Streaming The Cowboys Online

março 7th, 2010 by russell4993102
Streaming The Cowboys Online. Streaming The Cowboys Online.

Movie Title: The Cowboys
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This review refers to the WB DVD edition of THE COWBOYS.

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From 1971,THE COWBOYS finds our guy,The Duke, as an aging rancher who must hire 11 young boys to help him on a 400 mile cattle drive. He’s tough and gruff, but really has a way with the kids,(only The Duke can cure a boy’s stuttering in less than 2 minutes!), and soon finds himself acting as both trail boss and father to the group. The drive is rough for all and has the added suspense of some bad hombres led by Bruce Dern who are out to rustle The Duke’s cattle.

Wayne, who by this time, just awed us with his on screen presence, turns in a touching performance and if it was up to me, would have recieved an Oscar for this role. Dern is the baddest of the bad as he goes after our hero. The film is not short on talent, Directed by Mark Rydell, it includes Roscoe Lee Brown, a young A. Martinez, and a small but meaty part for the wonderful Colleen Dewhurst. A nice widescreen presentation, the picture and color were good but seemed just a little dated to me.The sound remastered in DD 5.1 is fabulous. There’s a great documentary included. The Breaking of Boys and The Making Of Men, talks about how the boys were selected, and how they trained for their parts. There are 13 (count em ..13) trailers of Wayne films from the 30’s through the 70’s, informative production notes, and has languages and subtitles in English and French.

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Collector’s of Wayne may find it more economical to purchase the John Wayne Collection set. Included with this fabulous film are two greats directed by John Ford, THE SEARCHERS, and STAGECOACH. Spanning 30 years of his career, it’s a wonderful selection.

Saddle up and enjoy the ride…

Happy Trails…..Laurie

Oldies but Goodies with The Duke:

Shadow of the Eagle

His Private Secretary

John Wayne

I’m puzzled by the negative reviews (vide supra). If the story’s a little thin, then the acting more than makes up for it. John Wayne and Roscoe Lee Browne lead a cattle drive across the West with the aid of the only help they could find, schoolboys. They are trailed by some bad guys. So much for the story. But Wayne and Browne give superb performances, truly, and the boys more than hold up their end. Bruce Dern’s a memorable villain who gets his. (Wayne is shot 1 hr., 50 min. into the picture–certainly not “early on”!) I rate this movie 4 stars because, sure, “Stagecoach” and “The Searchers” and the U.S. Cavalry trio rank higher; but 4 stars on the Wayne scale ain’t too shabby. One day the world will come around to the realization that John Wayne was one of the greatest screen actors ever to walk through Hollywood.
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Stream Survivorman Online

março 7th, 2010 by russell4993102
Stream Survivorman Online. Stream Survivorman Online.

Movie Title: Survivorman
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***** This set does not contain “The Making of Survivorman”. That extra footage came out after I purchased this DVD. Try Survivorman’s website for the latest version. *****

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The two colorful DVDs come in a classic plastic container. The picture quality and sound are perfect. Each episode is shown in its entirety and without commercials. It doesn’t get any better than this.

Disc One

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Desert - Les salvages his broken bicycle after it strands him in the desert. He later uses those parts to aid his situation.

Boreal Forest - Just what it implies. The forest. It’s in one of these forest/jungle outings that Les almost amputates his finger when his knife slips.

Swamp - Bullfrogs and turtles are Les’s main staple as he builds a raft out of the swamp.

Jungle - At night the jungle floor moves with activity.

Disc Two

Arctic - No food anywhere, except for his pack of seal blubber. Polar bears stalk his sleeping area.

Mountain - Shelter building and fire making at its best.

Winter Plane Crash - My favorite. Les fakes a broken arm to reflect a real plane crash situation. He builds a nice shelter from the busted up airplane, and traps rabbits with a snare.

Canyonlands - The loneliness of the canyons grates on Les’s nerves as he smokes out a living quarters and catches small animals for food.

Lost at Sea - Les takes flight in a rubber raft and gets hit by a nasty unexpected storm.

I can’t wait to see what Les has planned for Season Two. I’ll be the first to buy his DVD.

Terrific show, great DVD. This is a repackaging of the Season One DVD available on Les Stroud’s website for $25. It contains the 9 episodes from Season One plus a behind-the-scenes episode.

Years ago when I heard about “Survivor” I thought it would be dumping modern Americans on an island and watching them try to feed themselves. I thought that would be a great show. Instead it was the series of challenges and voting people off the island - not about survival at all.

Les Stroud made my wish come true. He recreates accidents that would leave you stranded in the wilderness, and then uses the items at hand and his wits to survive for seven days. He actually falls out of his canoe and watches it drift away, then he swims to shore, gets out his backpack and sees what he has to survive - in one episode he smashes a video camera and uses the lens to start a fire. He survives the desert, artic, a shipwreck in a raft, the Georgia swamp (he catches and eats a rattlesnake).

He does all his own filming, talking as he goes. This leads to some of the humor in the show - he’ll film himself making a slow trek up a steep ridge, and then point out he has to go back down to get his camera - then go up the ridge again.

Some of what he does works well - he catches a snow-shoe hare with a snare, something everyone has heard about but he actually shows you how it works (its not like in the cartoons) but some are flops. He eats plants which make him throw up, and it takes him a LONG time to start some of his fires, with multiple failed attempts. I find it all very interesting.

He has immense patience, and his super-power is to go for five days without eating more than two lizards without complaining.

One last comment - the show invites a comparison to man vs wild, which is much more dramatic and over-the-top and gross - the man vs wild guy drinks by squeezing elephant dung and brown liquid comes out and he swallows that. That guy goes out of his way to face drama - he chooses an escape path over a lava field so you can see his boots smoke, where Les Stroud would walk around it. Plus I can never forget that the man vs wild guy is standing there with a camera crew which has coolers and a truck right there. They are presumably drinking Coke and eating McDonald’s while the guy drinks elephant dung juice. Its a stunt. Whereas when Les Stroud found the rattlesnake (he jumped a mile and they had to bleep what he said) if he had gotten bitten he would have had to face it alone.

