Saturday, June 7, 2014

SIFF 2014 Reviews

Ratings based on 5 stars.  List is alphabetical.  New additions are marked with >>>


>>>Begin Again****

 A wonderful musician's fantasy with an incredible cast and great music and heart. This was made by the same people who created Once, and was equal to that if not just a bit better. I did pull a star off of this film as I began to write this because, simply looking at the title, I couldn't remember what the movie was. So.  No long lasting impressions, but a pleasant experience, nonetheless.  

Director: John Carney
Principal Cast: Keira Knightley, Mark Ruffalo, Adam Levine, Cee Lo Green, Hailee Steinfeld 
Country: USA
Year: 2013 

>>>Belle and Sebastien****

A fantastic adventure, gorgeously filmed and satisfyingly told. For my mom's sake I must say that it can be a slightly unpleasant experience for anyone with a fear if heights. That said, the dizzying suspense is part of what helps this to rise above or at least meet the best of the existing boy and his dog films. 

Director: Nicolas Vanier
Principal Cast: Félix Bossuet, Tchéky Karyo, Mehdi El Glaoui 
Country: France
Year: 2013 

Beyond the Brick:  a Lego Brickumentory***
Director: Daniel Junge, Kief Davidson
Principal Cast: Narrated by: Jason Bateman
Country: Denmark, USA 
This documentary, as the title suggests, is a little bit too cutesy at times, but it does end up giving you some compelling information about the history and the future of this “toy”.  The most engrossing is the examples of innovative uses of Legos as tools for design and art.  The most moving is watching people who love their Legos getting to fulfill their fondest dreams.

The Congress**
Director: Ari Folman
Principal Cast: Robin Wright, Harvey Keitel, Danny Huston, Jon Hamm, Paul Giamatti
Country: Israel 

I hate to say that I did not like the animated portion of this film.  It’s such an innovative piece, and the idea of the animation is so right, but it just didn’t work for me.  I couldn’t feel the heartbeat during that part - which is the second half of the movie - it just went silent.  There was nothing compelling and no through-line.  Anything could happen in this other-side world, and it did, so there wasn’t anything with which to get involved.  That said, the ending of the film, which is a combination of animated and real-life as well as the whole first half is truly breath taking.  Such an interesting and thought-provoking set up, with emotional punch and visual attractiveness really needed to be met with the same in the animated world and it just wasn’t.  That world was flat and meaningless in comparison.  Maybe that was the idea?  I don’t think so, I just think the animator and the writer of the story that takes place there wasn’t up to the task.  

Damnation*****
Director: Ben Knight, Travis Rummel
Country: USA
Year: 2014 

Ben Knight tricked me at the beginning of this film when he said “Hi I’m Ben, I’ll be your narrator.  Before I made this film, I didn’t really know much about dams except that the overflow chutes are great for skateboard tricks..”, or something close to that.  I assumed I was going to see a fun, though probably not very compelling or well-done film. It’s a good thing to discover one’s own prejudices, so I will add that to the perks of this documentary about the movement toward removal of dams in America.  This film is so very compelling, so very well composed and developed, I can’t say enough about it.  Let me just say, simply, that it is an absolutely beautiful and moving story.  The various angles on the story and people involved are abundant, important, and effective.  That some of the events take place on our very own Elwa river, matters a great deal.  That I had more than one quote from the movie come up appropriately in the two days since I saw the movie is notable.  That I am now in love with a woman who spent time in Glen Canyon (and shot lots of spectacular footage), before it became Lake Powell, is life affirming.  You’ll love her, too.  Go see this movie.

Dear White People***
Director: Justin Simien
Principal Cast: Tyler Williams, Tessa Thompson, Teyonah Parris, Brandon Bell
Country: USA 

This is a fun movie with a good message.  I didn’t get lots of references (I’m guessing more because of my age than my racial background), but the ones I did get went deep and the laughter and outrage I felt were genuine.  That is despite the satire’s rather broad strokes. I was particularly taken with the lead actress, Tessa Thompson (who’s character has nightmares about being one of the Cosby kids).  She’s an old friend from Veronica Mars.

