Review for Tropic Thunder - Go - Gotta see Downey Jr The movie started out great. I couldn't think of a better way to start the movie to create the back story. The previews were part of the greatness of the movie. The second greatest part was the cameos. I won't reveal the second one but it a good one.
Overall, the movie started out awesome. It slowed a little in the middle but for the most part. Probably as funny as the modern classics (Anchorman, Wedding Crashers, 40 Year Old Virgin) Review for Star Wars: The Clone Wars - Go - Action-packed beginning to a promising new series Awesome animation and lots of action here in this newest Star Wars feature film. The production team didn't disappoint! There were some real funny parts in this movie too - the Jawas loitering around waiting to scavenge parts for example. And the whole dumb droid thing with the Separatist Army. Although it was a simple plot, I think the story served as a good introduction to the upcoming television series that I'm sure to watch. Great for Star Wars fans of all ages. Review for The Dark Knight: The IMAX Experience - Must Go! - Dark Knight I tried not to go into the movie with expectations. However, it was absolutely incredible! There's really not much that can be said about Joker that already hasn't been said. It was not TOO long. The movie was amazing. Joker definitely made the movie. It was the most accurate portrayal of the real Joker I have ever seen. And no one has ever made Joker look so cool. Two-Face also looked incredbile. Definitely not for little kids. Two-Face's face is enough to give any kid nightmares. And I loved that the violence was more psychological than gorey. My favorite movie ever so far. To top it off, seeing it in IMAX was great. The first scene of the city looked like I could have fallen right through. Defnitely worth every penny and will be going soon to see it again!
L.A. Times - Movie Reviews
'Mirrors' Mon, 18 Aug 2008 00:00:00 -0700 After muddling through this horror diversion, Kiefer Sutherland is better off keeping his day job on '24.'
Hollywood, where vanity can seem not a vice but a virtue, would presumably love mirrors. Not so in "Mirrors," a ridiculous studio remake of a Korean horror film where at a burnt-out old department store, the new night-shift security guard (Kiefer Sutherland), a disgraced ex-cop, finds that the mirrors are home to evil, murderous spirits.
'Fly Me to the Moon' Fri, 15 Aug 2008 00:00:00 -0700 Also: 'Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer,' 'Falling,' 'XXY' and 'Re-Cycle'
"Fly Me to the Moon," a 3-D-animated tale of insects who want to be the first flies on the moon, seeks to instill in kids a sense of wonder at space exploration. Whether it succeeds is really in the eye of the beholder.
'Vicky Cristina Barcelona' Fri, 15 Aug 2008 00:00:00 -0700 Woody Allen's latest, starring Scarlett Johansson and Javier Bardem, again tries to balance comedy and drama. Again, the result is off-kilter.
LIKE shipwrecked sailors awaiting the return of the hero sent for help, comedy-deprived moviegoers are desperate for the return of the old Woody Allen, the one who made them laugh. Each new Allen film is frantically examined as soon as it appears on the horizon: "Is that him? Is he back? Please, God, let him be back."
Movies
Vicky Cristina Barcelona David Denby Mon, 18 Aug 2008 04:00:00 -0000 The Film File Movies Mon, 18 Aug 2008 04:00:00 -0000 OPENING
DEATH RACE
A science-fiction thriller in which an ex-con (Jason Statham) must take part in a deadly car race. Directed by Paul W. S. Anderson. Opening Aug. 22. (In wide release.)
HAMLET 2
A comedy, directed by Andy Fleming, starring Steve Coogan as a high-school teacher . . . Elegy David Denby Mon, 18 Aug 2008 04:00:00 -0000 The Film File
Rolling Stone Movie Reviews
Vicky Cristina Barcelona Mon, 04 Aug 2008 11:51:48 -0700
Starring:
Penelope Cruz, Javier Bardem, Scarlet Johansson
Review:
Woody Allen goes latin (you heard me), and the romantic, richly
comic result — powered by a dream cast — is his sexiest
movie ever. Shooting in Spain has loosened up the Woodman. You want
plot? Two American girls, Vicky (Rebecca Hall) and Cristina
(Scarlett Johansson), spend the summer at the Barcelona hideaway of
Vicky's pals, Mark (Kevin Dunn) and Judy (the ever-glorious
Patricia Clarkson). No sooner do the girls spot Juan Antonio
(Javier Bardem), a bedroom-eyed painter, than he's hitting on both
of them. So far, so predictable. What sparks the movie is
Penélope Cruz as Maria Elena, the painter's ex-wife, a
fireball given to strong emotions — hell, she once stabbed
Juan Antonio during an argument. You haven't lived till you've
heard Cruz and Bardem trading Woody Allen o...
Rating:
3 Stars
Tropic Thunder Mon, 04 Aug 2008 11:23:35 -0700
Starring:
Ben Stiller, Jack Black, Robert Downey Jr., Steve Coogan, Jay
Bar...
Review:
Think of all the ways you can hurt yourself laughing, as in fall
down, split your sides, bust a gut, blow your mind. You get it all
in Tropic Thunder, a knockout of a comedy that keeps you
laughing constantly. It's also killer smart, lacing combustible
action with explosive gags. Major props to Ben Stiller, the
director, co-producer, co-writer and co-star, who shows us
Hollywood at war with its own ginormous ego during the making of a
megabudget Vietnam War movie with an uproariously inept cast and
crew. Stiller took flak for the other three movies he's directed:
1994's Reality Bites was allegedly too soft, 1996's
The Cable Guy too dark, 2001's Zoolander too
airy-fairy. Confession: I liked them all. And I'm nuts about
Tropic Thunder, with its dynamite script by Stiller,
Justin Theroux and...