Les Stroud is very low key and Canadian, and he plays his harmonica to keep his spirits up. He is very likable.

My whole family likes Survivorman. We bought the DVD on his website and were delighted. I recommend it heartily.
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Stream Forgetting Sarah Marshall Online

março 7th, 2010 by russell4993102
Stream Forgetting Sarah Marshall Online. Stream Forgetting Sarah Marshall Online.

Movie Title: Forgetting Sarah Marshall
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My wife and I took a chance on this and rented it when we couldn’t find anything else. We haven’t seen any other Apatow films — they all looked a little too adolescent for our tastes. We had read some good reviews of this, though, so we gave it a shot. It was a real surprise — very clever, well-written, and genuinely funny. Great cast, and all give excellent performances. Lots of real talent went into this. A very enjoyable movie.

“Forgetting Sarah Marshall” is another smashing success brought to you by Judd Apatow and friends. This time it is Jason Segel’s turn to shine and he certainly does not dissapoint with a script that is both laugh out loud funny and emotionally honest.

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While one has come to expect Jonah Hill, Paul Rudd, and even Segel himself to be on point because of their past turns in other Apatow produced comedies, it is the newcomers that really impress.

Like Christpher Mint-Plaisse as Fogel in “Superbad” it is the ability to find new and original comedic voices that have largely contributed to the success of past Apatow movies like “Superbad”, “Knocked up”, and even “40 year old virgin”.

“Sarah Marshall” introduces the british Comedian Russell Brand to American audiences as Aldous Snow the ultra-ridiculous british rockstar/new boyfriend of Sarah Marshall. Brand has dynamite comic timing and is certainly willing to do anything for a laugh. His interactions with Jonah Hill whose character is obsessed with him are both creepy and laugh out loud funny.

the other real suprise is Mila Kunis. While I enjoyed her as jackie on “That 70’s Show”, her work here is truly relevatory. While she is essentially playing the requiste “dream girl” she is able to give the part some real depth while giving the movie a real warmth.

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The other standout for me was Bill Hader who is funnier everytime I see him. Most will probably recognize him from his work in Superbad as Seth Rogen’s partner and in this he plays segel’s step-brother who is not afraid to tell Peter exactly how it is.

I also feel I need to mention Kristen Bell who plays Sarah Marshall. While the role is rather thankless she is quite funny and gives the character real bite. She also nails perhaps the most honest scene I have ever seen in a romantic comedy when she finally tells Peter why it didnt work between them. Both actors shine in the scene, but her work is both honest and heartbreaking and gives her character a depth that I certainly was not expecting.

This one is highly recommended
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Julius Caesar Movie Streaming

março 7th, 2010 by russell4993102
Julius Caesar Movie Streaming. Julius Caesar Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: Julius Caesar
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What do Moses, Ben-Hur, and Antony have in common? Answer: They all look like Charlton Heston.

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If somehow you missed the play or the history, basically Julius Caesar let his status go to his head and is about to take on the role of emperor. It is up to a handful of Noble Romans to see that this does not happen. The play is about these individuals, their individual purposes and what happens to them after the attempt to stop him. The focus is on Caesar’s right arm (Mark Antony).

This is a 1970 rendition of Shakespeare’s play “Julius Caesar” that is well adapted for the screen. Hence the characters are well known contemporaries. You will notice the major players and might miss some of the others such as Preston Lockwood (Trebonius) who played the Judge in “Strong Poison” ASIN: B000062XDY. With many movies the actor out shine the character and totally changes the emphasis of the story. However this version is well done with maybe the exception of Jason Robards (Brutus) who sometimes seems like Jason Robards playing Brutus at other times he is quite exceptional. Diana Rigg (Portia) who looks like a little girl is the only person that sounds like she is speaking in meter. Everyone speaks clearly and pauses long enough for you to think before moving on. Facial expressions are important to the story and they do not look like they are yelling at you (except in speeches).

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You will notice that the back ground music is also of 70’s vantage and is used to emphasize certain scenes. However the volume is not so high that you can not hear the clear pronunciation of the lines. Also the costumes made with satin are distracting. At one point Antony looks like Carol Burnett when she was wearing a curtain and left the rod in.

As the play proceeds you will be so wrapped up in it that you will not care about the little differences in form and be totally absorbed in the film. There may be better versions and/or more favorite versions but that doe not make this version any less worth having.

Julius Caesar ~ Marlon Brando

For any version of William Shakespeare’s JULIUS CAESAR to be a success, the actor playing Marcus Antonius must give an outstanding “I’ve come to bury Caesar” soliloquy. Charlton Heston does exactly this– his emotionally-charged and finely-timed rendition of a most crucial speech is superb and leaves no doubt in the viewer’s mind of the underlying message being conveyed to Romans who have lent him their ears. On so many levels, Heston in fact -is- this great Shakespearean anti-hero.

That Jason Robards was miscast as Marcus Junius Brutus is an opinion held even by Mr. Heston himself. Robards’ quiet, self-involved portrayal of Brutus may not immediately serve the story’s needs, but later, the contrast between an indecisive Brutus and the take-charge Antony is that much better delineated, due entirely to Robards supposedly vague approach. His Brutus, as played against Heston is appropriate; in fact, Robards should be given more credit for a daring interpretation of this complex character.

Excellent Technicolor photography, a nicely unobtrusive score and top notch casting make this “Julius Caesar” an elegant and memorable film.

Also set in Roman times, TITUS, with Anthony Hopkins (as Titus Andronicus), is a startling and superlative adaptation of Shakespeare’s darkest play.

Parenthetical number prior to title is a 1 to 10 viewer poll rating found at a film research website.

(6.0) Julius Caesar (UK-1970) - Charlton Heston/Jason Robards/John Gielgud/Richard Johnson/Robert Vaughn/Richard Chamberlain/Diana Rigg/Christopher Lee/Jill Bennett
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Jeremiah Johnson Streaming

março 7th, 2010 by russell4993102
Jeremiah Johnson Streaming. Jeremiah Johnson Streaming.