>>>The Dune***

The acting and the photography of this mystery are both above the line, but it is just a one liner that's pretty easy to figure out. So, not suspenseful, but enjoyable. 

Director: Yossi Aviram
Principal Cast: Niels Arestrup, Lior Askenazi, Emma de Caunes, Guy Marchand, Mathieu Amalric 
Country: France, Israel 

>>>Elsa and Fred***

This is a very sweet love story with superstars for actors. It's also a bit cringe worthy, not because it’s old people being romantic, that part is fine, it's triteness and utter predictability that squashes it. Ah well. 

Director: Michael Radford
Principal Cast: Shirley MacLaine, Christopher Plummer, Marcia Gay Harden, Jared Gilman, Chris Noth 
Country: USA 
>>>Helicopter Mom*

Okay story, terrible dialog and terrible acting. 

Director: Salomé Breziner
Principal Cast: Nia Vardalos, Jason Dolley, Mark Boone Junior, Scott Shilstone, Skyler Samuels 
Country: USA 


I, Origins****
Director: Mike Cahill
Principal Cast: Michael Pitt, Brit Marling, Astrid Bergès-Frisbey, Steven Yeun, Archie Panjabi 
Country: USA 

A very neat story based on a great and perhaps quite feasible what if. Sci fi at its best. The filmmaker is currently working on "I". The movie this is the prequel to. Look for clues about that after the credits. The only reason I don't give this five stars is the scripting choice of a particularly brutal and focus jolting death. This felt unnecessary to me. Otherwise, a fantastic script, great cinematography, perfect performances. Particularly of note is the young Indian actress in the film's final act. 

>>>Kumiko, Treasure Hunter***

This is a fascinating and suspenseful parable of a story with amazing photography and a fantastic cast of characters.  The overwrought score and downward spiral of the film, bring it low, but it’s still worth watching. 

Director: David Zellner
Principal Cast: Rinko Kikuchi, Nobuyuki Katsube, Shirley Venard, David Zellner, Nathan Zellner 
Country: USA, Japan

>>>Living Is Easy With Eyes Closed****

Recognize the lyric? A very sweet road trip and young boy coming of age flick that's all heart and a joy to watch.  

Director: David Trueba
Principal Cast: Javier Cámara, Natalia de Molina, Francesc Colomer 
Country: Spain
Year: 2013 

>>>Love and Lemons***

A very enjoyable romantic movie. Perfect for date night. Definitely see it before dinner as it is the perfect appetizer. A very unique and enjoyable  soundtrack tops it off.

Director: Teresa Fabik
Principal Cast: Rakel Wärmländer, Dan Ekborg, Josefin Bornebusch, Sverrir Gudnason, Tomas von Brömssen 
Country: Sweden
Year: 2013 

Lucky Them*****
Director: Megan Griffiths
Principal Cast: Toni Collette, Thomas Haden Church, Oliver Platt, Ahna O’Reilly  
Country: USA 

This, for me, is the very definition of a perfect movie. Compelling. Funny. Poignant. Beautifully shot. It’s unpredictable, but follows a satisfyingly evolutionary course. The characters are deeply written and so you are pulled deeply in. There is a brilliance in the script that uses audience assumptions and then blows them away. Toni Collette’s portrayal is typically amazing, so if you go to the movie for her, which I did, you will not be disappointed. If you go to the movie because it's shot in Seattle and environs, you will not be disappointed. If you go because you love music, you won’t be disappointed.  If you go because you love a good story, you will not be… If you go to the movie because it’s directed by our local rising, no, rocketing, star Megan Griffiths you won’t be...  I can’t actually figure out any scenario where you would be disappointed.  Go see it.

