Thursday, October 13, 2011

Footloose

PG-13
Starring: Kenny Wormald, Julianne Hough, Dennis Quaid, Andie Macdowell, Miles Teller and Ziah Colon
Running Time: 1 Hour and 53 Minutes

This movie is the remake of the 1984 version of "Footloose" starring Kevin Bacon. Craig Brewer directed this film and
I feel like he did a really good job and followed through with the original story very closely. I enjoyed this movie and I really wish they would have had even more dancing in it.
The story is set in a small country town Bomont, Georgia. The town was traumatized by a terrible car accident several years ago when five teenagers were driving home from a dance and they were all killed. The City Council decided in order to keep the youth safe that they had to outlaw dancing and the playing of loud music and it was to be strictly observed!
When the new kid Ren MacCormack (Kenny Wormald) moves in to town from Boston to live with his Aunt and Uncle after his mother had passed away, he finds the town rules outdated and antiquated. He struggles to find his fit in the community. He is introduced to Ariel Moore (Julianne Hough) and he is immediately attracted to her. Her father is the town's minister, Reverend Shaw Moore (Dennis Quaid) who just happens to be the father of the boy who was driving the car when the five teenagers were killed. Reverend Shaw feels strongly that if you don't let the kids play music or dance they will all be safe and no one will ever get hurt.
Ariel is a girl who tries to get away from the stress of her fathers rules, she has a difficult time trying to communicate with him and they don't see eye to eye. She also has a boyfriend who is selfish, he tries to take advantage of her and is physically abusive to her.
When Ren tries to get her attention she is aloof and she resists him. Finally, they start to like one another and the sparks fly. Her father does not want her to see Ren or have any relationship with him.
Ren gets tired of the city rules against music and dancing and decides to appeal it before the City Council. They try not to hear his case but he demands to be heard with the support of many of the local townspeople including Ariel and her mother (Andie Macdowell). Her father the Reverend Moore is totally opposed to overturning the rules. The Reverend has a change of heart and finally realizes he has been to strict with his daughter.
The kids get clearance to host a dance party across the county line with the help of some adults. They have a great time planning for the big event. Her father agrees and allows her to go to the dance with Ren. That was a really special scene. The dancing was really fun and well worth seeing.
I really enjoyed this movie and found it to be very entertaining. I enjoyed the supporting characters and found them to be a lot of fun as well.
Parents be advised this is definitely a PG-13 rating, with teenage rebellion, alcohol and drug use, domestic abuse, sexual references, profanity and fight scenes.
I am giving "Footloose" three and a half bags of popcorn!

Friday, October 7, 2011

Real Steel


PG-13
Starring: Hugh Jackman, Evangeline Lilly, and Dakota Goyo
Running Time: 2 Hours and 7 Minutes

This movie takes place somewhere in the future when human boxing has been eliminated and robot boxing is now the sport to watch. These robots box each other until the underdog is literally knocked-out! This is a total rock-em, sock-em robot movie.
Hugh Jackman plays Charlie a down and out former boxer who is really down on his luck when he bet more than he had.
His former girlfriend dies and leaves him with an eleven year old son (Max) whom he has never had a relationship with.
Max is adopted by his mother's wealthy aunt and she pays Charlie a large amount of money while she and her husband vacation for the summer. When he receives both the boy and the money, he buys another robot to box.
He and his son Max start to form a bond and become close with one another, Max insists upon going with him to the match. After his robot loses the match, they go to an old robot junkyard and after Max falls down a long, deep chute, he comes upon an old sparring robot. He and Charlie pull the robot up and take him to clean him up and get him ready to rumble. Charlie has his doubts and doesn't believe that this robot named Atom will amount to anything. But, this robot has a special gift, the ability to shadow, which enables him to follow the movements of humans. He shadows young Max and learns all of his moves. They enter him into some matches where he shadows Charlie with his own personal boxing experience.
When they dare to compete with the worlds greatest robot boxer, Zeus, the tension mounts and the action begins.
This movie has a lot of heart and soul. The relationship between Charlie, Max and Atom is sweet and tender. Parents be advised there is a lot of robot boxing violence and some human violence. There was quite a bit of profanity, even young Max had his share of profanity as well.
Overall, I enjoyed this movie, I thought the robots and the sounds they made were really fun. I would advise parents to follow the PG-13 rating guideline.

