Tuesday, September 9, 2008

↑ мσνιє FLASHBACK ؃ THE ωЄЄк! ↑

Well, this is the very FIRST post of the movie Flashback of the Week! First off, some basic understanding.

This is what YOU should know:

-I ALWAYS accept requests. [For movies of your choice for the Flashback of the Week]

-To send me a request, post your comment on the posting [Movie Flashback of the week] prior to the next Movie Flashback of the Week.

-I'll post my next Movie Flashback of The Week from the day Tuesday - Friday, but on holidays there is exceptions.

-I don't post movies of racial slander, discrimination, high sexual contant [such as porn videos], or movies that have been from the 60's or 70's Depending on the movie, I will make an exception, but you must talk to me first.

-The movie must be in the years of the 80's/90's/this decade and future decade movies.

-If the movie has not been out yet in theatres, then the Movie Flashback Of The Week rule does NOT apply, and you may NOT submit.

Here, we go, the very first Movie Flashback Of the Week!
This movie is one of those movies that makes you look back at your high school years and you have the option to cringe and think, but at the same time, have fun doing it, because it makes you remember great memories.

Never been kissed is a great movie. It is……… It's a comedy which makes us cry without even us (ourselves) noticing. Well Drew does it all. Drew Barrymore in my opinion is a Splendid actress and I enjoy her movies very much. Well I would say no one can do it better than her. She does all the justice there is to be done to this movie. She's funny and all and at the same time too tragically sad as she can be. She's a great comedian as well as a serious actress. She does have this ability to make us laugh as well as cry.

As for the story, it is very entertaining and it does make people laugh about the fact about how they were in there high School days. Well if anyone has ever been "Made-fun-of" or "laughed about", this movie could be a bit too depressing. Anyways, near the ending everything turns out to be fine.

The best actors in this movie, would have to be, Drew Barrymore, Molly Shannon, Micheal Vartan, David Arquette and John C Reilly. They all made this movie incredible.

As surprising as this is, Jessica Alba HAD to be the worst actress in this entire movie, her makeup and outfits were all wrong for high school, and her acting didn't make the role any better for herself either. I think I would have beleived better in a sandwhich than her acting in THIS movie.

Because of Jessica's acting, I've lost one rating towards this movie.

Overall Rating: 6.9

miRяoRS [The movie]





Mirrors was pretty much doomed for terrible critical reviews from the start. Horror never scores big with film critics; in fact I can't remember the last horror film that got more positive reviews than negative. If the horror film in question is a remake, especially of a foreign movie, it's almost destined for critical failure. There's a reason for that: most horror remakes are utter garbage and are solely created so studios can make a quick buck. However, once in a while, a horror film remake will come along that actually isn't half bad, yet will still suffer negative reviews based on the fact that it's a horror film remake. It happened several years ago with The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and more recently, with The Hills Have Eyes.

Mirrors has suffered a similar fate. Directed by French horror director Alexandre Aja, the same man behind The Hills Have Eyes, Mirrors is a remake of a Korean horror film, as well as the best wide-release horror film of the year thus far. While I'll admit I probably enjoyed the film much more than most will, it's still miles better than the critic's lousy reviews or lackluster promotion would have you believe.

Kiefer Sutherland stars as Ben Carson, an ex-cop suffering from emotional issues after a "workplace accident" and a messy divorce. Sick of sleeping on his sister's couch, he takes up a job as a security guard at an abandoned department store that was devastated by a fire many years back. The job seems easy enough, primarily consisting of walking through the building every couple hours, making sure there are no trespassers. Things take a turn for the worse though, after several strange encounters involving the mirrors in the building, and Ben begins to find that his own reflection is haunting him, not only at the job, but in any mirror or reflective object (or liquid) he comes across. Soon enough, Ben find his life, as well as his families, in danger.

Mirrors biggest strength is the storyline, easily one of the best horror premises to hit the screen in years (even if it is recycled). Reflections are practically inescapable, not only appearing just in mirrors, but in doorknobs, windows and water. The inescapability of reflections is what makes the idea of one's reflection out to get them so chilling. They're everywhere. You can't escape them. Not since Nightmare on Elm Street, where ones own dreams were the cause of death, has there been a supernatural premise that has gotten so much under my skin. The fact that whatever the mirror images do to themselves happens to their real life counterparts, only heightens the hopelessness of Carson and his family.

Alexandre Aja has already proved his ability to create genuine scares with previous films, but most have been of the brutal, violent kind, as opposed to the atmospheric chills usually employed in supernatural horror movies that are more reliant on the mood and feeling than shocking acts of brutality for scares. Surprisingly, Aja's penchant for gore and violence complements the film surprisingly well. The sequences inside the derelict department store at night build up suspense very well, utilizing the eerie location with corpses manifesting themselves within the mirrors and screams emitting from within deep recesses of the building. It's fairly generic stuff for movies like this, but Aja is talented enough stylistically to pull them off. However, it's the sequences where Aja really lets loose that prove to be the most frightening. One sequence that takes place in a bathtub ends up being one of the most brutal and unsettling death scenes of the year. There are several of these sequences sprinkled throughout the film and they are extremely effective, utilizing a combination of brutality and atmospheric suspense that are, at the least, shocking. When a ghost pops out in one scene, it isn't a pale, long black haired Asian woman, nor a semi-transparent floating apparition: it's a half-naked female with half her body burned off, the flesh still sizzling off her burnt carcass as she wails in pain. That's the difference between Mirrors and most other ghost films.

