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January 11, 2009

Marley & Me movie review, download Marley & Me movie torrent, downlaod Marley & Me wallpaper & posters.....free

My Rating: 7/10

Marley & Me
is a 2008 American dramedy film directed by David Frankel. The screenplay by Scott Frank and Don Roos is based on the memoir of the same title by John Grogan. The film was released in the United States and Canada on December 25, 2008 and set a record for the largest Christmas Day box office ever with $14.75 million in ticket sales.

Directed by David Frankel
Produced by Gil Netter
Kevin Halloran
Karen Rosenfelt
Written by Scott Frank
Don Roos
Based on the novel by John Grogan
Starring Owen Wilson
Jennifer Aniston
Music by Theodore Shapiro
Cinematography Florian Ballhaus
Editing by Mark Livolsi
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) December 25, 2008
Running time 115 minutes
Country United States

Movie Review:

The longest movie I have ever been through. It reminded me of a childhood experence watching Tora Tora with the writing on the screen. Most people have been through the loss of a pet. It is something private.

Watching the actors watch a dog fake death exploits a very special, private moment. I just kept thinking this is so special and then I would think "but this is just for money". Why fake something so special? Money? Ratings? Same thing with the miss carriage. What a sad moment in someone's live.

Using that like the dying dog to get ratings from an emotinal experence? What a sad day. Keep special moments sacred and special for the many of us who have really grieved through them. Somethings cannot be used for emotions to get up the ratings.

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Yes Man movie review, download Yes Man movie torrent, downlaod Yes Man wallpaper & posters.....free


My Rating: 7.5/10

Yes Man
is a 2008 American comedy film directed by Peyton Reed and starring Jim Carrey. The film is based on the true story and 2005 book The Yes Man by British humourist Danny Wallace (who has a brief cameo in the film). Production began in Los Angeles, CA in October 2007.

Directed by Peyton Reed
Produced by Jim Carrey
David Heyman
Richard D. Zanuck
Written by Screenplay:
Nicholas Stoller
Jarrad Paul
Andrew Mogel
Book:
Danny Wallace
Starring Jim Carrey
Terrence Stamp
Zooey Deschanel
Bradley Cooper
Rhys Darby
Danny Masterson
Cinematography Robert D. Yeoman
Editing by Jeff Micks
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) December 19, 2008 (US, ES)
December 26, 2008 (UK)
January 1, 2009 (AU)
January 21, 2009 (FR)
Running time 104 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $70 million
Gross revenue $116,555,687

Movie Review:

Dec. 19, 2008 | There's no aroma so pungent as the air of desperation that hangs around a fading comic, which is why we should be grateful that Jim Carrey's new comedy, "Yes Man," isn't being presented in Odorama. Gifted comics almost invariably go bad at some point, possibly because great comedy demands a touch of craziness, a willingness to go to extremes. And any extreme, hit over and over again, becomes tiresome. In choosing his roles over the years, Carrey may have had some sense of that himself, and although it's hard to forgive him for subjecting us to the hell that was "The Number 23," in other cases -- most notably, "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" -- he's made unpredictable choices that turned out to be good ones.

But "Yes Man" is nothing but a predictable choice for Carrey, a predictably wrong one. Carrey plays Carl, a guy who says no to everything. He's missed so many social events that his friends have almost given up on him. We don't really know why he's uninterested in anything and everything -- the one clue that's dropped heavily is that he hasn't gotten over his failed marriage -- other than that he's just a perpetually negative guy.

One day an old pal (played by John Michael Higgins) drops in from nowhere and invites Carl to a self-help seminar run by a guru who favors flashy brocade shirts (Terence Stamp, who at least lends some solemn elegance to the proceedings). Suddenly, as the result of a "covenant" the guru supposedly hexes him with, Carl begins saying yes to everything. (The premise is more than vaguely reminiscent of Carrey's "Liar Liar.") In fact, Carl can't say no to anything: He finds himself helplessly ordering up Middle Eastern brides, courtesy of PersianWifeFinder.com; he treks out enthusiastically to see questionable performance art; he gives rides to thankless bums who ask to borrow his cellphone and then run down the battery.
ut as a result of saying yes with so little restraint, he does meet a cute girl: Allison (the always adorable -- perhaps too adorable -- Zooey Deschanel) is a singer who rides around on a motorbike dressed in a mod-style black patent leather coat. She also teaches a class that combines yoga with photography -- zany! Finally, Carl's life is turning around.