Movie Title: Jeremiah Johnson
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This movie is one of several fascinating historical threads that I have been following since I first saw it as a 12-year old and loved it. First, it is based on the actual life of a mountain man named John Johnston, later changed to Johnson, and known in the West from the mid-1840s as Liver-Eating Johnson (see the book “Crow Killer” published 1958, R.W. Thorp & R. Bunker). I did not know this until recently and assumed it was all fiction. He was a huge man for his time, 6′2″ and 240 pounds in his early 20’s, had fists the size of baked hams and was best in hand-to-hand fighting with his 16″ Bowie knife. Thorp and Bunker based the book on first-person interviews with several mountain men and others who had known of him, including, surprisingly, the famous photographer of the 1870’s West, W.H. Jackson (photographer for the Hayden Expedition and famous for the first photograph of Mount of the Holy Cross near Vail, Colorado), but the real detail being furnished by an old mountain man named White-Eye Anderson, who told the story to R.W.T. in 1941 when he was in his 90’s. After Johnson’s Flathead wife was murdered on the Musselshell in Montana by a band of young Crow braves, Johnson “took the trail” on the entire Crow nation. His calling card, for over 20 years of butchery on the Crows, was to remove the liver of every Crow he killed and eat it. The Crows called him “Dapiek Absaroka”. Vardis Fischer, on whose book this movie is based, “borrowed” as well certain scenes from a book written in the 1840’s called “Life in the Far West” by George Ruxton, a first-person account of life in and near the Colorado Rockies. This movie does a fine job with a subset of Johnston’s life, leaving out his service in the Civil War, and his later life as a town marshal and finally, his death in an old veterans home in Los Angeles. I got the notion that Fischer’s book bordered on plagiarism after reading Ruxton, and after reading Crow Killer it seems all Fischer did was change Johnson’s name to Jeremiah and slap on a cover with his name on it. The movie also leaves out that Johnson spies, among the pile of bones that was his wife outside the cabin, a round object about the size of an orange - the skull of his unborn baby. He collects the bones of wife and baby and puts them in an iron pot and inters them behind carefully mortised rocks near the cabin; a shrine, his “kittle ‘o bones” those closest to him called it (never in his presence) he visits over the years. Will Geer’s character, near as I kin figger, is based on a friend of Johnson’s named “Bear Claw” Chris Lapp, a man known to say, when presented with grizzly claws his mountain man friends collected for him to make necklaces of, “Great Jehosophat! Pocahontas and John Smith!” The Crazy Woman, one of the most sympathetic characters I have ever seen in a movie, was in real life the wife of John Morgan, a foolish homesteader on the Oregon Trail who quarreled with the wagon master and took off on his own only to be tomahawked and scalped alive by Crows, his daughter raped and scalped alive, and his two young sons killed. Mrs Morgan, having killed several of the Indians with an axe yet driven insane by the loss, lived on the Musselshell and was cared for by Johnson and his fellow mountain men for years. The movie leaves out the little detail that she and Johnson beheaded the Crow corpses and set them on stakes at each corner of the graveyard where she buried her children, the weathered skulls a powerful medicine for the Crows ever after. It was the Crow’s deference to this insane white woman living in their midst that finally convinced Johnson to call off his vendetta against them, after having killed nearly 400 Crow warriors. Liver-Eating Johnson’s grave (and here I borrow heavily from “Crow Killer”) is in a cemetary off of Sepulveda Boulevard (interesting, that. One of Johnson’s comrades was a huge black-bearded Hispanic named “Big Anton Sepulveda”) in a section called San Juan Hill, row D, 2nd stone from the road reads “Jno. Johnston, Co. H, 2nd Colo. Cav.”. Get the movie and enjoy it; it’s a true story. Only took me 30 years to find that out.

He was a big man, maybe even growing in physical stature with the growth of his myth; deadly with his Bowie knife and his gun alike. Formerly a fighter in the U.S.-Mexican war, he had left the lowland’s ways behind in favor of a mountain man’s: the lonesome hunt, the wild outdoors, and the confrontation with nature rather than his fellow men. And he came to be known as “Crow Killer” and “Liver Eating Johns(t)on” when he took war to the Crow nation after they killed his wife.

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Based on Raymond Thorp/Robert Bunker’s “Crow Killer” and Vardis Fisher’s “Mountain Man” and scripted by John Milius and Edward Anhalt - with input from frequent Redford/Pollack cooperator David Rayfiel - Sydney Pollack’s and Robert Redford’s 1972 movie loosely traces the mythical hunter’s legend, opening with his arrival at the fort where he buys his first horse and gun. “Ride due west as the sun sets. Turn left at the Rocky Mountains,” is a trader’s goodnatured answer to Johnson’s naive inquiry where to find “bear, beaver and other critters worth cash money when skinned.” But soon he finds that his lowland skills no longer do him any good, almost starving in the freezing mountainous winter before being taken in by old “griz” hunter Bear Claw Chris Lapp (Will Geer in a stand-out role - his and Redford’s deadpan exchanges alone make this movie worth its price).

Setting out on his own again the following year Johnson fares better, even gaining the respect of a Crow warrior prosaically named Paints His Shirt Red (Joaquin Martinez), the first person he encountered in the mountains. After assisting a settler’s wife who had to watch her family massacred by Indians (Allyn Ann McLerie) and reluctantly agreeing to take charge of her son (Josh Albee) - a boy grown mute by the horrors he witnessed, whom he names Caleb - he comes across white hunter Del Gue (Stefan Gierasch), buried up to his head in sand by a band of Blackfeet. Revenging that act unwittingly leaves Johnson with a wife, in exchange for bestowing the Blackfeet’s ponies and guns on Flathead chief Two-Tongues-Lebeaux (Richard Angarola): the chief’s daughter Swan (Delle Bolton). Although neither embraces the match enthusiastically, over time Jeremiah and Swan learn to appreciate and, eventually, love each other. But then fate strikes: Against better judgment pressured into guiding a cavalry company through Crow burial ground, Johnson finds Swan and Caleb murdered upon his return. He sets out after the Crow who invaded his home … and plants the seeds of his myth.

