AARP Eye Center
'Jersey Boys' Headlines a Full Movie Weekend
By Bill Newcott, June 19, 2014 02:52 PM
Clint Eastwood and his Jersey boys cruise through the 1960s; Crash director Paul Haggis steers another star vehicle down the rough byways of love; and the Think Like a Man couples limo their way up the Vegas Strip during this something-for-everyone summer-movie weekend.
Jersey Boys
Clint Eastwood's screen version of the smash Broadway musical tells the story of Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons. The film revivifies most of the group's big hits but avoids becoming a mere big-screen jukebox. The cast is uniformly flawless, especially John Lloyd Young, whoses choirboy voice and good looks won him a Tony award as Frankie.
Third Person
As he did in his Oscar-winning Crash, writer/director Paul Haggis tells several overlapping stories spanning two continents, enlisting an all-star cast including Liam Neeson, James Franco, Mila Kunis, Maria Bello, Adrien Brody and Olivia Wilde. Crash was about race; Third Person seems to be about love, but not in a nice way: Everyone here is in a poisonous relationship or emerging from one.
Think Like a Man Too
The guys and gals from 2012's surprise hit Think Like a Man, based on the bestselling book by Steve Harvey, are back. This time they head to Las Vegas for a wedding and embark on a battle of the sexes to see who can have the most over-the-top prenup party. Grownup stars like Dennis Haysbert, Jennifer Lewis and George Wallace stop by, but it's the kids' night out. Kevin Hart continues his (successful) quest to become the screen's latter-day Chris Rock.
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Still Out There . . .
Belle
Handsomely filmed and beautifully acted, this true story of a half-African woman raised in an aristocrat's home at the tail end of slavery in the British Empire takes some of the hard themes studied in 12 Years a Slave and wraps them in Jane Austen finery. The luminous Gugu Mbatha-Raw plays the title role; Tom Wilkinson and Emily Watson are the conflicted blue bloods who try to balance their affection for Belle with the realities of 18th-century England. FULL REVIEW
Cold in July
This small, perfect crime thriller introduces us to a quiet Texas businessman (Michael C. Hall of TV's Dexter) brooding about fatally shooting a prowler. His guilt and regret shift to terror when the burglar's father (Sam Shepard) turns up, seemingly bent on revenge. That somewhat predictable set-up takes a quick left turn, though - and soon we're off on a chase as murky as a Texas back road on a moonless night. Don Johnson crackles as a low-rent private eye. FULL REVIEW
Edge of Tomorrow
Tom Cruise stars as a soldier who dies in a battle against space aliens, only to find himself in a time loop that plops him back into that same fateful day over and over again. It's a Twilight Zone-worthy scenario that gets smart, spectacular treatment from director Doug Liman ( Swingers, The Bourne Identity). Cruise is laugh-out-loud funny in the early scenes as a cocky Army information officer. Emily Blunt is tough as nails as a fellow warrior who warms up to Cruise - after a few hundred replays. FULL REVIEW
The Fault in Our Stars
Like the bestselling John Green novel that inspired it, this young romance about two teens who meet and fall in love in a cancer-support group aims squarely at the YA (young adult) audience. But veterans Laura Dern and Willem Dafoe provide solid support for youngsters Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort, and comedian Mike Birbiglia is hilarious as a clueless support-group leader.
Godzilla
Here are two things this re-re-reboot of the 1954 Japanese classic does not have enough of:
1) Bryan Cranston
2) Godzilla
Unwisely, the star of TV's Breaking Bad makes an early exit ... and inexplicably the title character doesn't really show up until the second half. Most of the film focuses on two incredibly ugly prehistoric critters that terrorize cities on both sides of the Pacific; the G-Man arrives later, Mighty Mouse-like, to save the day.
The Immigrant
Director James Gray's lush vision of 1921 Manhattan stars Marion Cotillard as a young Polish woman forced into prostitution by a charming but evil businessman (Joaquin Phoenix). Jeremy Renner plays the guy's brother, a sensitive magician who is her only hope for escape.