It must also, of course, turn upside down, so we'll have lots of chances to watch Carrey go all crazy and kooky. But "Yes Man" -- directed by Peyton Reed ("Bring It On," "The Break-Up") and written by Nicholas Stoller, Jarrad Paul and Andrew Mogel -- is almost unbearably lifeless, even as it struggles to provide some sort of framework for Carrey's ever-escalating mania. Carrey pulls every old trick out of the bag here: He does a crazy pratfall in a restaurant; he "impresses" his new girlfriend with inappropriate stalker wisecracks; he binds his face with Scotch tape so that his features take on the freakishness of Lon Chaney's Phantom of the Opera. None of it is funny, possibly because every gag that Carrey attempts is set up by an extra beat: I'm not sure if it's Reed's direction or Carrey's timing (it's most likely a combination of both), but anything that might elicit even the tiniest giggle is set off by quotation marks. We're given plenty of time to prepare for our own laughter, the surest way to kill it off.

Watching "Yes Man" was, for me, a completely joyless experience; I just can't take pleasure in seeing Carrey fall, figuratively or literally. His particular brand of mugging and physical shtick drove some people crazy right from the start, but I used to delight in his pinpoint timing, in the effortless ballet of his rubbery limbs. Carrey is astonishing in "Dumb & Dumber," a poo-humor masterstroke. At the time, there was no one like him, and even now, there's still no one like him -- but his distinctiveness no longer matters. With "Yes Man," Carrey has bled the well dry, doing everything he knows how to do, over and over again, just to prove that he still knows how to do it. It's exhilarating to see brilliance in a comic; but by the time you start smelling it, the game is over.

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The Day the Earth Stood Still movie review, download The Day the Earth Stood Still movie, downlaod wallpaper & posters.....free

My Rating: 6.7/10

The Day the Earth Stood Still
is a 2008 American science fiction film, a remake of the 1951 film of the same name. Directed by Scott Derrickson and starring Keanu Reeves as Klaatu, the film updates the Cold War theme of nuclear warfare to the contemporary issue of humankind's environmental damage to the planet. It was released on a rollout schedule beginning December 12, 2008, screening in both conventional theaters and IMAX screens.

Directed by Scott Derrickson
Produced by Erwin Stoff
Paul Harris Boardman
Written by David Scarpa
Starring Keanu Reeves
Jennifer Connelly
Jaden Smith
John Cleese
Kathy Bates
Music by Tyler Bates
Cinematography David Tattersall
Editing by Wayne Wahrmann
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) December 12, 2008
Running time 103 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $80,000,000
Gross revenue $202,899,000

Movie review: "The Day the Earth Stood Still," from 1951, is considered a sci-fi classic in part because it eschewed the cheesy "invaders from Mars!" B-movie tropes of that era and didn't have a lot of action -- its focus was its ideas. The new remake, predictably, has washed out most of those ideas, but there still isn't much action. Which is pretty strange -- the one thing Hollywood can usually be counted on to do when remaking old films, especially when dumbing them down, is to boost their action quotient, and these guys have failed to do even that.

The new screenplay, by David Scarpa ("The Last Castle"), bears only a superficial resemblance to the original, with a few details included as a nod to the fans. The story concerns Helen Benson (Jennifer Connelly), a Princeton astrobiology professor who is summoned -- more accurately abducted -- by the U.S. government, along with experts in several other fields, when an unidentified flying object is discovered to be hurtling toward Earth. It turns out to be a spaceship, which lands in Central Park and whose occupants are Klaatu (Keanu Reeves), a human-looking extra-terrestrial, and his 35-foot robot bodyguard.

Klaatu, having been shot upon landing his UFO in Manhattan (New York parking enforcement is hardcore), is taken into custody by the military and questioned by Secretary of Defense Regina Jackson (Kathy Bates), who naturally wants to know what he's doing here and why he brought that giant robot with him. People who travel with giant robots are seldom to be trusted. Klaatu says he has a message, but he'll only deliver it to all the nations of the world at once, not just one measly leader of one measly country. He also urges his captors to let him go.

He's on the loose soon enough, don't you worry -- aided by Helen Benson, who believes he means us no harm, and by Helen's stepson, Jacob (Jaden Smith), who is much more skeptical. "They didn't come here to hurt us!" Helen tells him. He replies, "We should kill them anyway, just to be sure." I believe that's as subtle as the film gets in its commentary on international diplomacy.

It's even more heavy-handed in other areas. Those ideas that the original film had, the ones that aren't really present in the remake? They've been replaced by a generic "save the Earth" message that's so hollow and mishandled it would embarrass even Greenpeace.