Rating:
3.5 Stars
American Teen Tue, 22 Jul 2008 09:59:34 -0700
Starring:
Hannah Bailey, Colin Clemens, Megan Krizmanich, Jake Tusing
Review:
Reality tv, welcome to the multiplex. If The Hills went
back to high school and developed wit, perception and a conscience,
it might play something like Nanette Burstein's wallop of a doc.
Burstein (The Kid Stays in the Picture) did total
immersion with a handful of seniors at the only high school in
Warsaw, Indiana, which we're told is "mostly white, mostly
Christian and red state all the way." It's not all condescending; a
church sign announces, "Get an Afterlife." Camera in hand for more
than 10 months, Burstein waited patiently for character types out
of a John Hughes movie to shake off their clichéd shells
— the prom queen (Megan Krizmanich), the star athlete (Colin
Clemens), the band geek (Jake Tusing), the arty rebel (Hannah
Bailey). The fact that they do, sometimes by happy...
Rating:
3 Stars
Rotten Tomatoes: Top Movies
84% Tropic Thunder Tue, 19 Aug 2008 14:05:02 -0700 With biting satire, plenty of subversive humor, and an unforgettable turn by Robert Downey, Jr., Tropic Thunder is a triumphant late Summer comedy. 94% The Dark Knight Tue, 19 Aug 2008 14:05:02 -0700 Dark, complex and unforgettable, The Dark Knight succeeds not just as an entertaining comic book film, but as a richly thrilling crime saga. 18% The Clone Wars Tue, 19 Aug 2008 14:05:02 -0700 Mechanical animation and a less-than stellar script make The Clone Wars a pale shadow of George Lucas' once great franchise.
NPR Topics: Movies
Bringing Bollywood To The U.S. Mon, 18 Aug 2008 07:53:00 -0400 An Indian conglomerate has acquired more than 200 movie screens across the United States in the past year. The company, Reliance, is using the theaters to showcase Indian films. Now it's grabbing headlines for reported plans to set up a new movie venture with Steven Spielberg. Summary Judgment: Is 'Tropic' Worth Cloning? Fri, 15 Aug 2008 13:00:00 -0400 Critics don't see eye-to-eye on the Ben Stiller comedy Tropic Thunder, the Woody Allen film Vicky Cristina Barcelona' and the animated Star Wars film Clone Wars. Writer Mark Jordan Legan breaks down the reviews and helps resolve what's worth the price of two gallons of gas this weekend. Edwards' Woes, New Movie's 'Blackface' Draw Scrutiny Fri, 15 Aug 2008 12:00:00 -0400 The guys in the Barbershop speak their mind about the woes of former presidential contender and Senator John Edwards, and a new movie that has a big-name Hollywood actor appearing in blackface. This week's 'shop' patrons — Jimi Izrael, Arsalan Iftikhar, Ruben Navarrette and Justin Ross also weigh in on the presidential candidates' favorite songs.
NYT > Red Carpet
The Lawsuit Over Producer Credit for 'Crash' Gets Personal SHARON WAXMAN Thu, 09 Mar 2006 00:00:00 -0400 A top executive of the movie academy described one of the producing team behind the best-picture winner, "Crash," as throwing a tantrum in suing over credit for the film. News Analysis: Los Angeles Retains Custody of Oscar DAVID CARR Tue, 07 Mar 2006 00:00:00 -0400 Los Angeles, a place where race is discussed rarely, saw itself in "Crash," a film where encounter and understanding are just a random fender-bender away. 'Crash' Walks Away With the Top Prize at the Oscars DAVID M. HALBFINGER and DAVID CARR Mon, 06 Mar 2006 00:00:00 -0400 In a stunning twist, the motion picture academy turned its back on "Brokeback Mountain," awarding the Oscar for best picture to "Crash."
Village Voice | Films
Chabrol and Rohmer Keep Doing What They Do Best Tue, 12 Aug 2008 00:00:00 -0500 From the standpoint of 2008, the French new wave that broke half a century ago is a towering monument to a particular moment— a solitary whitecap in a Courbet seascape. What was that surge?
As a film critic or a filmmaker (or, in most cases, both), each of the nouvelle vague ...
An Interview With Woody Allen Tue, 12 Aug 2008 00:00:00 -0500 The last time I interviewed Woody Allen, at his editing suite on Manhattans Upper East Side, he was preparing the release of Match Point (2005), a dark morality play about an ambitiousand ultimately homicidaltennis instructor working his way up the rungs of Lon...
Manny Farber 1917-2008 Tue, 12 Aug 2008 00:00:00 -0500 Painter, carpenter, university professor, and underground model for scores of American film criticsmyself includedManny Farber died early Monday morning in San Diego, where he had lived, taught, and worked since the early 70s.
Farber, who began reviewing movies for the Ne...
Film News from Times Online
How Batman became cinema's top trump Sun, 17 Aug 2008 00:00:19 -0000
Every decade or so, a film passes from box-office hit to cultural phenomenon.
That’s what is happening with The Dark Knight, the latest instalment in the
Batman franchise. Even in Hollywood, nobody can quite believe how big a hit
the $180m film, the second Batman movie to be directed by Christopher Nolan
and to star Christian Bale as the superhero, has become. $“It’s a film that
is rewriting the record books every day, redefining our notions of what a
blockbuster can be,” says Paul Dergarabedian, president of the box-office
tracker Media by Numbers.
Oliver Stone's George Bush biopic W. Sun, 10 Aug 2008 00:00:59 -0000
Watch
the W. trailer
Heels before swine in Ben Charles Edwards's The Town That Boars Me Thu, 14 Aug 2008 16:21:57 -0000
Now, shall I wear my electric-blue brogues? The high-heeled lilac boots? The
traffic-light-red Patrick Coxes? The black python-skin? Hmm, no: let’s have
the new patent-leather Joneses with pink edging and laces.