Lullaby
Richard Jenkins stars as a terminal cancer patient who, after 12 years of six-months-to-live prognoses, decides to pull his own plug. Into his hospital room troop his son (Garrett Hedlund), daughter (Jessica Brown Findlay of Downton Abbey) and their mother (Anne Archer) to share regrets and recriminations. Thanks to a terrific cast (Amy Adams, Terrence Howard and Jennifer Hudson play smaller roles), first-time writer-director Andrew Levitas manages to make the sad proceedings life-affirming. FULL REVIEW
A Million Ways to Die in the West
Every time Seth McFarlane's Western satire takes a turn along its winding, dusty road, we discover that Mel Brooks got there first, 40 years ago in Blazing Saddles. There's a story about the hero (McFarlane), an out-of-place sheep farmer, preparing for an ill-advised shootout. But the film works best whenever McFarlane presents - in hilariously graphic fashion - yet another way in which the Old West can do you in.
Maleficent
Angelina Jolie is the chief attraction here. As the "evil" queen who cast that shut-eye curse on Sleeping Beauty, she gives a brainy, heartfelt performance in a movie that mostly sacrifices nuance for bombast. Director Robert Stromberg visually quotes a lot of better movies, including Fantasia, Wings of Desire and Kevin Smith's Dogma (check them out!). Jolie's stellar turn aside, however, he seems unwilling to make an emotional connection.
The Other Woman
Three betrayed women (Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann and Kate Upton) seek revenge on the guy who done them wrong (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau). But didn't First Wives Club already build this same scenario - and do it a whole lot smarter?
The Signal
Laurence Fishburne is a mysterious computer hacker who sort-of lures two MIT students and a girlfriend to his desert lair, where strange things are happening. The hacker claims it's all the fault of ETs, but he may be lying. In the end, the explanation is a lot less satisfying than cinematographer-turned-director William Eubank's often-inspired images.
Tracks
Mia Wasikowska stars as Robyn Davidson, a city dweller who became a National Geographic cover girl in 1978 after she made a solo trek across 2,000 miles of Australian outback accompanied only by her dog.
Trust Me
Writer/director Clark Gregg ( The Avengers, Iron Man) also stars as a former child star now working as an agent to other kid actors in this uneven comedy. Despite a great cast (Felicity Huffman, Allison Janney, William H. Macy, Amanda Peet, Sam Rockwell and Molly Shannon), Gregg's movie can't make up its mind: Is it a wild satire of Hollywood heartlessness? Or a solemn meditation on the victimization of children? FULL REVIEW
Words and Pictures
To this summer's list of handsome grownup couples, add Juliette Binoche and Clive Owen in a romance that's got more on its mind than boy-gets-girl. She's an art professor who thinks pictures are supreme; he's an English prof who insists words are all that. As their debate rages, we discover two damaged people who each might be able to supply the emotional elements missing from their counterpart. FULL REVIEW
X-Men: Days of Future Past
You needn't be obsessed with the X-Men mythology to be utterly caught up in this spectacular new adventure about Marvel's ultimate crime-fighting tag team. Set partly in the future and partly in the past, it's the story of how a government program to eliminate the X-Men "mutants" goes horribly awry. The team sends Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) back in time to enlist younger versions of the group to head off the carnage before it starts.
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Alan Partridge
If you know Steve Coogan only as that nice reporter man in Philomena, it's time to meet the comic genius Britain has loved for decades: Here he plays his most famous character, a fallen-from-grace TV-talk-show host reduced to being a radio DJ. When the ego-driven Partridge finds himself at the center of a hostage situation, he sees it, of course, as a vehicle for his own public redemption.
All That Heaven Allows
The ultimate 1950s "women's picture" is Douglas Sirk's sumptuously filmed story of an upper-crust woman (Jane Wyman) whose family condemns her love for a much-younger groundskeeper (Rock Hudson). Come for the suds, stay for cinematographer Russell Metty's Technicolor brilliance.
