Monthly Archives: May 2011

Bridesmaids

This movie is sheer crazy and pretty outrageous most of the time (ding ding: “crude warning”!). Which isn’t to say it’s not enjoyable to sit through another zany wedding movie. Kristen Wiig sort of saves the whole kit and caboodle (just wanted to use that phase) as a maid of honor whose life has hit rock bottom but tries to pull off all the rituals that go with the territory; along the way she battles another of the bridesmaids for maid of honor status. Wiig’s face during the movie and the tennis scene alone are probably worth the price of admission. It could have done without the whole food-poison-gross-out stuff, hello?! you kiddin’ me. Some scenes fall a bit flat, like on the airplane, or the strange roommates (?!), but others find their mark: gotta go with the tennis scene (AC/DC!), and the Wilson Phillips singalong is a schmaltzy crackup.

Wiig is pretty hilarious. If you like her on “Saturday Night Live,” you’ll like her here. Her character, Annie, is a mess: broke, left by her boyfriend and living with wacko roommates. She’s on the precipice of a breakdown. It’s safe to say: the wedding duties send her over the edge. Good to see another “SNL” alum, Maya Rudolph, as the bride. (Her “Bronx Beat” skits on SNL still make me laugh just thinking of them. Oh god the one with Jake Gyllenhaal?!) Anyways it’s a bit sad to see Jill Clayburgh in her final role here. Here’s to you, Jill.

It sort of reminds me, which are the funniest wedding flicks in memory? If you had to pick for a desert island, they might include: “The Hangover” “Wedding Crashers,” “Four Weddings & a Funeral,” “My Best Friend’s Wedding,” “The Wedding Singer” … and perhaps a light sprinkling of “Bridesmaids.” Continue reading

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Win Win

This is a gem of a little film, which I thought was going to be solely about a wrestling coach and team, but it turns out to dwell more on family issues. The wrestling sort of comes in later. It’s about a small-time lawyer and high school wrestling coach (played by Paul Giamatti) who makes the dubious decision for financial reasons of taking on the guardianship of a elderly client whose grandson, an excellent wrestler, he stumbles upon after the kid winds up at his grandfather’s. But with his grandfather in a nursing home and his mother in drug rehab, the kid ends up living with the coach’s family and joining the wrestling team. All seem to be winning in this arrangement, until the mother shows up out of rehab and things begin to unravel.

Giamatti, of course is wonderful just as he was in “Barney’s Version,” and makes a good team with Amy Ryan as his wife, who recently played Michael Scott’s love on “The Office.” It is an endearing film that sneaks up on you and gets under your skin. It’s funny at times and also a drama about the family and what will happen to the boy on and off the mat. Continue reading

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Country Strong

This movie is a weepy and whiny affair about a popular country singer (played by Gwyneth Paltrow) who tries to overcome her alcoholic demons. I thought it would be a good chick flick so I rented it, but the script’s considerably weak and cliched, though I wasn’t asking for all that much. The dialogue’s not that great either.

Gwyneth’s character Kelly Cantor is indeed a crying mess; she’s lost a baby, she’s drinking despite rehab, she’s having affairs, notably with a rising country star, played by Garrett Hedlund. Her husband, played by Tim McGraw, has hurried her out of rehab and put her on a short tour to reestablish her reputation, but she’s far from ready! She can’t get through these shows! She’s too messed up and has to cancel the first two, but then she gives it her all at the last concert, only to end it all in dramatic fashion after.

Despite its flaws, “Country Strong” has some good music, and Leighton Meester and Garrett Hedlund seem believable as opening acts. It’s a bit hard to see Gwyneth as anything other than Gwyneth. I plan to check out the soundtrack for the hell of it and see if it’s not too sugary.

“Country Strong” comes on the heels of “Crazy Heart,” which was also about an alcoholic singer/songwriter, but that script and movie were a bit “stronger.” Continue reading

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The Bad Lieutenant

Okay so it’s not exactly “Water for Elephants,” but the usually good Werner Herzog was listed as director, and apparently Roger Ebert said it was one of the best movies of 2009, which I had missed. So I rented it, though it’s not really on a subject matter that has many redeeming qualities. It’s a pretty dark movie about a detective on the take of drugs and other favors on the streets of New Orleans while trying to solve the murder of an immigrant family. This is one crooked cop (played by Nicolas Cage); you name it, he’s done it, which makes it a pretty uneasy watching experience.

It’s quite a change to see Cage, who’s done a slew of Disney films recently, playing this corrupt a character. Even his Ben in “Leaving Las Vegas” knew more right from wrong. Yet, Cage’s bad lieutenant is still good at solving the case at hand despite all his illegal activities.

I sort of forgot Harvey Keitel had played the “Bad Lieutenant” in a different movie set in New York in 1992. No wonder it sounded familiar. The filmmakers say it isn’t a remake, but it sure seems quite alike. In the end, there wasn’t a really good reason that I needed to sit through the same themes again. There’s some good suspense and acting in it, but during the process you wade through considerable sleeze. Keitel’s lieutenant pays for it, but Cage’s lieutenant comes through clean. Continue reading

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