Jun 20, 2011
(rated PG)
Based upon the play “The Man That Was Peter Pan” and “inspired by true events” comes a story set in London circa 1903. Johnny Depp is James Barrie a failed playwright by night, whose day job is convincing his loyal and upbeat producer (Dustin Hoffman) that he has come up with yet another show to finance. At home, Barrie finds a less than enthused wife (Radha Mitchell) who spends little time interested in his passion for his writing. And so one day, Barrie finds himself in the park where he meets Ms. Davies (Kate Winslet) widow and mother to a quartet of little boys, who will soon be the muse Barrie has been waiting for. As Barrie madly puts quill to paper, the town gossips, but no one more than Mrs. DuMaurier (Julie Christie), not only the inspiration for Captain Hook but also grandmother to the children. With more than a touch of the Peter Pan syndrome, Barrie refuses to grow up. Nothing is “just” anything. With “just” you can imagine and anything can be – boys who can fly, boys on pirate ships (Sidenote: Depp has a pirate fetish again playing a momentary pirate following last years’ “Pirates of the Caribbean”) and days on end playing make believe with the Davies boys. The movie in and of itself is magical, transporting us to places we’ve never dreamed, but felt in our hearts. A movie like this doesn’t come along often (heck, last time was “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang” in the 1960s). Real tears are pulled from every person in the theatre – even the men – the boys at heart. You’ll fall for it hook, line and Tinker-belle but its only downside is while it seems to appeal to children, it’s very much for grownups. That’s where word of mouth will be needed for this movie to find its proper audience.
Jun 20, 2011
(rated PG)
Based upon the play “The Man That Was Peter Pan” and “inspired by true events” comes a story set in London circa 1903. Johnny Depp is James Barrie a failed playwright by night, whose day job is convincing his loyal and upbeat producer (Dustin Hoffman) that he has come up with yet another show to finance. At home, Barrie finds a less than enthused wife (Radha Mitchell) who spends little time interested in his passion for his writing. And so one day, Barrie finds himself in the park where he meets Ms. Davies (Kate Winslet) widow and mother to a quartet of little boys, who will soon be the muse Barrie has been waiting for. As Barrie madly puts quill to paper, the town gossips, but no one more than Mrs. DuMaurier (Julie Christie), not only the inspiration for Captain Hook but also grandmother to the children. With more than a touch of the Peter Pan syndrome, Barrie refuses to grow up. Nothing is “just” anything. With “just” you can imagine and anything can be – boys who can fly, boys on pirate ships (Sidenote: Depp has a pirate fetish again playing a momentary pirate following last years’ “Pirates of the Caribbean”) and days on end playing make believe with the Davies boys. The movie in and of itself is magical, transporting us to places we’ve never dreamed, but felt in our hearts. A movie like this doesn’t come along often (heck, last time was “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang” in the 1960s). Real tears are pulled from every person in the theatre – even the men – the boys at heart. You’ll fall for it hook, line and Tinker-belle but its only downside is while it seems to appeal to children, it’s very much for grownups. That’s where word of mouth will be needed for this movie to find its proper audience.
Jun 20, 2011
(Rated PG-13)
No it’s not a drug-free “The Basketball Diaries” and it’s not “Good Will Hunting” in the hood. It’s the recently knighted Sir Sean Connery, under the direction of Gus Van Sant starring in this drama about a reclusive J. D. Salinger type who mentors a black student (newcomer Rob Brown) in a quintessential prep school. Problem is it lacks the sexual appeal of Affleck and Damon but successfully includes Anna Paquin as the Minnie Driver love interest. The name Forrester is taken from the famed author William Forrester of a single published novel some 50 years ago. The novel won a Pulitzer driving the author into hiding, until now. Of course once the young man begins writing at a level far superior than his peers, he is blamed for plagiarism and of course the fact that he can play a good game of basketball, doesn’t help either. The story is predictable, long and meant to be a feel-gooder and it is. Busta Rhymes should be credited for some excellent comic relief, but it’s Joey Buttafuoco, yes, Joey Buttafuoco as the security guard that got my interest up.
Jun 20, 2011
(Rated PG-13)
Using computer animation to create an imaginary into futuristic worlds, works better than its semi-lame plot. Based on the popular video game series, this story transports viewers to the year 2065 where the earth is overrun with evil aliens who are determined to destroy the planet and obliterate humankind. Only one woman, Dr. Aki Ross (Mulan’s Ming-Na) can devise a plan to defeat the aliens, however she is dying from a fatal disease. Alec Baldwin stars as her teammate but somehow the movie lacks what “Tomb Raider” delivers. Maybe it’s human beings as this story is the first ever to star photo-realistic, computer-generated humans.
Jun 20, 2011
(rated R, 93 mins.)
Opens March 17th
Not yet reviewed. From the writers who created some of the most memorable and spine-chilling episodes of “The X-Files” comes a story about a high school student who has a premonition moments before a plane takes off, that it’s going to crash, full of high school students. His efforts to warn the other passengers result in he and a group of his friends being ejected from the aircraft. But, when his prediction turns tragically accurate, the survivors find themselves hunted by a presence that may or may not be death itself, coming to collect its due.