Decoding Annie Parker
Samantha Morton is the title character, whose grandmother, mother and sister all died of breast cancer - and who has just been diagnosed with it herself. Helen Hunt is the researcher who's certain there is a genetic link to some forms of breast cancer, but she keeps running into brick walls within the medical establishment. Both double-Oscar nominees, the stars make engaging work of this true story of two women who barely meet yet are intimately joined in a race against genetics. FULL REVIEW
The Grand Budapest Hotel
No filmmaker has a more fierce following than Wes Anderson ( The Royal Tenenbaums, Moonrise Kingdom). But if you've been on the fence (or clear on the other side of it) regarding Anderson, this may be the film that makes a believer of you. A dazzling vision of Europe between the wars serves as the backdrop for a dizzy story about a grand hotel concierge ( Ralph Fiennes), the lobby boy he takes under his wing (Tony Revolori) and their unwitting involvement in a murder mystery. FULL REVIEW
House of Cards Season 2
Washington's favorite schemers, Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright, return for a second round of Capital high jinks. He's a modern-day Richard III; she's Lady Macbeth reincarnated. We can't say if real-life politics are this dirty, but they can't possibly be as much fun.
Inside Llewyn Davis
Joel and Ethan Coen's most balanced movie ever is a fond look at the early 1960s Greenwich Villlage folk-music scene. Oscar Isaac is irresistibly mopey as the title character, but the real treat comes when Llewyn hitches a ride to Chicago with a blustery, bloated blues musician, played with great aplomb by John Goodman. FULL REVIEW
Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit
Tom Clancy's true-blue CIA agent returns to the screen for a fifth go-round, this time starring Chris Pine in the title role (following in the footsteps of Alec Baldwin, Harrison Ford and Ben Affleck). Pine plays a younger version of Ryan, recruited into the spy biz by a charmingly convincing Kevin Costner. Soon he's neck-deep in an adventure that takes him from Moscow to New York, matching wits with an oily villain played by Kenneth Branagh, who also directs. The action is superb, the story moves right along and it's all softened nicely by the romance between Ryan and his fiancée (Keira Knightley) - the woman Ryan can't tell what he does for a living. FULL REVIEW
L'Eclisse (The Eclipse)
Michelangelo Antonioni's 1962 masterpiece, about a free-spirited woman (Monica Vitti) who moves ruthlessly from one lover (Francisco Rabal) to another (Alain Delon), explores the modern world's determination to keep people alienated from each other. Fifty-two years later, his tocsin rings louder than ever.
The Lego Movie
There's a lot more for grownups here than you'd expect: Packed with gags and clever toy-world references, it's the story of a nondescript LEGO minifigure (voiced by Craig Berry) saving his world from an evil villain (Will Ferrell) who wants to (gasp!) glue all the blocks together, stifling creativity forever. Written and directed by a bunch of guys from TV Sitcomville ( How I Met Your Mother, Brooklyn Nine-Nine), it's fast, funny and feel-good.
The Monuments Men
George Clooney enlists Matt Damon, John Goodman, Bill Murray, Bob Balaban and Cate Blanchett to help him patrol Nazi-occupied Europe in search of stolen artworks. A greater sense of urgency would have better advanced the plot, but what's more fun than hanging out with George and his buds for two hours? FULL REVIEW
Philomena
In a season of extraordinary acting accomplishments, Judi Dench gives the performance of a lifetime as the title character, a woman seeking the son she gave up as a child. Steve Coogan, who also wrote the film's moving and disarmingly funny script, costars as the investigative reporter who helps unravel a tangle of deceit and corruption. FULL REVIEW
The Redemption of Henry Myers
Friday Night Lights costar Drew Waters (he looks like Brad Pitt's baby brother) stars as an Old West outlaw who arrives shot up real good on the porch of a widowed woman and her young children. The film's message (see title) gets laid on a tad thick, though not for the faith-based audience the movie aims to find. Even so, the engaging cast and New Mexico setting make for a fine family-friendly adventure.
True Detective: Season One
One of HBO's all-time great casting coups pairs Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey as mismatched New Orleans police detectives on the trail of a ritual killer. With more twists than a dirt road through the bayou, True Detective becomes an epic tale of two guys tracking down monsters both out there in the world and deep inside their own tortured psyches.