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“Jeremiah Johnson” was Redford’s and Pollack’s second of seven collaborations after 1966’s “This Property is Condemned.” What most obviously characterizes this movie is the breathtaking manner in which its cinematography uses Utah’s mountains (doubling for the story’s actual Montana setting): despite studio budgetary limits shot entirely on location, the film had Redford acting as a virtual tour guide to the magnificent Wasatch, which he had recently made his home himself.

But the movie also shows enormous restraint, particularly given its violent underlying story. There’s no blood-gushing “Braveheart”-style, no dramatic score; fights are mostly one-on-one, occurring as they would in real life - silently, with only the opponents’ grunts being heard - and despite his fearsome epithet we never actually see Johnson eat a dead Crow warrior’s liver. (Reportedly a script change on which Redford insisted: wisely so.) Similarly, Johnson’s and Swan’s relationship builds on small symbolic gestures, moving from his coarse attempts to teach her English and refusal to learn her language to conversations in Salish (Flathead); and from her submissive expectation of his exercising his marital rights on their wedding night (which rather repulses him) to later-exchanged tender glances and smiles: Thus, we only learn about their marriage’s belated consummation when one morning Swan points to his beard in response to his question about her reddish cheeks. - Further, there’s no dramatic conclusion; no final battle: as Johnson’s myth begins to grow and he withdraws deeper and deeper into the mountains, he retraces his steps and meets in reverse order the people he encountered after his arrival: Del Gue, the settler now living in Caleb’s mother’s cabin, Bear Claw Chris Lapp; and finally Paints His Shirt Red who, although a Crow, created a monument in Johnson’s honor and sends him off with a last salute, which Johnson reciprocates; ending the movie in an immortalizing freeze-frame shot - again, a feature insisted on by Redford, doubtlessly reminiscent of “Butch and Sundance” (and repeated one way or another in several subsequent movies).

Despite its languid pace and although just under two hours long, “Jeremiah Johnson” formally takes an epic approach, complete with overture, entr’acte and narrator (uncredited, but I’m told Redford’s “Brubaker”-costar Tim McIntire), whose subtle voiceovers and brief songs provide key narrative bridges. While the latter match the movie’s overall style and the overture at least corresponds with Johnson’s mythical stature - albeit also setting up ultimately unfulfilled expectations of a dramatic finale - adding an entr’acte may have been a bit much, particularly in the middle of the ride through the Crow burial ground (incidentally a screenplay addition designed to give the Indians a reason to punish Johnson and not make them appear as mindless killers). In my view this breaks the dramatic tension rather than enhancing it; problematic insofar as virtually all that remains thereafter is Johnson’s gradual withdrawal into the mountains and fights with the Crow. But no matter. This is a terrific movie, featuring great banter with Johnson’s fellow hunters as well as some wonderfully delicate scenes with Swan, showcasing some of North America’s most dramatically beautiful scenery, and growing on you more and more the more often you watch it.

And some say he’s up there still …

“The way that you wander is the way that you choose. The day that you tarry is the day that you lose. Sunshine or thunder, a man will always wonder where the fair wind blows …”

(Lyrics, Jeremiah Johnson’s theme.)

Also recommended:

Crow Killer: The Saga of Liver-Eating Johnson (Midland Book)

Mountain Man: A Novel of Male and Female in the Early American West

The Redrock Chronicles: Saving Wild Utah (Center Books on Space, Place, and Time)

Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here

Audubon: Grizzly & Man

A River Runs Through It (Deluxe Edition)

These Rare Lands
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Stream Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses Online

março 7th, 2010 by russell4993102
Stream Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses Online. Stream Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses Online.

Movie Title: Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses
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Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses is available for streaming or downloading.

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A nice return to good Barbie movies. This is (loosely) based on the fairy tale of the 12 dancing princesses. Rewritten and remodelled for a Barbie-style ballet movie.

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Genivieve is the 7th of 12 princesses. Her father calls for the Duchess Rowena to look after them as his wife is dead. The duchess has plans of her own, and with her strong-man servant and her monkey, she works to take over the kingdom and get rid of the 12 daughters. She starts by taking all the fun and colour out of their lives, trying to quash their spirit.

Genivieve, however, discovers a secret magical kingdom below the floor of their bedroom where the princesses can escape at night and dance the night away until morning. They have their dancing shoes from Eric, the Cobbler who also happens to be extremely gorgeous and nice - and not a little in love with Genivieve. When Rowena discovers the secret stairwell she seeks to trap the princesses down there forever. But toghether they escape, and rush to save their father who Rowena is attempting to kill.

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It is a lovely movie, there is lots of dancing which is beautifully done given there are twelve characters it is easy to form nice chorus lines etc. 3 are little Kelly sized girls, there are 2 teenagers and the other 7 are adult sized. There could be some confusion, luckily they are named alphabetically from A to L according to age - unfortunately many have very un=princessy names like Lacey, Hadley and Courtenay.

The animation is lovely although there is an odd piece of oddity in the filming. For some reason near the end when Genivieve is luring Desmond away from his post she seems to go out of focus slightly, it might be my particular player.

There are some nice extra features, the making of the movie is excellent and my children were fascinated by it.

I really like the toning down of colours. The castle and environs looked colourful without the overwhelming brightness of some of the earlier movies.

Overall this is a great fun movie which my children have enjoyed a number of times and I also enjoyed. It can be watched many times and still find something new. I just hope that the Barbie makers will be working on another singing movie. the Princess and the Pauper still rates as the top Barbie movie ever - the songs were inspired and fun. My only real gripe on this movie is the enormous number of merchandise from this - 12 characters!

Before we first rented one of the Barbie videos for my daughter, I was expecting them to be trite, over-commercialised, and over-sugary. However, I have been pleasantly surprised.