Mood Indigo (L‘ecume des jours)***
Director: Michel Gondry
Principal Cast: Audrey Tautou, Omar Sy, Romain Duris, Aïssa Maïga, Philippe Torreton
Country: France 

The second half of this movie, particularly the ending gets two stars.  The first half gets 4.  So, it averages to 3 stars, but not really.  I would recommend this movie to everyone, if they are willing to get up and leave after the doctor comes to the house and gives a lousy prognosis.  Perhaps Michel Gondry’s goal was to lift his audience up in a gentle, cartoonish cloud, bounce them around in quirkiness and charming innovation, dazzle them with hyper carnival colors and then tip the cloud car upside down so they plummet into dingy dark murk and hopelessness.  Lousy goal, if so.  Let me say, though, that the whimsical creative genius in the first half of this film is mind-blowingly wonderful.

Muse of Fire****
Director: Giles Terera, Dan Poole
Principal Cast: Derek Jacobi, Judi Dench, Ben Kinsgley, Ian McKellan, Rory Kinnear, Ralph Fiennes
Country: United Kingdom 

This fabulous documentary serves its expressed purpose by inspiring its audience to stop fearing Shakespeare. The filmmakers make themselves part of the film and bring you along on their crazy journey to explore the reason Shakespeare seems to scare people. They're just a couple of guys who like to act and decided to make a film. Why not follow them as they explore? This works, not only because you see them sparsely, just enough to remind you that there's nothing to be afraid of, but also because their goofy hope filled approach belies their  exceptional skills as actors, filmmakers, interviewers, editors and musicians. Clearly, they obviously also have exceptional social skills, not only because of great interactions they have with people everywhere they go, but also who they know and who they convince to share their thoughts in this film. A short list, Judy Dench, Ian McKellen, Ralph Fines... Gets very long, very fast. And what these people have to say isn't cursory. Judy Dench, after a perfect rendering of the sleep text from Macbeth turns to the camera, breaths a bit and says, 'if I had written that, I'd stay up and look at myself in the mirror'.  

Obvious Child***
Director: Gillian Robespierre
Principal Cast: Jenny Slate, Jake Lacy, Gaby Hoffmann, David Cross, Gabe Liedman 
Country: USA 

Despite what some might find to be too many fart jokes, this is actually a lovely little romantic comedy. Gender role reversal and an example of the hardships only women face from one-night stands freshen the well established structure. Add to that a number of pleasant surprise reactions from the various characters, a compelling performance from Brooklyn comedian Donna Stern, and a perfectly choreographed love making scene set to the song upon which the movie's title is based and you've got a real charmer. 


Regarding Susan Sontag****
Director: Nancy Kates 
Country: USA
Year: 2014 

Nancy Kate - "the question of what you should be looking at is a very complicated one". In reference to the graphics in her film while Patricia Clarkson is reading Sontag's words.  The question, in the case of Susan Sontag, is always complicated, it seems, yet  this film about her, her works, and her lovers is quite accessible and enjoyable. I came away feeling that the answers weren't near as difficult as I might once have thought. Not to mention an even larger crush than I already had for this astounding woman.

Seeds of time**
Director: Sandy McLeod 
Country: USA
Year: 2013 

The arguments and urgency presented in this film about preserving the seeds of crops that are going extinct are very strong and important, but it's hard to get that message from this uneven film. Beautifully shot footage and compelling stories from around the world are lost in a jib jab of editing with way too much emphasis placed on the dull camera angles in stuffy offices. If the filmmakers had edited those meetings and talking heads out and just let actions speak (in a story telling order), it would have been something to see. Instead, it was something to sleep through.  


The Skeleton Twins****
Director: Craig Johnson, 
Principal Cast: Bill Hader, Kristen Wiig, Luke Wilson, Ty Burrell, Boyd Holbrook
Country: USA 

This is a very sweet, funny/sad fantastically acted heart tugger about siblings and suicide and how much we need each other.  All the actors are known for their comic chops - here we get to see, again, how great comedians can be at drama.

The Sunfish***
Director: Søren Balle
Principal Cast: Henrik Birch, Susanne Storm, Lars Topp Thomsen, Jacob Hauberg Lohmann, Mikkel Vadsholt
Premiere Status: North American Premiere
Country: Denmark 

This is a charming love story.  The characters are diverse and interesting and the setting brings some good tension.  The city woman/country man device is a familiar one, but I enjoyed how this one played out. 