The biggest downfall of the film is when it tries to provide an explanation for the horrific events taking place in the second half. The idea of one's image terrorizing oneself is horrifying on one level, but at the same time, it's extremely unrealistic. Trying to explain why this happened back fires on the film, as no explanation is going to make sense and instead, will just draw attention to the fact that this would never happen in real life, destroying a bit of the film's effect. The audience doesn't need to know why this happens. Ambiguity in this case would be much more frightening and wouldn't take away from any of the other scares. Once you throw in a sub-plot about mental institution experiments and haunting tragedies taking place in the building, you lose a lot of the suspense. Despite the unwise direction the movie takes in its second half, it's still entertaining and manages to retain a few good scares here and there, while finally rebounding in the last act.

Mirrors isn't perfect (what film is?), but its strengths far outweigh its weaknesses and in the end, it's the most enjoyable wide-release horror film of the year (although personally, the only other decent wide-release horror film this year would be The Strangers). Benefiting from a brilliant premise and the unlikely combination of French director Alexandre Aja's love of blood and brutality with an atmospheric, supernatural storyline, Mirrors is definitely much better than what one would expect of a typical Korean horror movie remake, let alone any horror movie that hits theaters.

Overall Rating: 8.7/10

Sunday, September 7, 2008

The House Bunny


Well this movie stars Anna Faris who plays Shelley, When Shelly, a Playboy bunny, is tossed out of the mansion, she has nowhere to go until she falls in with the sorority girls from Zeta Alpha Zeta. The members of the sorority - who also have got to be the seven most socially clueless women on the planet - are about to lose their house. They need a dose of what only the eternally bubbly Shelley can provide... but they will each learn on their own to stop pretending to be what others want them to be and start being themselves.

This movie also stars various stars such as Tom Hanks son, Colin Hanks,Katharine McPhee,Emma Stone and Kat Dennings along with many other stars and a surprise crowd of the big billionaire himself, Hugh Hefner, and the 'girls next door', Holly, Bridget and Kendra as themselves.

This movie got a few laughs out of me, but had a lot of cheesiness, and half way through I felt I was watching American Pie and porn at the same time and felt it was out of place for us girls, and more had it there for men. Even for a PG-13 rating.


Overall Rating: 7/10

Batman; The Dark Night


I felt I had to post on this, because not only was it the highest profit making movie in history, but it's also won numourous awards already, and it's sadly the last finished movie for Heath Ledger.

Heath Ledger did a powerful and mind numbing experience with this movie, and he changed his pretty boy image into something REAL, and he turned this movie into a whole new kind of darkness. Although some other serious celebs played part in this movie (Gyllenal, Bale, Caine, Oldman, Eckhart, Freeman; etc;etc), Heath Ledger honestly stole the spotlight from all of them because of his overall effort and preformance.

The plot is basically where Batman, Gordon and Harvey Dent are forced to deal with the chaos unleashed by an anarchist mastermind known only as the Joker, as it drives each of them to their limits.


Definatly got some laughs and 'aws' out of me, and definatly something to buy the date it comes out.
Only downfall? The movie, doing three hours long. Definatly is not gonna hold you for the first bag of popcorn.

Overall Rating: 9/10

AWAKE



This movie starring Hayden Christensen (Clay Beresford) and Jessica Alba (Sam Lockwood) have great chemistry,
as the story progresses, there's alot of things you find out, and through half way the movie, you just can't get enough.
It references to the real phenomenon 'anesthetic awareness' in which surgery patients, though completely paralyzed, are conscious of everything they are experiencing.

This movie starts out as a hot shot billionaire who's got almost everything, money, a beautiful lover, and the love of his mother, but things holding him back, such as a questioning past, and a heart condition change everything.

As he goes into surgery, he think's he's heading into sleep, until he finally is painfully given a shock when his surgery starts, from there, his journey starts from knowing dirty little secrets while paralyzed, and deeping deeper into his past to find more answers.


I actually liked this movie, I went under anethesia before, and I've gone to sleep peacefully along with the vast majority, and when I saw this, for sure I was more aware! This movie, although underated and probably not the highest sales in box office history, it still is incredible, and is a huge step for Alba and a even bigger step for Christensen.


Overall Rating: 8/10

The Best Disney Classic Of All Time.



This has to be the cutest movie I have ever seen.

Although this movie has been made close to fifteen to twenty years ago, I felt it was important to add it on here, because I know for a fact it will always be remembered.

Christopher Daniel Barnes (Prince Eric) and Jodi Benson (Ariel) made this preformance outstanding, and you can't finish this movie without smiling. It features outstanding animation: brilliant colors and beautiful scenes, along with interesting characters and pretty good songs. Growing up I adored this movie, and now as an older teenager, I love this movie, and I'm always going to keep this in my heart.


Movie Overall Rating: 9.5/10