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Movie Reviews
- Jesse
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Amélie
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A Tale of Two Sisters
This is truly a psychological (thriller?) film if there ever was one. It's categorized as horror, though I'm still not sure if anything in the film was supposed to have been real or all just in the girls mind. Also, this movie has the best use of 5.1 I have ever heard; I mean it was amazing; they had direction on nearly every sound. If you do watch the movie, make sure you get a 5.1 version out of a 5.1 compatible system. None of this pro-logic crap.
This is a very entertaining South Korean movie (they're rare). It starts out with a girl and her sister coming back from what you assume is a mental institution to rejoin their family. Their step mom though seems to be pure evil. Soon after returning, the older daughter, Soo-mi, has a strange dream where she is in a forest of bamboo and her sister is dead, she then wakes up to something crawling on the floor. It stands up and is a dead girl, similar to that of the ring, except it has a broken neck. Soo-mi sits there in sheer terror as it climbs onto the bed. Blood starts dripping down its leg, and all of a sudden from between its legs (its wearing a skirt) an arm shoots out and grabs her leg. She then wakes up and assumes it was all a dream.
It seems as though the step mom and the daughters just can't get along, until eventually it builds up to the step mom locking Soo-yeon (the younger sister) in a wardrobe. Soo-mi comes in and lets her out, and when the father comes up to investigate, Soo-mi tells him how the step mom locked her in the wardrobe. Now here's where it gets interesting, the father replies something to the extent of 'Quit these games, Soo-yeon is dead' This is very confusing because you have seen Soo-yeon interact with a number of people(?) Especially the step mom who had locked her in the closet.
After this point, it looses all sense. I still have not quite figured out what was what, because it gets very complicated. Here's the gist of it though as I understand it (skip this if you ever plan on watching it) The step mom kills Soo-yeon (who's supposable already dead) Soo-mi goes looking for Soo-yeon and finds her dead in a sack (we don't see it but we assume its her) Then Soo-mi assumes that she actually is insane, and asks the step mom for help, at which point the step mom agrees to help her and smashes her with a statue, killing her. Then the father comes in, finds Soo-mi and the Step mom, but, now here's where everything goes to hell, the step mom comes in the door, and for a second there are two step moms in the room. It is then that the first step mom, the one who's gone on the murderous rampage realizes that in fact she is Soo-yeon (the one who the father said was dead) It then cuts to her in a mental institution again.
After this there is a flashback (I assume) of their original mom hanging her self in a wardrobe, and then the wardrobe falling on Soo-yeon and crushing her to death?
I really suggest watching this film with someone else because it is so confusing you will want to discuss it. I do believe I have done a horrible job hacking together the plot for you, so watch it and prove me wrong.
- Jesse
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Beyond the Sea
Kevin Spacey plays Bobby Darin, for those of you who don't know, was a singer from the 50-70's who had such hits as 'Splish Splash' and the aforementioned 'Beyond the Sea.'
The movie starts out with Bobby Darin filming a movie, about his life none the less. A reporter comes up to him and asks him "Aren't you too old to be playing this role?" He responds something like "Who better to play the role?" He never actually filmed a movie of his life, and it puzzled me why they would include this the first couple days after I saw it.
After this there is a flash back to when he was a young boy, the doctor was there, and told Bobbies (Not his real name) mother that he would not live past 13. It then goes through him learning music while growing up, and eventually leaving to go into the music business. He changes his name to "Bobby Darin" based on a sign he saw on a Chinese restaurant.
It occurred to me that, the movie he was filming in the beginning was not actually a movie, but a representation of him, playing Bobby Darin. The reporter asking aren't you too old for this role asked that because he was supposed to have died at the age of 13, but he went on to be 37 years of age. This actually seemed really cleaver to me when I first figured it out, which is funny because before I understood it I thought it was just really stupid.
The movie goes through his life, his marriage, the troubles with his marriage, and how he spent very little time with his son, and his eventual death, which many points where he will randomly break out into song and dance, such as when he is romancing his woman. We had planed on seeing something else, but we arrived late and it was the latest showing, and felt very out of place because most of the people seeing the movie were in there 50's or so. At the points where he broke out into song, I often found my self laughing uncontrollably at the sheer akwardness of the abrupt change of style.
Overall it was a decent movie, though I feel bad about paying 8 dollars to see it.
- Forshizzle
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The Aviator
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In Good Company
- Meka of Awesome
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American Splendor
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National Treasure
- Jesse
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Collage of our Life
This movie is like no movie I have seen. It is one of the only movies I have ever seen that DISERVES to use computer animation, and when it does it does it discretely, and in a purely metaphorical sense.
The movie starts out with him (Ryuhei Matsuda) explaining to an American on the phone why he has a woman’s name. It then goes into a flash back:
He is a boy, studying to be a photographer when he meets a girl, the girl of his dreams nonetheless. He tries to teach her how to take photos but she cannot learn for the life of her, her pictures always end up unfocused, etc. They both submit photos to an art exhibition, and hers wins. Unable to suck up his pride, Ryuhei (his real name, cannot think of his name in the show) breaks up with her, and she leaves for New York to pursue a career in art.
Years pass, and at a school reunion he hears a rumor that she is dead. He becomes distraught and decides to leave for America to find his long lost love. He gets beaten up by a gang, and would have ended up dead if not for a magical black man who saves him. And by magical I mean he has the magic power to find things by urinating? (You’ll see what I mean) Well anyway, it ends up by some stroke of crazy unlikeliest the black man “found” Ryuhei’s dream lady’s camera with undeveloped film in it.
The undeveloped film when developed leads him to a shipyard where he finds her friend who happens to be waiting for him to kill him for some reason? Ends up she killed his lady friend for some unknown reason, and then they have the cheesiest gun fight ever. He ends up getting shot in the leg or something and the black guy pops out and saves him. Then he is at a photo shoot with the person from the beginning explaining that he took her name after all this so he could get her recognition? Seems cold hearted to me, but they are Japanese?
excuses excuses?
The film is broken up by a number of beautiful, metaphorical(?) not actually happening events, as was the case with Ping Pong as well. It was worth watching just for the scene with the flying orange?
- Jesse
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