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Showing posts with label Malin Akerman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malin Akerman. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

[Trailer] Rock of Ages

I’ve been a big fan of movie musicals because I fell in love with Baz Luhrmann’s Moulin Rouge.

Before that I can say I was generally disinterested in most musicals, since I just can’t get enough of them.

The teaser for Rock of Ages looks like it could be lots of fun with a nice dose of self aware cheese……





Friday, July 8, 2011

TV SHOW REVIEW: CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL: THE COMPLETE FIRST AND SECOND SEASONS DVD

TV SHOW REVIEW: CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL: THE COMPLETE FIRST AND SECOND SEASONS DVD



Synopsis: Short parodies of medical dramas.

Cast: Rob Corddry, Rob Huebel, Megan Mullally, Erinn Hayes, Ken Marino, Michael Cera, Lake Bell, Henry Winkler, Malin Akerman, Zandy Hartig, Nick Offerman

Review:

Children’s Hospital is an incredibly funny rapid fire show. First season is comprised of the 4-5 minute “episodes” which shoot medical drama parody jokes at you at an amazing rate. It’s hilarious for the most part, when it doesn’t quite hit the mark it helped by its format because nothing ever lingers too much on screen. The 2nd season offers up longer 11 minute “episodes” which still have the same effect but occasionally linger a tad to long when a joke isn’t working. The cast is a collection of wonderful comedians who are all in throughout. Nothing is off-limits and they aren’t afraid to go for the cheapest laughs while setting higher concept laughs either (such as mocking every type of behinds the scenes, live shows, TV show deaths, etc..). There’s a very loosely connected overall plot but its sparse and fairly unnecessary since it’s not really the point. Satire and parody are the name of the game here and its down quite well.

B-

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Movie Reviews: WATCHMEN

Sunday, March 08, 2009
Movie Reviews: WATCHMEN
IN THEATERS



WATCHMEN

300's Zack Snyder adapts Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' acclaimed comic book Watchmen for the big screen. Set in an alternate universe circa 1985, the film's world is an unstable one where a nuclear war is imminent between America and Russia. Superheroes have been forced to go into retirement due to the government's Keene Act, but the death of The Comedian (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), an ex-hero commando, perks the interest of one of the country's last remaining superheroes, Rorschach (Jackie Earle Haley).

Cast: Billy Crudup, Malin Akerman, Jackie Earle Haley

Director: Zack Snyder

Opened March 6, 2009.

Runtime: 2 hr. 43 min.

Rated R for strong graphic violence, sexuality, nudity and language.

Genres: Superhero Film, Science Fiction.

Review:

Zach Synder’s Watchmen is complex and entirely engaging adaptation of the watershed graphic novel that deliver most of the good with only a few bumps along the road. Dense, disjointed and, as a film, unfocused this adaptation demands a high level of attention from the audience throughout, threatening to abandon you if look away for too long. Synder creates a mystic almost ethereal tone from the start and maintains it for the better part of the film. A spectacular opening credit sequence sets the stages and covers a large amount of back story in a short time. Synder stays as close to the source material as possible, at times to fault, and recreates scenes almost page for page and gives fanboys plenty to squeal about. Still it’s an imperfect process. There are times when the script feels wooden and forced. Also Synder can’t help but indulge himself by staging action sequences in hyper slow mo that feels painfully out place. These 300 like action sequences take you out of the film so much that you start to wish they’d be over as soon as they start. It’s the type of film that would have benefited from more realistic action which would have been more in keeping with the story’s tone. The cast is an effective ensemble that brings these classic characters to life with wonderful vigor. Jackie Earle Haley is the film’s brightest star and delivers the most effective performance of the piece. His grizzled rasp and dead stares, when he’s unmasked, fit Rorschach perfectly. Patrick Wilson also turns in a wonderfully understated performance, perfectly channeling the character from the page. Equally effective is Billy Crudup as the god like Dr. Manhattan, delivering lines in measured monotone that fits his character’s overall detachment. A truly mesmerizing flashback scene really displays Crudup’s talents. Jeffery Dean Morgan is incredibly effective as the Comedian, giving an adequate griminess to his psychotic character. Sadly, Malin Ackerman misses the mark as Laurie Jupiter aka Silk Spectre II. The role is simply to big for her ability, there are lynch pin emotional scenes that simply fall flat with her delivery. She looks the part but can’t make a connection with the audience once the heavy lifting starts. Still as a group the cast is mostly effective and bring the appropriate gravitas to the proceedings. As the film traverses it’s nearly 3 hour run time, it rarely loses touch with the audience and delivers an engrossing experience. Not perfect but an effective attempt at capturing something as complex and subversive as the Watchmen graphic novel.

B-

Movie Reviews: RAMBO, THE HEARTBREAK KID & SAW IV

Sunday, January 27, 2008
Movie Reviews: RAMBO, THE HEARTBREAK KID & SAW IV
IN THEATHERS




RAMBO
Thinking his days of war and bloodshed are behind him, John Rambo (Sylvester Stallone) lives a peaceful life in the jungles of Thailand. Even when Christian aid workers ask the former warrior to take them up the Salween River into Burma to deliver medical supplies, he refuses because he knows how dangerous a trip like that can be. The missionaries go anyway, and when they don't come back, Rambo crosses the border himself and dispatches Burmese soldiers with his traditional gusto to save the kidnapped innocents.