>>>Tangerines****

A very good, quietly seething anti-war film.  This one has stuck with me and earned an extra star for its impact. 

Director: Zaza Urushadze
Principal Cast: Lembit Ulfsak, Elmo Nüganen, Zhanri Lolashvili, Mikheil Meskhi, Giorgi Nakashidze 
Country: Estonia, Georgia
Year: 2013 


Tracks****
Director: John Curran
Principal Cast: Mia Wasikowska, Adam Driver, Emma Booth, Rainer Bock, Roly Mintuma
Country: United Kingdom, Australia
Finally!  The book I read in my twenties that altered my life and continues to affect my thinking has been brought to the screen.  And, it doesn’t disappoint.  Gorgeous settings, a real feeling of the grueling, mind bending journey this woman went on, and some of the complexity as to why she did it is presented. Not much narration, so it’s really about the visual experience, whereas the book is about the inner thoughts created and expressed through that medium. This is how it should be.  When movies try to read to you, they fall short.  Just show it.  A very satisfying experience.  Warning - If you’re sensitive to these things (which I am), harm to animals is depicted, necessarily so.

Trip to Italy***
Director: Michael Winterbottom
Principal Cast: Steve Coogan, Rob Brydon, Rosie Fellner, Claire Keelan, Marta Barrio
Country: United Kingdom, Italy 

I loved the first one, called "The Trip” and taking place in the Lakes District so much, I bought the DVD when it came out.  The problem with sequels is that you go in with expectations. When these are met, rather than exceeded then the movie is just good. Such is the case here. Delicious setting, Italy this time. Rich and unusual food. Tasty banter. Piquant and poignant moments and some bad behavior sprinkled over the top. Just what one would expect. 

>>>You Must Be Joking***

This comedy is pretty choppy, the story telling is often neglected for a so so joke. It's mostly enjoyable though, and in the end, and I do mean the final act and how it's wrapped up, it's truly funny. 

Director: Jake Wilson
Principal Cast: Sas Goldberg, Jake Wilson, Margaret Colin, Hannibal Buress, James Wolk 
Premiere Status: World Premiere
Country: USA 

Friday, May 2, 2014

SIFF 2014 - Let's get the reels rolling!

SIFF Press screenings have begun.  My opinions will be in the next note.  Here are the upcoming movies I’m extremely excited about (I’ve added links so you can read SIFF’s descriptions):

Absolute Must See


Saw these this week and they are fantastic!


Opinions about these and three others coming up next.


Thursday, August 15, 2013

Entertainment Value: Movies I Saw This Week 8/5/13


(descriptions and information gathered from IMDB.  The opinions rendered below these, however, are mine. Using a 5 star rating system.)

Match Point ** 2005
At a turning point in his life, a former tennis pro falls for a femme-fatal type who happens to be dating his friend and soon-to-be brother-in-law.

Director/Writer

:

 

Stars:

 

This is an absolutely brilliantly written and executed pure bummer of a movie. The plot is basically a simplified Great Gatsby without nuance. I'm a lifelong fan of Woody Allen's, and I certainly can't fault his work here, but I also can't understand why he made this movie. 

The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc
** 1999
A young girl receives a vision that drives her to rid France of its oppressors.

Director:

 

Writers:

 

Stars:

 

This is certainly A story, but it's a strangely told one, with a rather cynical root. It presents Her as not a visionary, but just a mad girl. The strangeness is the odd humor amidst extreme and grotesque violence. At moments operatic and others hyper real. It's hard to know where to settle while watching. It's also hard and amazing to watch Milan Jovovich's screechy yet compelling performance. Finally, as you might imagine, the thing doesn't end well.  

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Entertainment Value: Movies I Saw This Week 7/29/2013


(descriptions and information gathered from IMDB.  The opinions rendered below these, however, are mine. Using a 5 star rating system.)

