers to make it up to Stanley somehow, much to Stanley’s disdain, but Diana seems to take a liking to him, so Phil becomes the "third wheel" on their date.

The Third Wheel is a fairly thin premise for a comedy.  It’s a typical date flick, except it puts the male lead in the predicament of having to suck up all of the ungraciousness of a third party for the sake of looking like a decent man in the eyes of his date.  As the evening progresses, Stanley is obviously uncomfortable, looking for a way to ditch Phil, but hoping to do so without looking like a complete heel.  There is a secondary plot involving the office workers, led by Stanley’s friend Michael (Affleck), spying on them in order to score in their betting pool.  It’s a superfluous angle, but Affleck’s energy generates some laughs, and it does break up some of the monotony of the basic main story at times.

There are moments where the comedy clicks, while others where things get downright annoying.  One of the main reasons comes from the character of Phil himself, who is written to be as grating as possible, but the fact that he is supposed to have a soft side makes him seem altogether pathetic.  Luke Wilson, who seems to be cast regularly as the male romantic lead in comedies, is often genuinely unlikable, which does deplete from our own vested interest in seeing him become lucky in love.  When a hottie like Diana, who could have any man she wants eating out of the palm of her hand, makes goo-goo eyes at a loser with a surly attitude like Stanley, it makes her character lack any real dimension and the plot feel very contrived for a happy ending’s sake.  That there is no chemistry between the two actors certainly doesn’t help either.

The Third Wheel isn’t a good film, but it isn’t the worst film in the careers of any of the actors involved, so if you watch anything and everything with Affleck, Damon, Wilson, or Richards, you’ll most likely find it at least worthy of a rental, and you might even come away liking it in a modest way at times.  It’s a cheap looking and scattershot production made by relative newbies in the industry, and the amateurishness shows all too often.  For completist hardcore fans only.

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Rated X avi movies

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

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Movie: Whether some people want to accept the fact or not, pornography is a huge business recognized as increasingly mainstream these days. Every year, upwards of 12,000 new titles are produced for the public’s insatiable appetite for watching other people have sex on camera. Recent releases such as , , and blur the lines between what were once the highly segregated worlds of porn and mainstream entertainment, although admittedly there’s still a long way to go to bridge the gap completely. This being the case, it came as no surprise to me that someone would attempt to make a documentary about the adult movie business in recent years, even if it ended up so limited as to be more of a tiny time capsule rather than a blazing expose of shady practices or a comprehensive gaze into the industry as a whole. The title of the documentary, : A Journey Through Porn, serves as the focal point of director Dag Yngvesson’s personal exposure to the industry more than anything else but it was an interesting trip nonetheless.

The movie was shot from the early 1990’s through about 1996, including some statistics from 1997, to be released in 2000 at the South by Southwest Film Festival. Dag had the idea of looking into porn as it was such a thriving business that had really slipped the obvious attention of most media outlets during the time and in that sense, it worked well to shed a small light on a large topic shrouded in darkness. The industry as we know it started in the early 1970’s with the release of such films as Deep Throat and The Devil in Miss Jones but it wasn’t until the late 1980’s that it became quasi-legitimate with a California judge ruling the production of such movies as lawful expressions under First Amendment protection but even today people are prosecuted in some communities depending on local interpretations of obscenity statutes that the 1970’s Supreme Court had struggled with so long ago.

Dag went around and spoke to a number of notables to get their insights into the industry, a rather small community based largely in Chatsworth California, starting with such icons as William Margold and Jim South while ending up discussing the field with a then-popular performer, Jeanna Fine. Bill’s claim to fame in porn, initially at least, was that he was perhaps the sole individual that had been involved in all aspects of the industry, from performer to producer to reviewer to industry spokesman. A co-founder of PAWS (Protecting Adult Welfare), FOXE (Fans of X Rated Entertainment) and the XRCO (X Rated Critics Organization), Bill was an excellent place to start the journey although the bias to take everything the man said as gospel truth was a bit shaky in terms of a solid look at the matters at hand (pun intended). The journey then went to modeling agent Jim South, initially the largest supplier of performers to the production companies, who again came off as unscathed by any significant scrutiny. The sleazier side of the industry was also covered with some of the scummiest people shooting fetish videos (black pregnant gals) and some bit players of the time like Selena and Kirsty Waay.