Friday, September 23, 2011

Dolphin Tale


PG
Starring: Harry Connick Jr., Ashley Judd, Kris Kristofferson, Morgan Freeman, Nathan Gamble and Cozi Zuehlsdorff.
1 Hour and 52 Minutes

This movie is based on the true story of Sawyer (Nathan Gamble), an 11 year old middle school student who is lonely and sad after his father has abandoned he and his mother (Ashley Judd). He is very close with his cousin Kyle who was a High School all-star swimmer and is being deployed in the Military. He is struggling to get through summer school when he comes upon a man working with a beached dolphin and demanding the use of his cell phone. The dolphin was caught up in a crab trap with ropes and is severely injured. Sawyer cuts the ropes to try and help free the dolphin. The marine rescue team is called and they take the dolphin in to try and rehabilitate it. Sawyer locates the aquarium where they take the injured dolphin and goes inside. While there he is met by a young girl named Hazel (Cozi Zuehlsdorff) and she sneaks him in to see the dolphin which she has already named "Winter". Her father, Dr. Clay Haskett (Harry Connick Jr.) is a marine veterinarian and a very private person. When he realizes that Sawyer has formed a bond with the dolphin he allows him to come around and spend time with Winter.
They diagnose that the dolphins tail was broke and dolphins have to use their tails to swim and stay afloat. They try desperately to try and nurse her back to health.
When Sawyers cousin Kyle is injured by a bomb and sent home to the Veterans Hospital, he encounters Dr. Cameron McCarthy (Morgan Freeman) who is a specialist in prosthetics.
He helps a very depressed cousin Kyle to overcome his injury and they decide to try and help Winter as well. After several tries, they are finally successful.
This is truly a great movie. It deals with a lot of life's current trials that we are all dealing with today. The devastation of war injuries, the economic conditions, a hurricane, abandonment, death and belief and hope that everything will be okay!
I really enjoyed this movie and it pulled at my heart strings, and knowing that it is a true story even made it that much better. I would recommend this movie for adults and children over the age of six because of the injuries.

Friday, September 16, 2011

I Don't Know How She Does It

PG-13
Starring: Sarah Jessica Parker, Greg Kinnear, Pierce Brosnan, Olivia Munn, Christina Hendricks, Kelsey Grammer and Seth Meyers.
1 Hour & 35 minutes

Dilemma, dilemma, dilemma, what is a young working mother to do? This is the situation that Kate Reddy (Sarah Jessica Parker) finds herself in. As a young professional woman working for a Boston-based financial management firm and a wife to Richard (Greg Kinnear) an under-employed architect and mother to two young children, mothers guilt is rampant! Trying to be a super-mom and a great executive at work, she tries to balance everything. Never getting enough sleep, to-do lists running through her mind and trying to be a good wife and mother all take their toll on her.
This is most definitely a "chick-flick"! I think a lot of women, whether they are stay-at-home mothers or professional business women, will find themselves relating to this story in one way or another.
You can't help but get caught up in her life and her situation.
Kate was awarded a big account at her work and it demands that she fly to New York to meet with Jack Ableman (Pierce Brosnan). She is forced to fly to New York at a minutes notice on multiple occasions and leave her wife/mommy life behind.
Trying to balance the age old family/career becomes a real hardship for her. Her husband finally lands a big job and he needs her around more often.
When she succeeds at at landing a huge contract, Jack Ableman starts to find her attractive and hopes to further his personal relationship with her. She feels pressure from every direction.
This movie is based on the novel of the same name, "I Don't Know How She Does It", by Allison Pearson.
I actually enjoyed this movie and having three children of my own I could certainly empathize with her situation. Her assistant Momo (Olivia Munn) was a lot of fun in the movie as well.
It is rated PG-13 for some adult humor and a little profanity. Overall, it is just a fun girls night out kind of movie. I would advise parents to follow the PG-13 rating.


