Go Jazz!
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Thursday, April 24, 2008
"It Must've Been a Typo"
One of the best commercials ever, I actually saw this on tv during my lunch break today and looked it up to share with posterity. Both of "The Truth" musical commercials are pretty fun, actually. Although a lot of people seem to be annoyed by them.
http://www.thetruth.com/videos/typo.cfm
http://www.thetruth.com/videos/typo.cfm
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Dan's unfortunate life
Although some people would disagree, I really do try to like movies. I make an effort to keep my expectations reasonable and approach a movie with the assumption that I am going to enjoy it, at least in some degree. My expectations are, of course, influenced by the opinions of friends and family, as well as critical reviews; I must admit that the glowing recommendation of said friends and family and the forgiving reviews doled out by the film buffs led me to believe that "Dan in Real Life" was going to be a decent movie. I feel I was misled.
As much as I worship Steve Carell in all his "The Office" glory, I can't say that I enjoyed his performance here. In fact, I thought all of the performances were either mis-directed or misinterpreted; timing and delivery were awkward in all the leading roles. Exacerbating this quality was the almost Peter Jackson-esque indulgence of tossing editing to the wind and letting scenes go on waaaay too long (i.e. the aerobics, the dancing in the bar, the bowling). Not only am I watching bad acting, but I'm watching the same bad acting go on, and on, and on.
Thematically, the film missed the mark in its interpretation of the instantaneous power of love, the unbelievably forgiving nature of family ties, and the incredibly overrated angst of teenage drama. If you meet someone and are attracted to him/her and find out he/she is dating your sibling, you forget about it and move on. Yes, amazingly enough, people do have control over their lives. If your brother finds you hooking up with his moments-ago-girlfriend, yes, he will punch you, but he will probably take longer than an afternoon to forgive you. And no, teenagers are not unpleasant one hundred percent of the time, and can even be quite empathetic to a struggling parent. Overall, I thought the actual situations presented in the film were realistic, but the over-the-top, one-sided interpretation of them was not.
On the plus side, "This corn is like an angel" is a really terrific line. And that's the end of that.
As much as I worship Steve Carell in all his "The Office" glory, I can't say that I enjoyed his performance here. In fact, I thought all of the performances were either mis-directed or misinterpreted; timing and delivery were awkward in all the leading roles. Exacerbating this quality was the almost Peter Jackson-esque indulgence of tossing editing to the wind and letting scenes go on waaaay too long (i.e. the aerobics, the dancing in the bar, the bowling). Not only am I watching bad acting, but I'm watching the same bad acting go on, and on, and on.
Thematically, the film missed the mark in its interpretation of the instantaneous power of love, the unbelievably forgiving nature of family ties, and the incredibly overrated angst of teenage drama. If you meet someone and are attracted to him/her and find out he/she is dating your sibling, you forget about it and move on. Yes, amazingly enough, people do have control over their lives. If your brother finds you hooking up with his moments-ago-girlfriend, yes, he will punch you, but he will probably take longer than an afternoon to forgive you. And no, teenagers are not unpleasant one hundred percent of the time, and can even be quite empathetic to a struggling parent. Overall, I thought the actual situations presented in the film were realistic, but the over-the-top, one-sided interpretation of them was not.
On the plus side, "This corn is like an angel" is a really terrific line. And that's the end of that.
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
"21"
There's not much to be said about this dud. I'm going to go for the easy comparison here and say the movie was about as flat and lifeless as Kate Bosworth's hair. The acting was pretty terrible (except for Kevin Spacey, who is a terrific actor and who doesn't belong in time-wasting trash like this). For a film about intelligent college kids having the time of their life winning thousands of dollars on Las Vegas blackjack tables, it simply wasn't fun enough. The supposed "conflicts" were silly: Laurence Fishburne as an anti-card-counting casino thug was ridiculous (he even had a sidekick!) and Jim Sturgess' neglect of his nerdy-but-loveable friends really didn't matter because we all knew they would kiss and make up in the end. I will say I really enjoyed the "Jimmy got a job at Google...catchy, isn't it?" bit of dialogue, but other than that, I feel comfortable labeling this film a complete flop.
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