Fireflies in the garden** 2008
The Taylor family is devastated by an accident that takes place on the day their matriarch is due to graduate from college -- decades after leaving to raise her children.

Director:

 

Writers:

  (poem), 

Stars:

  , Carrie Anne Moss, Julia Roberts, Hayden Panetitere
This was messy, perhaps because of poor editing, and maybe because of poor, unnuanced dialog and not as compelling as it should have been given the plot. Given, also, an amazing cast. Add in a bizarre idea, depicted more than once, that being cruel to animals is a great way for family members to bond and feel nostalgic, and you end up with a not very good movie. 

Tell Them Willie Boy is Here*** 1969

Based on true events, Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here, tells the story of one of the last Western manhunts, in 1909. Willie Boy, a Native American, kills his girlfriend's father in self defense, and the two go on the run, pursued by a search posse led by Sheriff Christopher Cooper.

Director:

 

Writers:

  (book), 

Stars:

 , , 

I chose this movie because I'm assisting in the editing of a documentary that incorporates it and the story behind it into its canvas.  I wasn't as impressed as I should have been considering the accolades it received for its director and stars. I was instantly put off, of course, by the fact that non-natives with black wigs and dark pancake makeup were starring as natives. The supporting cast were real natives, of course. I also hated the depiction of Carlotta as an ineffectual whiner. Lots of fun ignorant stuff that you see in abundance in movies between 1950 and 1970.  Barring that, it's certainly an interesting film, and a fascinating historical perspective. Since then, however, as I know from the aforementioned documentary, much more has come to light about who Willie  was and how he died, so the story, as any point in history, stopped and depicted will show, only tells half truths. 

The Avengers****

Nick Fury of S.H.I.E.L.D. assembles a team of superhumans to save the planet from Loki and his army.

Director:

  

Writers:

  (screenplay),  (story), 

Stars:

 , , , Mark Ruffalo, Jeremy Renner, Samuel L Jackson. 

I must start by saying that I watched this movie on a small screen, so it just wasn't as spectacular visually as it could have been. Given that, however, it was certainly everything it promised to be. Stunning visuals, an intelligent and compelling plot, great and groovy super heroes. Nothing really stuck with me, though, so like a great roller coaster, it was over when it was over. Pure entertainment. Not to be dismissed, not be to reflected upon. 



Thursday, August 1, 2013

Entertainment Value: movies I saw this week 7/22/13


(descriptions and information gathered from IMDB.  The opinions rendered below these, however, are mine. Using a 5 star rating system.)

A Wake in Providence*  1999

Going back home can be hard, particularly when you come from a traditional Italian family, and especially when the girlfriend you bring back is not Italian. But the roof caves in when she's African American. This is the problem that Anthony faces when he brings Alissa from Los Angeles to his boyhood home of Providence, Rhode Island to attend his grandfather's funeral.
Director: Rosario Roveto Jr., Writers: Billy Van Zandt, Jane Milmore, Stars: Vincent Pagano, Adrienne Barbeau 

This is very uneven, overwrought at the beginning then quiet and thoughtful at the center with more of the too-much in the third act.  The unoriginal sound track matches the overdone quality of this movie.  It's too silly with an absolutely preposterous script, utterly predictable, and has nothing smart to say.  

Elizabeth: The Golden Age*** 2007
A mature Queen Elizabeth endures multiple crises late in her reign including court intrigues, an assassination plot, the Spanish Armada, and romantic disappointments.

Director: Shekhar Kapur, Writers:  William Nicholson, Michael Hirst, Stars: Cate Blanchett, Geoffrey Rush, 

A visual spectacle.  That's really all it is.  much of what happens is hard to follow, even if you know the history, but it doesn't matter.  The camera moves way in to the details, and you're looking at a red ring being placed on a finger, a white horse jumping from a ship, a blown off stump of a leg, a black filigreed neck liner.  The camera pulls out and up.  The Queen in her regalia entertaining her suitors, the queen in armor standing on a stormy cliff, the spanish armada, Mary Queen of Scots lays her head on the chopping block, the floor of the throne room tiled to show a map of the world.  Beautiful and stunning, but not emotionally compelling.