Friday, June 17, 2011

Fresh Living

Check me out on Fresh Living on channel 2 today at 1:00pm. I'll be reviewing "Mr. Popper's Penguins"

Mr. Popper's Penguins


PG
Starring: Jim Carrey, Carla Gugino, Angela Lansbury, Ophelia Lovibond, Madeline Carroll and Maxwell Perry Cotton
1 Hour & 35 Minutes

I can honestly say I went into this movie having absolutely no expectations. I never know quite what to expect when it comes to Jim Carrey. I always feel that in most of his movies he has a tendency to over-act and he is usually over the top.
Jim Carrey plays Tom Popper and the movie begins when he is a young boy communicating on a ham radio to his father who is a world traveler and seldom if ever at home.
The adult Tom Popper lives in New York City, he is a very successful businessman who lives in a fancy penthouse and has lost touch with his family. He is a divorced father of two children; a cell-phoned obsessed teenage daughter, a young son and an ex-wife with a boyfriend.
He receives word that his father has passed away and that he will soon be receiving something from his father. When he opens the package, there is a penguin inside. Then he receives another package and there are five penguins inside that package He has absolutely no idea what to do with the penguins. He is expected at work as usual. He has a huge deal that he needs to negotiate in order to get the big account which just happens to be the world famous restaurant "Tavern On The Green", where he has his own childhood memories.
Needless to say, his world is turned upside down and he has no idea what he should do. He still has all the demands of his work, his obligations and his children.
He is helpless when the penguins take over his home, he concedes and turns his home into a penguin playground. He struggles to keep them safe and keep them inside the penthouse.
When his ex-wife brings the children over for a visit, they see inside the door and they are overwhelmed at all the mayhem. They all fall desperately in love with the penguins and they want to stay and play too.
There is an evil zookeeper who gets wind of the penguins and he wants to take them and put them in the zoo.
The family comes back together and the parents realize they still love each other.
I found myself actually liking this movie. It had some really sweet parts in it. Jim Carrey did a great job. I enjoyed the penguins and I thought it was a fun and happy movie. The children are going to love this movie and the adults will enjoy it too. It has your standard bathroom humor which I think we've all come to expect in children's movies these days. I personally think they should have waited to release it during the holidays just because it takes place during the winter. Overall, it is a fun and happy family movie with some really tender moments. I would recommend this movie for children ages five and older.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Super 8


PG-13
Starring: Joel Courtney, Riley Griffiths, Ryan Lee, Gabriel Basso, Kyle Chandler, Noah Emmerich and Elle Fanning.
1 hour & 52 minutes
Directed by: JJ Abrams and Produced by: JJ Abrams and Steven Spielberg

This movie is about four young middle-school aged boys in 1979 in Lillian, Ohio who are helping their friend make a movie about zombies. He uses what was the state of the art technology back then, the super-8 camera. He wants to enter his movie into a film competition where the competition is pretty tough. The young man (Riley Griffiths) who directs and makes the movie just happens to be from Cedar City and has acted in the Utah Shakespearean festival.
While they were out late one night filming a scene at the train station, a train gets into an accident and derails while the super-8 camera is rolling and something very unusual shows up on the film.
This movie is filled with action and suspense, young romance and the loss of a parent. You are always on the edge of your seat. This film is reminiscent of the old Spielberg movies and has a really retro feel to it.
The children stole the show, they were great and it was a lot of fun to watch and see them interact with each other.
Parents be aware that there is a lot of action violence with the train wreck, fires, explosions and a mysterious alien monster that might be to intense for younger children. I think this movie deserves its PG-13 rating, there is also some profanity with an unexpected F word as well.
I really enjoyed this movie a lot. It took me back to the days when Spielberg was at his best. Also, don't leave the theater immediately after the movie is over, there is a fun little zombie clip that the kids made that they play after the movie is over.

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