Other than some minor glimpses of performers like Mark Davis, Brooke Waters, Crystal Gold, Tina Tyler, and Damien Michaels (longer interview), the best moments of the show were when he interviewed Vivid director Toni English, Sean Michaels or Jeanna Fine. Jeanna’s insights were particularly interesting as she was one of the most popular, and outspoken, performers of the time who had dealt with addictions and the darker side of the industry. Further, when Dag participated as a cameraman his own inner turmoil suggested a naiveté that few today would have. Those personal moments were golden compared to the canned comments of the people interviewed as they didn’t seem so self serving for the most part.

As the shallowest of glimpses into the porn production world on the mid-1990’s, : A Journey Through Porn wasn’t a bad documentary. That it jumped around so much and never offered up a hypothesis to be challenged was a big problem but also the limited number of people he spoke with and the factual inaccuracies it portrayed. Missing were as a focal point; a guy that makes himself available at any and every opportunity to be in small films, anything relating to the industry trade publication, AVN or it’s , or so many of the major players in the industry (including spokespeople like Nina Hartley). Lacking any exposure to the main companies or significant discussion of the topics as he narrated the production, the ambition of the film seemed far too great for the described vision of the show. While not bad, the limitations of the material earned it a rating of Rent It or maybe a little bit higher for those wanting an honest look by someone co-opted into the world of porn, albeit for a short time before he got out.

Picture: : A Journey Through Porn was presented in the usual 1.33:1 ratio full frame color it was shot in. The source material included videotape and 16 mm film (perhaps 8 mm too) and looked like an ultra low budget documentary. There was a lot of grain and other visual flaws but it could’ve been on HBO for the way it explored the topic in a basic, raw manner. I saw no compression artifacts from the DVD mastering process but keep in mind it was produced over a period of years with a shoe string budget and you’ll understand how bad it tended to look.

Sound: The audio was presented in 2.0 stereo Dolby Digital but I sensed that the source material was recorded in monaural as there was no separation between the channels. The dynamic range was also limited to that of a low budget, self financed documentary with a jazz-lite music score.

Extras: There were some very short interviews with , , and but none of them really provided enough detail to incorporate into the movie itself; a shame since the three of them could’ve provided a wealth of material on the industry’s past present and future. Admittedly, Jenna’s interview was on April 8, 1995 and long before she became THE star of the industry but the other two could’ve been tapped for so much more. There were also some deleted scenes (mainly longer versions of scenes included into the movie), a still gallery, a short time lapse sex scene and a filmmaker’s biography.

Final Thoughts: : A Journey Through Porn was so shallow as to make me think it was supposed to serve as an introductory episode to a lengthy series more than the “premise that he can fully document the whole experience” as provided on the back DVD cover but it had some gleaming moments too. It scrapped the surface of the interracial issue (black male on white female scenes) fairly well and he narrated a short bit on the HIV outburst that hit the industry back in 1998 (which was another failing since he should’ve tried to include something more about that) but the ay he glossed over so many topics or just took the word of the participants at face value limited the value of the production so very much. He alluded to mob connections and then dropped the topic outright, touched on female created porn in the lightest of ways, and seemed to lack the background knowledge needed to really look at the porn industry in a detailed manner. In that sense, it came off like a local news report more than a full fledged documentary but give it a look anyway since it had a nostalgic feel to it (in porn, the industry sort of reinvents itself every couple of years so the industry he looked at so long ago is nothing like the current version).