 

Friday, July 26, 2013

Entertainment Value: Movies I Saw This Week - July 15th, 2013

(descriptions and information gathered from IMDB.  The opinions rendered below these, however, are mine. Using a 5 star rating system.)

Shaun of the Dead**  2004
A man decides to turn his moribund life around by winning back his ex-girlfriend, reconciling his relationship with his mother, and dealing with an entire community that has returned from the dead to eat the living.

Director: Edgar Wright, Writers: Simon Pegg, Edgar Wright, Stars: Simon Pegg, Kate Ashfield, Nick Frost.


I noticed that SIFF was showing this film and two others that make up a trilogy, so I thought I'd check this one out.  It's very funny, but, you know, it's still a zombie film and its stars (all top rate), still get torn apart and eaten and still turn into zombies.  The fact that it's funny doesn't mitigate the horror and the gore.  In fact it's almost worse, you've got your eyes wider open because you're laughing.


Swimming to Cambodia**** 1987
Spalding Gray tells about his participation in the film, "The Killing Fields" & the background story about the troubles of Cambodia.

Director: Jonathan Demme.  Writer/Star: Spalding Gray


Spalding Gray has acted in a number of films, but is known mostly for his filmed monologues, this being the first of them.  I watched this because I had recently seen The Killing Fields and thought this might be an interesting adjunct.  Funny.  Fantastically performed and written.  The filming doesn't draw attention to itself, but lets you feel as though you are at the theater watching Mr. Gray perform live. Thank Jonathan Demme for that. Mr Gray talks candidly, and thus can be a bit off-putting when he expresses his views about women.  I say this, but must also say that my favorite part is when he describes (after setting us up much earlier in the monologue), what the whores can do with their vaginas in Thailand...

Looper**  2012
In 2074, when the mob wants to get rid of someone, the target is sent 30 years into the past, where a hired gun awaits. Someone like Joe, who one day learns the mob wants to 'close the loop' by transporting back Joe's future self.

Director/Writer: Rian Johnson, Stars: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Bruce Willis, Emily Blunt


Fantastic acting by everyone in this unbearably bleak time travel parable.  This was a great opportunity to play with time, always fun to watch, but I think the main idea behind this script was already presented quite well in the Disney film The Kid also starring Bruce Willis.  In that film, no children are murdered.  Sorry I can't say the same about this one.  To go one step further, a future dystopia with time travel, again starring Bruce Willis and again involving him coming into contact through time travel with his younger self, was 12 Monkeys.  That film was bleak as well, but had heart and a clear belief in the human capacity for good, this one does get there, but not until the very last, (via an extremely unreliable narrator), moment.

Lola Versus****  2012
Dumped by her boyfriend just three weeks before their wedding, Lola enlists her close friends for a series of adventures she hopes will help her come to terms with approaching 30 as a single woman.

Director:  Daryl Wein, Writers:  Daryl Wein, Zoe Lister Jones, Stars: Greta Gerwig, Joel Kinnaman, Zoe Lister Jones, Bill Pullman, Debra Winger.


I watched this because I loved Frances Ha at SIFF this year.  I was glad to see that Greta Gerwig is not just playing herself in these movies, though I imagine they are versions of herself.  In Frances Ha, she is truly still a child who hasn't yet filled out her grown up body.  She's also struggling with her connection to her best friend.  In Lola Versus, she's her own age - just about to turn 30 - and struggling with boyfriend connection.  I loved the arc in both of these films.  They are satisfying and moving and feel very real.  The writing is definitely a big part of this movie, but, I think it's this lovely actress's chops that really pulls it off.  A very enjoyable story that stays with you.

The Crash Reel*** 2013
Fifteen years of verite footage show the epic rivalry between half-pipe legends Shaun White and Kevin Pearce, childhood friends who become number one and two in the world leading up to the Vancouver Winter Olympics, pushing one another to ever more dangerous tricks, until Kevin crashes on a Park City half-pipe, barely surviving. As Kevin recovers from his injury, Shaun wins Gold. Now all Kevin wants to do is get on his snowboard again, even though medics and family fear this could kill him.