Yes, they do have a lot of commercial spin-offs and a high saccarine count, but the quality of the Barbie films we have subsequently bought or rented, including “12 Dancing Princesses,” was significantly higher than I had expected. They have not just kept my children engrossed for hours - including my son as well as my daughter - but introduced them to some beautiful stories and truly wonderful music. On more than one occasion I have been listening to a CD of a classic such as Beethoven’s pastoral symphony, or The Queen of the Night’s aria from Mozart’s magic flute, and my daughter has recognised and expressed appreciation of the music, and correctly remembered which Barbie film had used it. (”Magic of Pegasus” and “Mermaidia” respectively.)

The soundtrack to “Twelve Dancing Princesses” is mostly adapted from some of Mendelsohn’s best work, including “A Midsummer night’s dream” and the Scottish and Italian symphonies. It also includes a lullaby sung to the King by the 12 princesses which was based on a 16th century anthem by Byrd, the recording of which was sung beautifully by Melissa Lyons and the Women’s Occidental Glee club.

The story is loosely based on the children’s story. “Barbie” plays “Princess Genevieve”, the seventh of 12 daughters of a widowed King (e.g. seven young women, plus a pair of twins who appear to be about 11 and a set of triplets who appear to be about 6.) Like the original, the story is about 12 princesses who having been banned from dancing, sneak off every night through a magic passage and take a magic barge to a special island where they can dance all night. However, in this version the killjoy who tries to stop them dancing is not the King their father, who loves them very much, but his cousin, Duchess Rowena, who he has brought to the palace to be their tutor. At first even the princesses do not realise quite what a bad mistake this was …

As with many of the Barbie films, comic relief is provided by talking animal companions of some of the principal characaters. In this case Princess Genevieve has a pet cat, and the evil Duchess Rowena has an equally evil pet monkey, Brutus. The hero, who in this version is the royal cobbler, Derek, has a pet parrot, who for some reason talks with a greatly exaggerated Indian accent. (That’s Indian from the subcontinent, not native American.)

Those people who enjoy criticising what the Barbie franchise represents will not have much difficulty finding things in this production to sneer at. If you, or more importantly your kids, are allergic to an excess of twee sweetness, then this film and the Barbie videos generally may not be for them. And the female characters are all on the thin side of plausibility: I’m not worried that watching this is going to give my daughter anorexia as she likes food too much and has a good sense of the difference between fantasy and reality, but if you are worried that your children may be forming an unrealistic idea about how thin a healthy body shape is, that is a concern with this film.

But on the plus side: it is beautifully made, it will hold the attention of most small children for long enough for the typical exhausted parent to clear the mess they have made in several rooms of the house or collapse for an hour’s rest after doing so. Alternatively there are enough more sophisticated jokes thrown in that you won’t be completely bored to death if you decide to watch it with your offspring. And best of all, the soundtrack is almost worth buying the film for on it’s own.
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Stream The Getaway Movie Online

março 7th, 2010 by russell4993102
Stream The Getaway Movie Online. Stream The Getaway Movie Online.

Movie Title: The Getaway
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This film has it all, and I cannot understand those who say it hasn’t aged well. It’s a great bank robbery film. It’s a great prison film. It’s a great chase film. It’s a great love story. It fires on all cylinders. The depth and complexity of the story and the performances are peerless. It’s a sprawling tale over several days, with many important and complex characters, all of whom you feel you know with some depth. Even the small roles are standouts, including Ben Johnson as the crooked sherriff, and Dub Taylor in what should have been a throwaway piece playing a hotel clerk. The only weak spot for me over the years is Ali McGraw who, although beautiful and believable, seems to be playing it so minimalist that she becomes nearly transparent. But that’s a small nit to pick - her by-play with McQueen is spot on. When I saw it for the first time the first thought that came into my mind was “these kids really look and act MARRIED…” which is a tough bit of business to play. Their violent love for one another is the undercurrent here, their desire to simply be left alone, to make it in life, to get away from their problems.

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The artistry is in the details, in the small brush strokes - the way McQueen holds and uses his .45 automatic are perfect. He is definitely more than just another actor handed a pistol and said “Here, hold this…” Slim Pickens has a tiny gem of a role at the end and in a few brief sentences we learn volumes about his sweet, sad life, and cheer his good fortune for running into our heroes. The Sherriff’s flunky sidekicks provide some honest humor, all big cowboy hats and beer guts crammed into a Cadillac convertible.

McQueen was such an artist, and this is a real masterpiece of his almost haiku way of acting. He’s the master of the small gesture, the subtle glance, the deadpan line that just turns you cold inside. What a shame he left us so soon. The Getaway stands as a real testament to his genius.

Unpredictable, volatile, abrasive, and the only man Charlton Heston ever threaten on a set of a movie (Major Dundee)…I’m talking about `Bloody’ Sam Peckinpah…love him or hate him, the man knew how to tell a story, one that could entertain not only the average film patron with loads of action and violence, but also the haughty, oft-times snobby film critics with his thoughtful and insightful characterizations…actually, I think these same, snobby critics actually got off secretly on being able to enjoy the more visceral elements of his films while still being able to tout them on a cerebral level…like a guilty pleasure without the guilt. But that’s not to say Peckinpah’s films were always critically accepted…I know his film Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974) took a beating, but I enjoyed the hell out of it, in all its glorious dirty, sweaty, dust-caked, fly-ridden seediness…based on a novel by Jim Thompson (The Grifters) and adapted for the screen by Walter Hill (The Warriors, 48 Hrs.), The Getaway (1972) stars Steve McQueen (The Magnificent Seven, The Great Escape), the man many believe to be the penultimate in machismo and cool, on and off the screen. Co-starring with McQueen is the very beautiful Ali MacGraw (Love Story, Convoy), who became so enamored with her co-star she actually left her husband at the time, movie producer Robert Evans, to be with McQueen, and thus gave up the opportunity to star in several high profile films like Chinatown (1974) and The Great Gatsby (1974)…yes, the lure of the McQueen is a strong one…also appearing is Peckinpah favorite Ben Johnson (Major Dundee, The Wild Bunch, Junior Bonner), quintessential heavy Al Lettieri (The Godfather, Mr Majestyk), Sally Struthers (Five Easy Pieces), whose most recent work include the tearful pleas to feed the starving children (which would probably be a lot more effective if she wasn’t so heavyset…there I said it), Slim Pickens (Blazing Saddles), Richard Bright (The Godfather), `Rub a Dub’ Dub Taylor (The Wild Bunch), Jack `Howard Sprague’ Dodson (”The Andy Griffith Show”), and Bo ‘Knows’ Hopkins (The Wild Bunch, White Lightning).

