How much should you know about The Cabin in the Woods before you
see it? Ideally, nothing-- so if you click away from this review now, I
understand. But interest is high enough in the horror film from
first-time director Drew Goddard and his co-writer, Joss Whedon, that
plenty of people have already seen the trailer, in which we're told
explicitly that this story of college kids in a creepy cabin has quite
the twist, and that the generic title gives way to a complete
deconstruction of the horror genre. Believe it or not, it's OK to know
that-- that's the premise of the film, not a spoiler.
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Wrath of the Titans Movie Review
This review from katey Rich on cinemablend, here the short synopsis of Wrath of the Titans.
A decade after his heroic defeat of the monstrous Kraken, Perseus (Worthington)—the demigod son of Zeus (Neeson)—is attempting to live quietly as a village fisherman and the sole parent to his 10-year-old son, Helius.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Movie Review & Trailer : Salmon Fishing in the Yemen
Salmon Fishing in the Yemen staring by Ewan McGregor, Emily Blunt, Amr Waked, Kristin Scott Thomas, Rachael Stirling. Directed by Lasse Hallstrom and produced by Paul Webster. This movie tells about A fisheries expert is approached by a
consultant to help realize a sheik's vision of bringing the sport of
fly-fishing to the desert and embark son an upstream journey of faith
and fish to prove the impossible, possible.
Movie Review & Trailer : Friends With Kids
Extraordinary, The writer, director and the star Jennifer Westfeldt has done something quite special with Friends With Kids.
While many multi-tonal movies suffer from imbalance as one genre takes
over the other, Westfeldt’s movie is the perfect blend of laughs and
drama, anchored by some terrific performances and a solid story.
Movie Review & Trailer : A Thousand Words
I think A Thousand Words has a mouthful of problems, and there’s one
issue in particular that it maybe can’t ever shake. The movie has half of a
heart, which is about the worst percentage possible for a comedy movie. If it
cared about the feelings of its characters less, A Thousand Words might actually be
funny. If it cared about them a little more, we might actually get
invested in their lives. Unfortunately, its partially formed organ
prevents any of that from happening, as it gushes between generic,
acceptable one-liners and shoehorned-in moralizations about family
values.
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