In the acting department, not much is required of Connelly other than looking awestruck and worried, and she handles that with the usual aplomb, while young Jaden Smith shows off the sassy attitude he picked up from his Fresh Prince father, who knows a thing or two about chasing aliens himself. Good actors like John Cleese, Kyle Chandler, Robert Knepper, Jon Hamm, and James Hong are used for a few scenes apiece as scientists, colonels, and other alien-invasion-movie stock characters, then set aside. Meanwhile, as Klaatu, Keanu Reeves uses the fact that his character is an alien as an excuse to be even more wooden than usual, if such a thing is possible. He's not inscrutable. He's boring.

The first half of the film feels like it's building to something, creating tension for an inevitable clash, and director Scott Derrickson ("The Exorcism of Emily Rose") finds suspense in the scenes involving the military's interaction with the giant robot. The disappointment is when that clash never really comes, or at least not in great measure. The film builds to nothing, in other words -- very little action, very few ideas, very little to recommend it. To paraphrase the original, klaatu barada nothankyou.

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January 08, 2009

Slumdog Millionaire movie review, free download Slumdog Millionaire movie, wallpapers.....watch videos...

My Rating: 8.6/10

Slumdog Millionaire is a 2008 drama film directed by Danny Boyle and written by Simon Beaufoy. It is based on the book Q and A written by Indian author and diplomat Vikas Swarup. Loveleen Tandan began as the film's casting director but was appointed by Boyle as a "co-director".

The film, shot and set in India, follows a young man from the slums of Mumbai who appears on a game show and exceeds people's expectations, raising the suspicions of the game show host and law enforcement.

Following screenings at the Telluride Film Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival, Slumdog Millionaire had a limited release on 12 November 2008 to critical acclaim and awards success.

Directed by Danny Boyle
Produced by Christian Colson
Written by Simon Beaufoy
Starring Dev Patel
Freida Pinto
Anil Kapoor
Irrfan Khan
Music by A. R. Rahman
Release date(s) 12 November 2008 (limited)
January 2009 (India)
Running time 120 min.
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Hindi
Budget $15 million
Gross revenue $30,298,341

Movie review:

Most times when I read about a movie with a lot of hype surrounding it, I find more often than not, the movie never actually lives up to the accolades it receives. "Slumdog Millionaire" is a movie that received such hype. I believe, as I write this review, it has been nominated for best picture by 11 of 20 critics associations. It has already received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Picture in the Drama category. It most certainly will be nominated for an Oscar for Best Picture. "Slumdog Millionaire" has all the ingredients it requires to be a bit of a letdown, based on my past history of movie viewing. Well, this holiday season I finally got around to seeing "Slumdog" and I just want to assure everyone that this movie is as good, if not better than you have heard. Chances are that it will be adding the Empire Movies Best Picture of the Year to the above accolades sometime in the next couple of weeks.

"Slumdog Millionaire" is the story of a young man from the slums of India who rises from poverty to become a contestant on the game show "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire". When Jamal answers every question correctly and is on the verge of winning the grand prize, the show takes a 24-hour break and Jamal is arrested and tortured because it is suspected he is cheating. The movie then takes us through the heartbreaking and often horrible life of Jamal and his brother Salim as they grow up parentless, homeless and without any real direction in life. As he explains to the police how he managed to answer the questions presented to him on "Millionaire", each question that was presented to Jamal on the game show triggers a flashback that involves Jamal, Salim and some horrible event that happened in their lives. Along the way, we learn of a girl named Latika with whom Jamal fell deeply in love during his childhood. Right up to his appearance on "Millionaire", that love has not wavered and we learn that winning money on the game show is not his real reason for even being there.

"Slumdog Millionaire" is basically a mix of a rags-to-riches story with an unconventional love story thrown into the mix. Most North American audiences are probably not used to seeing a love story that doesn't take place in New York or Chicago and doesn't involve Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, Jennifer Aniston or Vince Vaughn. "Slumdog" takes us to the worst parts of India and features the worst people we could possibly meet and some of the worst situations we could possibly imagine. Is there anything more horrific than seeing children tortured? If there is, I don't want to know about it. But out of all this doom and gloom, there rises one young gentleman who manages to find his way onto the most popular show on television and uses this opportunity to profess his unfailing love for the girl of his dreams. It might not be the most realistic story. In fact, it surely has all the makings of your typical fairy tale. But it's damn entertaining nonetheless. Without a doubt, "Slumdog Millionaire" is one of the best, most absorbing and most enchanting movies to hit the theatres in 2008.

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