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The film begins with scenes of a Texas prison, focusing on one inmate in particular, that of Carter ‘Doc’ McCoy (McQueen), who’s in his fourth year a ten-year stretch for bank robbery. After being denied parole, Doc agrees to cut a deal with a politically powerful and corrupt individual named Jack Beynon (Johnson), who just happens to also be a member of the parole board (that’s convenient). The deal involves, on being released from prison, that McCoy pull a bank job for Beynon, which he does, and while McCoy’s meticulous planning nets the robbers a large amount of cash, things quickly fall apart as there’s a couple of jokers in the deck (one of them being one of the men McCoy got saddled with by Beynon), and the double cross is in, but McCoy isn’t going down without a struggle, and he’s certainly not going back to the joint. Now McCoy and his wife Carol (MacGraw) must make their way to El Paso with the money, avoiding capture by the authorities (by this time McCoy’s face is plastered all over the news), Beynon’s trigger-happy goons, and one of the aforementioned jokers, all in a effort to make it safely across the border into Mexico.

While not my favorite Peckinpah film (I’ve always been partial to The Wild Bunch), The Getaway is still an excellent film with strong themes and just an all around entertaining story, assisted by superior cast. One thing I’ve noticed about Peckinpah is his ability to relate important aspects of story through visual means, carefully crafted shots and sequences, and make it look easy. A perfect example in this movie is the opening sequences with McQueen’s character in prison. We learn much about him, and feel a sense of the frustration and oppressive nature of his incarceration on his mental well-being to where desperation finally pushes him to the point of doing something he would normally wouldn’t in that of working for Beynon. Of course, this wouldn’t have worked as well with out McQueen playing the role, as his presence is the strong point throughout the film. I’ve heard some comment of MacGraw’s acting abilities (or lack of), but I think this was just a case of having to share the screen with McQueen, and who could complete with that? Not many…I think she did really well, avoiding some over dramatic pitfalls others would have succumbed to in the role…and then there’s supporting cast and the sense they were truly hand picked for their roles, providing, complex, distinctive, and believable characters. I’ve also heard complaints about how the story drags at certain points, and the action sequences uneven and too short, but I’d disagree. I thought the strength was in the quiet moments before the storm, the pacing intentional, to allow for the audience to develop an understanding of the characters and see them not as two-dimensional constructs but living, breathing individuals willing to do what they have in order to get what they want…to me, the action sequences, while certainly a draw for me to this film, were a part of a much larger piece. There were a couple of really interesting aspects about this movie for me, one being that while Peckinpah’s trademark usage of slow motions shots during the violent sequences is present, it seemed a little toned down from some of his other films, but that wasn’t a bad thing. The 2nd aspect was the sort of upbeat ending, which was a real departure given that many of Peckinpah’s films are permeated with fatalistic characters draw down inevitable paths of self-destruction. Some scenes to watch for…Steve McQueen going to town with a shotgun…oh yeah, kiss that squad car good-bye (quite a few cars were killed in the making of this film)…Steve McQueen slugging Sally Struthers in the mouth…hey, you can’t have a Peckinpah film without a little misogyny, and while I would never advocate the use of violence against a woman, I doubt there’d be few who wouldn’t agree that her highly annoying (and fairly sleazy) character was somewhat deserving…all in all this is a great film (much better than the 1994 Kim Bassinger/Alec Baldwin remake, in my opinion), with an exceptional script, acting, and direction, one that entertained me throughout, and reaffirms my belief of the possibilities of the cinema when in the hands of people who know (or knew) what they’re doing…

The picture, presented in widescreen anamorphic (2.40:1), enhanced for 16 X 9 televisions, looks sharp and clean, and the Dolby Digital 1.0 audio comes through very well. The `Deluxe Edition’, which is the one I have, has a few extra features in that of a commentary track with producer Nick Redman, and Peckinpah biographers/historians Paul Seydor, Garner Simmons, and David Weddle. Also included is an original theatrical trailer, along with a `virtual’ audio commentary track with Sam Peckinpah, Steve McQueen, and Ali MacGraw that consists of 1972 audio interview material from the three, spliced together and played over the film.

Cookieman108

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Watch Troy - The Director’s Cut Movie Online

março 7th, 2010 by russell4993102
Watch Troy - The Director's Cut Movie Online. Watch Troy - The Director’s Cut Movie Online.

Movie Title: Troy - The Director’s Cut
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Troy - The Director’s Cut is available for streaming or downloading.

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As a teacher of Classical Greek and Roman Mythology I was looking forward to “Troy.” In the past I have put together a unit on the Trojan War that included not only Homer’s epic poem the “Iliad,” but also the plays of Euripides and Aeschylus and other ancient works on the stories of these characters. In other words I am familiar with this story to the extent that when Briseis showed up wearing a garment with long sleeves I was upset that we did not get to see the lovely arms that were part of her usual epithet. So, suffice it to say, that when characters who survived the Trojan War started dying in this film, I was not exactly happy. Consequently, the truth is that the less you know about the Trojan War of classical mythology, the more you will enjoy Wolfgang Petersen’s “Troy.”