Lord of War full movies online

Monday, September 1st, 2008

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Reviewed By Rob Gonsalves Posted 12/30/06 06:59:46

"Scattershot and ultimately pointless morality tale." (Pretty Bad)

The ads for ‘’ promise a farcical, half-crazy satire on a subject close to no one’s heart — gun-running. Making a living by supplying weapons to chaotic nations is so indefensible that perhaps the movie, we think, will flip things around and find the thrill of it — the monetary rush, the power.Writer-director Andrew Niccol, however, has already decided how he feels about it, and he isn’t the kind of filmmaker to give you a down-and-dirty rise-and-fall story, like Martin Scorsese’s GoodFellas or Ted Demme’s Blow. Those movies at least enticed us into complicity with intelligent men who chose to profit from human frailty. can’t stop reminding us that gun-running crushes the soul; the movie ultimately crushes itself in a vise of self-loathing. Niccol is so busy making the profession unattractive that he forgets to make the film engaging. Nicolas Cage, as the suave weapons dealer Yuri Orlov, stands amid deep puddles of bullets and tells us (as in the ads) that there is a weapon for one in every twelve people on Earth, and that the problem is closing the deal with the other eleven. Then he smirks. is a two-hour effort to wipe the smirk off Yuri’s face. After witnessing a botched mob hit in a Little Odessa restaurant, Yuri decides that if people are going to kill each other anyway, they’ll always need the means to do it. He begins small, with local gangs, and soon expands his clientele to global gangs — revolutionaries, counter-revolutionaries, whoever pays on time. Yuri has no scruples; he’s just supplying a product, and what people do with it is their business. He enlists his slacker brother Vitaly (Jared Leto), who becomes his partner as well as a raving coke addict. The movie’s emotional reading is neutral. Other than the fact that the plaintively decent Nicolas Cage is playing him, we get little sense of Yuri’s humanity, so we don’t feel that his profession is rotting him away inside, even though the script tries to sell that later on. Yuri arranges to meet and seduce a woman (Bridget Moynahan) he’s had his eye on since he was ten, and she has no spark or personality aside from maintaining a willing moral blindness to what he really does for a living. Yuri’s riches buy him nice things, but we don’t get any kick from the American dream realized by deception and blood. Niccol puts Yuri’s lavish furnishings on the screen with no comment pro or con. doesn’t work as a tragedy or as a comedy, especially since Niccol fills the soundtrack with glib, obvious songs that editorialize on the action (he actually puts Eric Clapton’s "Cocaine" on when Vitaly starts his habit). Some of Niccol’s other touches, like the ka-ching of a cash register on the soundtrack accompanying each bullet shell out of a machine gun, are shockingly puerile coming from a previously sophisticated filmmaker. Did Andrew Niccol really want to make this movie? His previous efforts, 1997’s Gattaca and 2002’s Simone, both studied the human effects of technology. He also wrote 1998’s overrated The Truman Show, which took the same tack. But , which seems like a depressed remake of William Friedkin’s 1983 flop Deal of the Century, has only the slightest connection to his previous concerns as an artist. It feels like something he made because the money was there to make it, effectively rendering him as much of a whore as Yuri, though far less dangerous. Maybe Niccol, having fought hard battles to get some intelligent entertainment into theaters, sees himself in Yuri — sees Yuri as a stand-in for major-studio directors, who foist unpalatable product on people and don’t care who it hurts. In that case, is a self-hating Hollywood parable with no special insight into its putative subject, no matter how much research Niccol reportedly did. As for Nicolas Cage, whose name is on the film as a producer, he probably lied to himself as much as Yuri does, telling himself he was making an important film shedding light on the global cycle of violence. But the movie doesn’t care much about violence; there’s a too-clever credits sequence following a bullet from creation to execution, and it ends its journey by thudding into a blank, anonymous face. The point isn’t the life taken, it’s the bullet. Cage can’t find a consistent tone for Yuri, and he seems awfully constrained, denied either the heroism or the freakiness we know he’s capable of.About an hour into the movie, the great actor Eamonn Walker (of HBO’s series "Oz&quo ;) turns up as a casually brutal dictator who does business with Yuri, and the audience is shaken awake. Walker gives us a violent man, not without humor, who knows exactly what he is and isn’t bothered by it. He’s so much more interesting than anyone else on the screen (including "Gattaca" star Ethan Hawke, thrown away as a goody-two-shoes agent on Yuri’s trail) that he derails the movie by suggesting a complexity far beyond the margins of the rest of the film.