Director: Lucy Walker, Stars: Kevin Pearce, Shaun White


This is a very well produced documentary, exploring family, addiction and the drive for personal best.  It's a strong and interesting piece.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Entertainment Value: Movies I Saw This Week - July 8th, 2013

(descriptions and information gathered from IMDB.  The opinions rendered below these, however, are mine. Using a 5 star rating system.)

The Lone Ranger**** 2013
Native American warrior Tonto recounts the untold tales that transformed John Reid, a man of the law, into a legend of justice.
Director: Gore Verbinski, Writers: Justin Haythe, Ted Elliott Stars: Johnny Depp, Armie Hammer, William Fichtner, Tom Wilkinson

This was a total treat.  With Johnny Depp in the role, Tonto takes the front seat in this one (in case you didn't already know).  That's a good thing, here.  His underplayed, overdressed style perfectly matches the odd, slightly mystical humor of this movie.  The action is over the top, as well it should be and it matches the train-heavy silver-mining plot very well.  Filling in the cracks are the many homages - a soundtrack that loves Ennio Morricone's "Once Upon a Time in the West", a frame device and American Indian perspective brought forward from "Little Big Man", numerous John Ford references including the location shooting in Monument Valley, and, of course, the characters and horses from the 1949 radio serial.  Great bad guys, both hideous and lowly, and evil and powerful, round it out.

A fun romp, though prepare the sensitive ones for lots of violence.

The Out List***  2013
Activist and actor, politician and provocateur, drag queen and athlete all share personal stories that set them apart and tie them together, revealing a poignant, familiar journey to find themselves and secure a place in modern society.
Director: Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, Stars: Ellen Degeneres, Neil Patrick Harris, Cynthia Nixon

This ends up being a tear jerker, even though it is nothing but talking heads.  It's all about who the heads are and what they're saying.  An important historical perspective in time captured.  Not so long from now, this will be truly history.

Beyond** 2012
A detective teams with a tabloid psychic to track down a missing child.
Director: Josef Rusnak, Writer:  Gregory Gieras, Stars: Jon Voight, Teri Polo, Ben Crowley

This one reads like a TV pilot, but it's one I'd watch.  Tight pacing, intriguing plot, seasoned actors, all contribute to the enjoyability of the story, but it's still, finally, a forgettable one.


Dare to Dream: the Story of the U.S Women's Soccer Team***. 2007
Documentary chronicling the rise of U.S. women's soccer. Mia Hamm, Julie Foudy, and other players of note are profiled.
Writer: Ouisie Shapiro, Stars: April Henrichs, Babe Didrikson Zaharias, Billie Jean King

This is a great opportunity to watch some absolutely amazing moments in women's soccer.  It was hard, however, to avoid noticing that after all the successes of the women's team in the world, compared to no success at all on the men's side, there's still hugely more support for the men's professional league in America. Ugh.  The main reason this movie is so important, is that it's one of the few opportunities to actually see women play soccer.  Am I whining here?  Yep.

The Amazing Spiderman****  2012
Peter Parker finds a clue that might help him understand why his parents disappeared when he was young. His path puts him on a collision course with Dr. Curt Connors, his father's former partner.
Director: Marc Webb, Writers: James Vanderbilt, Alvin Sargent, Stars: Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Rhys Ifans

I wouldn't have watched this, except for Emma Stone, who really can do no wrong.  It's worth it, as a matter of fact, just for Emma Stone's performance, and the writing that created her character.  The set up is really great and fun.  The first half of the movie, then, is fantastic.  Aside from a really amazing sequence wherein cars and buses are suspended off a bridge by "webbing", the action portion of the film is nothing new.  If you like things falling off of big buildings, and giant lizards and the like, it'll work for you.  The very ending, with the tiny tiny smile on Emma Stone's face, again, makes the whole thing worth it.