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I have no problem with the idea that Homer and the other ancients have to be adapted in making a modern motion picture about the Trojan War. The decision to eliminate the gods is appropriate, getting away from the idea that this was a ten year war makes sense, and if the alliance of the Greeks is now political rather than as part of an oath sworn by the princes who were suitors for Helen’s hand, I consider that to be legitimate. I do not understand why Iphigenia, Cassandra, and Hecuba are all eliminated but there are not fatal omissions. But when you start rewriting who gets killed that is going a bit too far, especially when one premature death starts a chain effect that means Athens will never develop the jury system, which means we probably lose out on it too. David Benioff’s screenplay was “inspired” by Homer’s “Iliad,” which at least is an honest way to characterize what he did in this script, but I still do not have to like it or endorse it.

The big selling point for this film was not Homer but rather Brad Pitt as Achilles. Stories abound about how Pitt worked six months to get in shape for this film, gave up smoking, and ended up hurting his Achilles tendon in one of those profound ironies that indicates that maybe the gods were not pleased with what was happening in this film. Pitt certainly looks good, not just in terms of taking several opportunities to display the line of his nude body, but in how he carries himself as Achilles. The whole idea is that this guy is the greatest warrior on the face of the planet and Pitt exudes that with the way he strides across the sands of Troy. Even more impressive is the choreography for the fights, because Pitt’s movements are so smooth and powerful, especially compared with that of Eric Bana’s Hector, that you do not doubt that this guy is in a league by himself as a warrior. I also like the way he uses the distinctive form of his shield when fighting. They thought this part out quite a bit.

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The fight choreography was worked out by Simon Crane, the film’s stunt coordinator and second unit director, who describes Achilles as fighting with a boxing style but with the velocity of a speed skater and the agility of a panther. They also come up with a nice touch in that Achilles looks slightly to the side at his opponent until he is ready to come in for the kill. The best fight sequences of “Troy” are when Achilles is fighting. The giant battle sequences of computerized soldiers are not as impressive, mainly because the camera is always in motion and the cutting is so fast that we are left with an impression of the battle rather than always being able to tell what is going on (which has become my constant complaint with most movies with large battle sequences).

Bana does a good job of capturing Hector’s nobility without turning him into a marble statue, while Peter O’Toole fills the role of Priam naturally. On the Trojan side the problematic character is Paris (Orlando Bloom), again because of the writing more than the performance. Priam has negotiated peace between Troy and the Sparta of King Menelaus (Brendan Gleeson), but that is destroyed when Paris persuades Helen (Diane Kruger) to run away with him. Both Hector and Priam know that Paris is wrong and their reasons for supporting him and thereby dooming Troy ring hollow (the less than stellar “Helen of Troy” television miniseries did a nice job of providing a solid motivation for the Trojans to protect Helen).

It you want to draw a clear distinction between Homer’s story of Achilles and that of Benioff it is that the former is about the rage of Achilles (see the first line of the “Iliad”) and the latter adds an equally strong love element. The one character whose role is most inflated in this version is that of Briseis (Rose Byrne), the Trojan slave girl who comes between Achilles and Agamemnon (Brian Cox), the king of kings for the Greeks. This change becomes the reasoning behind how the film rewrites the end game of the Trojan War, although I still do not understand why some of the key characters get to live happily ever after. But since Pitt’s performance dominates the film and he is clearly the horse that director Wolfgang Petersen is riding to make the whole thing work, it makes sense that he has to be around until the very end.

The good news is that when I teach mythology after this DVD comes out my students will probably enjoy attacking Benioff’s changes in the original stories of Greek mythology in their papers. I think this will definitely help them understand why the writings of Homer and the other ancients are considered classics.

Features 2 new extras: “Troy In Focus” a 23 minute interview and a new 5 minute introduction by Wolfgang Peterson. Most of the other special features have been ported over from the previous edition.

First the most important question is whether or not this double dip is worth it? Absolutely because the additional footage only enhances the film giving it additional depth. The transfer is striking (regardless of which format)as well. In many respects this isn’t a double dip because we get a film that is superior to the original version.

Unlike “The Illiad” Wolfgang Petersen’s film “Troy” seemed too short and for good reason; Petersen had to trim the film down to a shorter length for its theatrical release. Luckily Warner gave Petersen the opportunity to revisit this epic film and add more meat to the bones of a film that had the look of an epic but was missing much of the emotional depth.

Petersen restores roughly 32 minutes to the film giving additional depth to the various relationships in the film. While “Troy” isn’t a perfect epic, it’s much improved. James Horner’s score is still occasionally obtrusive but the overall impact of Petersen’s film with its marvelous performances from Brian Cox (who steals almost every scene he’s in), the quiet power of Eric Bana and even the gravity of Pitt as Achilles is far more effective than the previous version.

Image quality is superb for both the DVD and Blu Ray verisons of the film (the Blu Ray, of course, gets the nod because the images are much sharper, crisper with better definition but the DVD isn’t too shabby either). Audio for the Blu Ray is presented lossless while the DVD’s audio sounds terrific given the limitations of the format. Colors are a bit bolder here than on the previous version to my eyes.

It appears that a lot of the special features from the previous edition have been ported over and the only new things are the introduction by Petersen as well as a retrospective 23 minute interview where Petersen discusses the genesis of the original film and this project.

This film version much more closely resembles what he had in mind when he took on the project. Greek mythology purists will find some of the changes disturbing but some of the changes enhance the film pulling the strands of the story together a little tighter.
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Watch The Scarlet Letter Online

março 7th, 2010 by russell4993102
Watch The Scarlet Letter Online. Watch The Scarlet Letter Online.

Movie Title: The Scarlet Letter
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I’ve avoided this movie for the longest time because Demi Moore was in it. Isn’t that silly? Even though I’ve enjoyed many of her movies, I just couldn’t believe that a movie this important with her in it would receive the historic treatment it deserved. I could not have been more wrong. I was deeply engrossed from the first scene, and could not tear myself away. Demi herself is amazing, but the screenplay and the scenery, the production and the details pulled me right into the story and would not let me go until the very last scene — and I absolutely loved the ending! This is an amazing work of art — and I’m glad I finally had a chance to see it. Once I had, I knew I had to add it to my library — a collection of what I consider to be only the best representations of our culture and our history.