Cast Sylvester Stallone, Julie Benz, Matthew Marsden, Graham McTavish, Rey Gallegos, Jake LaBotz (more)


Director(s) Sylvester Stallone


Writer(s) Sylvester Stallone


Status In theaters (wide)

Genre(s) Action/Adventure

Release Date Jan. 25, 2008

Running Time 93 minutes

MPAA Rating R - for strong graphic bloody violence, sexual assaults, grisly images

and language

Review:

Sylvester Stallone's Rambo is a gory mixed bag of a mess of a movie that doesn't deliver enough message or action to make it worthwhile. Not as bad a vanity project as Rocky Balbola, Rambo just feels odd throughout, unsurprisingly dated and uneven. Stallone wears pretty much one expression throughout the film and delivers lines without any conviction. The rest of the cast is as forgettable as they are nameless. Mostly they just serve as bystanders during some of the more action oriented sequences. This isn't entirely unexpected as the main draw in a Rambo movie is going to be the gory bloody action. Some sequences do provide some exciting action but are filled with surprisingly bad CG effects being used for gory effects thus rendering the effect meaningless and mute. Stallone seemed to be going for Saving Private Ryan but instead ended up with Pearl Harbor, the extended edition, styled battle. Stallone's script is equally lacking. The characters are given some just god awful dialogue and characters are written with the just slightest of depth, never becoming more than one dimensional. The villain lacks even more depth and isn't really given anything to do than be plain evil. Strangely, Stallone did have some material there that could have made a statement about war and injustices in lawless sections of the world but he misses the point and sends a very mixed message. Let's hope this ends Stallone's walk down memory lane as it's becoming readily apparent that these once beloved characters can't make the leap from the 80's to today.

D-

ON DVD

THE HEARTBREAK KID

Eddie Cantrow (Ben Stiller) is the last single man he knows. But he finally meets a beautiful woman, Lila (Malin Akerman), who seems like she's his perfect match. But after taking the plunge into marriage, Lila immediately starts acting like the wife from Hell on the honeymoon, where a disillusioned Eddie meets another gal, Miranda (Michelle Monaghan) who might actually be his true soulmate.

Cast Ben Stiller, Michelle Monaghan, Malin Akerman, Jerry Stiller, Rob Corddry, Carlos Mencia (more)

Director(s) Peter Farrelly, Bobby Farrelly

Writer(s) Scot Armstrong, Leslie Dixon, Bobby Farrelly, Peter Farrelly, Kevin Barnett

Status On DVD

Genre(s) Comedy

Release Date Oct. 5, 2007

DVD Release Date Dec. 26, 2007

Running Time 115 minutes

MPAA Rating R - for strong sexual content, crude humor, language, and a scene of

drug use involving a minor

Review:

The Farrelly brothers are 10 years detached from their last superior outing, There's Something About Mary, and it's starting to seem that their time may have passed. They've created a series of increasingly bad movies in recent years and The Heartbreak Kid doesn't fare any better. Going into a Farrelly movie you know more or less know what to expect, gross out sight gags the main character being put through the ringer time and again but he ultimately gets the girl. The Heartbreak Kid follows the typical game plan more or less throughout. Here though it just feels flat and lacks any life, mainly because the characters are all mostly unlikable and never make realistic human decisions. Ben Stiller turns in his typical performance providing his character with very little charm or likeability. Jerry Stiller as Eddie's vulgar father is just odd and doesn't achieve the intended comedic effect. Rob Corddry's supporting role is one of the few brightspots as his scenes provide some of the few laughs in the listless comedy. Aside from Corddry, most of the gags miss the mark badly and a group of running jokes are just silly but not in a particularly funny way. It's a shame that it's been so long since the Farrelly brother have hit the sweet spot comedy wise but if they continue to dole out movies like The Heartbreak Kid they may find that their fan base has moved on to greener pastures.

D-

SAW IV

Jigsaw (Tobin Bell) the serial torturer is dead, and two FBI profilers have arrived to help clean up the mess left in his wake. However, not all of Jigsaw's traps have been sprung, and a SWAT commander (Costas Mandylor) gets caught up in another deadly game.

Cast Tobin Bell, Scott Patterson, Betsy Russell, Costas Mandylor, Lyriq Bent, Justin Louis (more)

Director(s) Darren Lynn Bousman

Writer(s) Patrick Melton, Marcus Dunstan

Status On DVD

Genre(s) Horror

Release Date Oct. 26, 2007

DVD Release Date Jan. 22, 2008

Running Time 108 minutes

MPAA Rating R - for sequences of grisly bloody violence and torture throughout, and for language

Saw IV is a mildly better installment than the third turn but it's hardly a classic either. Bloody gory and still trying to convey Jigsaw, history's most prepared horror villain, message Saw IV does give us a more well rounded view of Jigsaw's psyche and motivations. Darren Lynn Bousman does have a fun sense of style in shooting his film, except when he decides to go with the super hyper editing with are series mainstays. Tobin Bell, in flashbacks, gets to open up his performance as we see a pre Jigsaw version of his character and he's fairly solid in giving more life to his ironically dead character. Like the previous entries this movie plays a game with the audience's expectations and delivers a twist at the end. The main problem is that this twist and the gory trek to arrive at it feels vaguely familiar, lacking the originality and effectiveness of the first film. It's been a similar problem with all the sequels to this "Seven light" serial killer series. I've always felt it would have been best to leave the first movie as a stand alone as it progressively getting less and less enjoyable to watch this torture porn tell us the same story over and over again.

D

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