Nov 24, 2009

Brief Interviews with Hideous Men

John Krasinski's directoral debut is much like John Krasinski's acting- muted. Krasinki gained fame for his role on The Office where he basically plays the straight man to the wackiness of many of the other characters in the show. Signature to this is where some other character says something crazy and Krasinkski looks at the camera as though to tell the viewing audience that he's aware how crazy it all is.

While this technique works for Krasinski in the Office and in his film Away We Go, Brief Interviews suffers from it. While the movie is not devoid of funny moments, all the characters are straight men, so to speak, and without the existence of wacky characters to counterbalance them, the characters fail to inspire the humor for which the movie clearly strives and ends up dull and non-conclusive.



My Rating:

2 1/2 Arbitrary Shapes

Nov 19, 2009

Julie And Julia

A delightful picture with Meryl Streep and Amy Adams that parallels the story of Julia Styles writing the Joy of Cooking and a bureaucrat in 2002 blogging about cooking every recipe in the Joy of Cooking in one year. Overall, a very light and enjoyable movie, punctuated by some strife, some unnecessary scenes, and a little too much talk about blogging.

My Rating:

4 1/2 Arbitrary Shapes

Nov 12, 2009

All Night Long

This film is something odd. In some respects, this is a satire on suburbia and the job of a night manager at a Walmart type store. In other respects, it's a strange sort of love story between Barbra Streisand and some guy. In still other respects, this is the story of Gene Hackman being angry. A lot.

That's why I'm hesitant to recommend this movie- it is a good movie, but it's really multiple movies put into one, where each is only dealt upon with insufficient depth and time.

Highlight: Since this movie was made in 1981, Gene Hackman drives by a vintage KFC that looked a lot like this:


My rating:

3 1/2 Arbitrary Shapes

Nov 8, 2009

The Crimson Pirate

If I could describe this movie in no more than two words, those words would be "flamboyant pants."


Unfortunately, this was the only picture I could find, but rest assured that the variety and bizarreness of pants in The Crimson Pirate rival even some movies based around pants.

Also of note was the realistic physics(Dropping a wooden blackjack/dildo on someone's head will in fact knock them out), the absurd acrobatics (Did you know that all pirates can do back flips?), and the chance to look at Burt Lancaster's chest for 105 minutes straight.

Predictable, but still entertaining.

My Rating:

3 Arbitrary Shapes.

Nov 2, 2009

Stalag 17

Stalag 17 is a 1950s film with William Holden about American prisoners in a Nazi POW camp and the spy among them. I'd seen this before and watching it again was almost as enjoyable as I remember it. Definitely worth seeing.
My Rating:

4 1/2 Arbitrary Shapes.