There’s a disclaimer which flashes on the screen at the beginning of this 1995 film. It says it is “freely adapted from the novel” by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Then it goes on to tell the famous story through the eyes of twentieth century feminism, sexual freedom and politically correct happy endings. I must admit I never did read the book, but I’ve long been aware of the general plot, set in 1666, of an adulteress forced to wear the scarlet letter “A”.

Demi Moore is cast as Hester Pryne, the adulteress, and we all know what’s going to happen to her. She’s been sent to America to establish a home; her husband is supposed to be following soon. She shocks the good people of the Massachusetts Bay Colony when she insists on living alone, with the help of a couple of bondsmen and a female black slave. I doubt if Hawthorne’s book then had the local minister, played by Gary Oldman, do a little nude swimming on Hester’s property. I also doubt that Hawthorne had her peeking, getting excited and sensuously soaking in a bathtub, displaying her own nude body and thinking about the pastor. The couple declare their love for each other but it is only after they think her husband dead that they consummate their relationship. Her pregnancy is a crime and she spends the last six months of her confinement in a horrible prison. Then she is forced to wear the scarlet letter and is shunned by all. She refuses to name her lover, and so Oldman sulks around town, looking guilty but keeping his mouth shut. This is a great role for any actress, but Demi Moore just can’t handle it. She might have a nice body but the expression on her face seems to be frozen, incapable of the subtleties, passion and despair that the role calls for. Gary Oldman is slightly better, but his portrayal of the weakling pastor is also one-dimensional.

The film is saved, however, by the role of Robert Duvall, who appears late, but yet steals the show with his impassioned portrayal of the wronged husband bent on revenge. He dominates every scene he’s in and a single expression on his face tells more about his character than the combined performances of the rest of the entire cast. The story is a good one, and it moved fast enough to hold my interest, especially since there were some action scenes added that Hawthorne had probably never intended. That’s why I can’t recommend it unless you’re willing to just relax and watch a well-plotted historical romance with mediocre acting.
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Confessions of a Shopaholic Streaming

março 6th, 2010 by russell4993102
Confessions of a Shopaholic Streaming. Confessions of a Shopaholic Streaming.

Movie Title: Confessions of a Shopaholic
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I went out and read the book to see what this movie was all about. I liked the book and looked forward to the movie. I found a lot of negative reviews but most went along the lines of “in these times…” which annoys me because generally you shouldn’t judge a movie by the economic times it comes out in.

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If you go to the movie expecting something resembling the book, you will be disappointed. The book is about 90% different than the movie and in the book Rebecca was much more believable as just an every day person getting into debt. If I remember correctly in the book Becky got an advance after graduation and just got into the habit of spending until it had grown well past what she had in the bank. But it was not so bad that she seemed irresponsible. In the book she is a valued reporter at successful savings from the start. And Luke Brandon was just someone she knew as a reporter. Overall a much stronger and independent woman in the book (oh and it was all set in London).

Here, um not so much. Her spending is very out of control for no reason and she starts off at a gardening magazine. Since she seems to have no interest in reporting (other than to get to fashion :: SUPER CLICHE’:::) and indeed takes a job at successful savings to attempt to get into a fashion magazine, she comes off a bit flighty and selfish. I felt bad for all those serious girls in the waiting room who wanted the job at Sucessful Savings — that went to Becky because she wanted to shop. Fortunately, in the movie, for someone so hapless she gets a charming handsome editor who thinks she is pretty and thinks most of what she does is great.

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Of course the movie ends in kind of the “tootsie” live tv moment where Becky is outed as being in big debt (while in the book it is Becky who takes Brandon to task on tv for one of his companys taking advantage of ordinary folks ) but in the movie everyone loves her anyway after proving to be a fraud.

I guess the *current economic times* comes into play in that Becky in the movie is the person we all hate. The person who got the too big for her to pay mortgage even though she knew, or should have, there was no way to pay for it, the person who got into debt and is now declaring bankruptcy… yet, this movie gives her the dreamy Hugh Dancy as reward. And in the movie, Becky never seems remorseful, yet in the book she really is.

I might have enjoyed this more had I not read the book. To see a strong independent Becky there kind of makes me frustrated that things were so changed here.

I have a confession to make…every now and then I love to see movies that are purely frivolous, just plain fun and, well, on the girly side. Confessions of a Shopaholic is the perfect combination of these qualities. It’s full of silly, completely ridiculous situations, witty dialogue, slapstick humor and lighthearted entertainment that reminds every girl about the excitement, and danger, of shopping.

Isla Fisher plays Rebecca Bloomwood, a shopping-addicted New York journalist who suddenly finds herself buried under credit card debt and without a job. In order to pay off her bills and move closer to her dream, Rebecca takes a job at a finance magazine that’s all about saving money. Through a series of highly improbable, but absolutely hilarious, events Rebecca becomes the magazine’s poster girl for personal finance -while hiding overdue bills under her bed.

Shopaholic quickly becomes predictable, leaving the audience only to wonder how and when the next plot point will occur. While this may bother some film goers, I didn’t mind it because that’s the kind of movie I was expecting. It’s fun and entertaining enough to help you escape from your own credit card debt for a little while, but not phenomenal. Fisher is irresistible and will keep you wondering what kind of crazy thing she’s going to do next.

But men beware -even though Shopaholic is being produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, this movie is purely for women. The only guys who were in the theater when I went seemed like they were dragged by their significant others (except my dad, who likes Isla Fisher). The movie’s PG rating also implies that the movie is intended for families. There were a few little girls in the theater when I went, and they seemed to be having a better time than the adults. But adults be warned: there are scenes of alcohol consumption and drunkenness in the movie, but they are fairly mild.

Some people think that this movie is not appropriate for the country’s current economic condition, but I think that it teaches a good lesson. Rebecca’s credit card debit ends up ruining her life and her career so much that she is forced to change her habits and conquer her shopping addiction -sounds to me like something the average American should have learned long ago.
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