divx Washington Heights video

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

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“,” a fine and absorbing film, takes its title from an inviting Latino neighborhood on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, where Carlos Ramirez (portrayed by Manny Perez) has lived his entire life. At 28, he has long wanted to escape and pursue his dream of being a comic book artist. The screenplay is written by Perez and director Alfredo de Villa, in collaboration with Perez’s writing partner Nat Moss. What gives this film its punch is the feeling that Carlos’ story is being told from the inside — the film may not be autobiographical but its star and director themselves seemingly have experienced the longing and frustrations of Carlos. In striving to satisfy their own creative impulses, they’ve had to reach beyond the borders of their ethnic communities. ADVERTISEMENT At its core “” is a story about an immigrant father and his native-born son. Long ago, Carlos’ father, Eddie (Tomás Milían), gave up his dreams of becoming a singer when he married and had a son. Now widowed, he’s content to be a beloved neighborhood figure, extending credit to old customers at his corner grocery store even though he can’t afford to. Carlos lands a job in the East Village as a comic book inker. His employer — also his mentor — is tough on him because he believes in his talent. Carlos, who works on his own projects when he has time, dreams of becoming a full-fledged artist and moving to the East Village with his longtime girlfriend Maggie (Andrea Navedo), who works as a dressmaker in her apartment. Neither Eddie nor Maggie takes Carlos’ talent seriously — his ambition is beyond their comprehension. Carlos’ frustrations are mirrored in those of his friend Mickey Kilpatrick (Danny Hoch), who is the superintendent of the building where Carlos and Eddie live. Mickey works for his demanding father, Sean (Jude Ciccolella), who scoffs at his son’s longing to enter a Las Vegas bowling tournament. Carlos is already feeling trapped when catastrophe strikes. Tensions between Carlos and Eddie escalate and the ominous state of affairs forces everything out in the open. As probed by the filmmakers, the predicaments faced by characters in “” are complex and even contradictory. The intricate structuring of the drama heightens the sense of reality and impact. If “” seems to have been envisioned from within, the same can be said for its performances. De Villa asks his actors to dig deep and they come through. Milían shows us a warm, life-loving man who nevertheless possesses a destructive jealous streak. Perez’s Carlos is consistently sympathetic, even when he gives way to understandable anger. Hoch’s Mickey means well but is none too swift, while his father is capable of generosity to others but not to his own son. And this well-paced film’s realistic style and authentic locales are a perfect fit for the characters and their story. ‘’ MPAA rating: R, for language, sexuality, brief violence and drug use Times guidelines: Some violence, language, sex. Too intense for younger audiences. Manny Perez … Carlos Ramirez Tomás Milían … Eddie Ramirez Danny Hoch … Mickey Kilpatrick Jude Ciccolella … Sean Kilpatrick Andrea Navedo … Maggie A MAC Releasing presentation in association with Samy Boy Entertainment. Director Alfredo de Villa. Producers Luis Dantas, Manny Perez, Tom Donahue and De Villa. Executive producers Peter Newman, Greg Johnson, Joseph La Morte. Screenplay De Villa and Nat Moss; from a story by Perez, De Villa and Moss. Additional writing by Junot Diaz. Cinematographer Claudio Chea. Editor Tom Donahue. Music Leigh Roberts. Production designer Charlotte Bourke. Art director Sandra Goldmark. Set decorator Erik Carrion. Running time: 1 hour 28 minutes. At selected theaters.