Showing posts with label Drew Barrymore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drew Barrymore. Show all posts

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Timeless De Niro
Take a family of four children dispersed across America – of blue collar origins, but now a successful (?) quartet – one a part-owner of an ad agency, one an artist (as opposed to a painter), one a composer (or is it a drummer), and one a dancer (in Las Vegas? And perhaps a lesbian?). Now throw in Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) as their father, a man of blue collar origins who pushed his children hard, to get to where they are, and ostensibly Everybody’s Fine. So what does one expect when, seeing that the children are too busy in their careers for a reunion, the ailing father sets out across America – by road – to catch up with his children individually. And finds the truths of their individual realities. And while all does not end well – what remains of the family is re-united, with their realities out in the open, and accepted. Even as De Niro just keeps adding to the roster of why he is a living legend, the all-star cast takes the movie to a different plane. A movie about paternal authority and the demands of career, and the varying reactions to the same, and the eventual result of acceptance all round, reminding us yet again that while success matters, in the end its all about the family. Miss this one and you miss something vital about valuing the ties that bind family

15.5/20

Sunday, November 08, 2009

Come Confess
As Chuck Barris, Sam Rockwell given the performance of a lifetime, in this intriguing blend of cinema noir foreseeing the coming of the brooding graphic novel movies a half decade or so later, and blending it with a scathing indictment of the travesty that is modern television, in Confessions of A Dangerous Mind. The skewed moralities of adolescent sex, killing without compunction for the greater good of the United States, the numerous women and the singular lack of attachment and the double-crosses, and the overarching peddling of the “lowest common denominator” of reality TV brings to the audience a movie that swings from passion to global intrigue to self-flagellation. A movie that leaves me reflecting on the overarching question of seeking our own individual identities and the eventual price of fame

14/20

Sunday, December 14, 2008

An Equal Music
I am not particularly a fan of romantic movies, but the combination of Hugh Grant and Drew Barrymore, albeit neither at their best, makes for a particularly heady combination that makes you want to forget your ghosts of the past, make great music like they did in the old days, write very well – so well that others sing the stuff, and fall in love – all at the same time, in Music and Lyrics. And since none of the above activities could possibly harm – not at least the first three anyway (!) – this movie is a petit indulgence that you should not deny yourself. Karmic Cora, a take on the pop icons of today, does not hurt in her smoldering sexuality with a heart of gold. Just the right entrĂ©e for a romantic movie – a modern-day success who is nice, even. Indeed.

widget1