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The Sessions (2012)
Explorations of Healing: Sexual Discoveries & Spiritual Truths
21 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Ben Lewin's exceptional film entitled "The Sessions" is a delightfully provocative story, hinging on two people's growth through the most fascinating, unusual and bizarre medical sexual relationship perhaps ever depicted in a movie.

Helen Hunt will probably nab a second Oscar for her supporting role, Cheryl, played with absolute breathtaking compassion, grace, nuance and powerful subversion of every misogynistic caricature one could imagine. Her performance alone is reason enough to travel and see this. Through the years, one can see how Hunt chooses her films slowly, carefully and wisely, and it is absolutely clear to me why she wanted to do this- her role has the charm of a scorpion. She stings your intellect into cessation, enlivening your emotional world. Her words and relational caring are heartbreaking, even as she makes you laugh in delirium at an artistic bravery rarely seen among artists, especially actors. Perhaps among such luminaries like Brando, Day-Lewis, Hepburn, Streep. But not many others.

Surrounding the story's naturalistic, almost inchoate humor which tinges each scene of heart-wrenching beauty and meaning is one of the most talented actors working today: John Hawkes. He will most likely also grab an Oscar nomination. William H. Macy is an additional treasure; he turns in a subtle portrayal of a Catholic priest imbued with a genuine love of caring, desiring to help Hawkes' character thrive within the physical limitations of a polio virus survivor.

Within the film exists heavy religious imagery seamlessly woven between the narrative architecture: from Jewish baptism to Catholic iconography, philosophical meanderings to poetic waxing, the story never settles for being typical or mundane, but rather imbues itself with the soul of a saint striving to alleviate the bite and excoriating pain of life. Each actor helps paint this subtle, masterful and accomplished story.

Sadly, the harsh realities created by physical incapacity are a subject too often ignored, swept under the rug or just plain forgotten by Hollywood. Helen Hunt further impressed me in that one of her earlier and most critically acclaimed films, "The Waterdance" (1992, co-starring Eric Stoltz), also explores this subject: the sexual lives of the physically disabled. This is a topic about which she must care, for it keeps coming back to her work as if meant to be, as if she were a veritable physical vessel of love and understanding. She is, in fact, a conduit of grace.

Helen Hunt's performance is so simultaneously understated and transcendent this reviewer cannot help think, turned by the religious symbolism within the film, of the Biblical figural archetype of Mary Magdalene. Except, within this story, there is no prostitution (which, as we learn, is an allegory from which Hunt's Cheryl quickly disabuses both Hawkes and the audience.) Hunt rather represents a femininity scorned by her past's community, yet now finding meaningful help engendering sexual satisfaction, self-efficacy and life change among those in need of intimate therapy. If Mary Magdalene represented, for Christ, feminine companionship even amidst a "sinful" past, Helen Hunt is the arch through which Hawk passes on his way to a fuller, more whole world. In the end, Hawkes' character can be seen as a type of Christ figure, in some ways.

This film is like a beaming purity of emotion that roots itself in your soul. Sex is a primal energy- in leads us to relationship with another. This film is strengthened by that energy- but please don't see this as a cynical analysis of Hollywood once again using sex to sell. Rather, this film uses sex to show love, growth, spiritual transformation and physical healing. Lewin has crafted a veritable mirror to reflect beauty, connection and love back to even the most hardened, pessimistic, sardonic and misanthropic spirit or painful body. A film to seek out!
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Travelling Salesman: Walking the Tightrope of Morality, Math + Science
12 September 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The University of Pennsylvania's International House hosted the premiere of Timothy Lanzone's exceptional, dynamic, propulsive, timely, genuinely exciting and morally intrepid independent film entitled "Traveling Salesman." Also screened more recently at the NYC International Film Festival, the film is remarkable and evolves along several levels, and with several modalities, all while remaining strictly dialogue-based- no explosions, no graphic sex or (despite one somewhat intense dream-type sequence) violence, no titillating CGI- just strong, compelling, forceful, thought-provoking dialogue. Lanzone both directed and co-wrote the screenplay, a work that can claim direct lineage from the "12 Angry Men" of Reginald Rose and Sidney Lumet, as well as (to a greater or lesser extent) from Darren Aronofsky's groundbreaking "π." Not to mention the subtle homage to Stanley Kubrick.

Lanzone has produced a cogent work of cognitive argument, a script of postulation and instruction, all meandering within and around the concepts of foreign policy, physics, mathematics, and the tangible governing laws of our universe. This is a thinking person's movie, and I believe Lanzone to be one of the most intelligent and gifted young filmmakers working in the television/film industries right now. He is surely amongst the best of his generation. It will be interesting to see what future films he concocts, what festivals into which they achieve entry, and what awards they most surely will win. Like Lanzone's mind, this script is expansive- yet very specifically focused, simultaneously.

How much of our modern capitalist world is not only completely dependent on, but created by, science and technology? How much of that science and technology is predicated on understanding mathematical laws, i.e. the fundamental governing and thus-far-codified algorithms of physics and space? How much will future hot or cold warfare- and is current cold and hot warfare- between nations based solely on the competitive acquisition of mathematical and physical knowledge? The age-old adage being, of course, that knowledge IS power.

The disturbing exploration and answer to these questions, which Lanzone deftly embraces in "Travelling Salesman", is that the entirety, indeed ALL of our world depends upon minds that are able to continually sort through data, see patterns, and form ways of predicting and calculating meaning. Lanzone's script is impressive, perhaps flawless- he references mathematical luminaries such as John von Neumann, Kurt Gödel, and G.H. Hardy as if every person in the general population knows exactly what he is talking about- which I loved.

The main import of Lanzone's work is this: how can the United States walk the razor's edge of science in an increasingly cut-throat, competitive world? Where does the line demarking points of no return exist, and how can we be true to what is right, or even know what is right, when knowledge discovered has the power to extrapolate beyond what our imaginations can comprehend?

Dr. Tim Horton- played with subtle and raw mastery by Danny Barclay- is the protagonist of the film, the quintessential genius and best-mathematician-of-his-generation, employed (with others) by the United States government to solve a centuries-old question, to develop an algorithm that I can best describe as a mystic's dream- something that can break all codes, predict, quantify and answer any question- a veritable philosopher's stone of physics. Once we obtain this knowledge, we unleash the equivalent of an atomic bomb in potentialities for future conflict- or unity.

This character gives an award-accepting speech, spliced throughout the film's progression, in which he explicates how science is becoming more and more divisive than unifying- mathematics was once universal, but now it threatens to unlock and unleash powers that have potentials worse than an atomic bomb. This is such an important topic to be explored, not only in this film, but for the general public as well- we are reaching a point in our history as a species where points of no return become more and more depressingly present.

I recently read a journal article detailing Bell's Theorem, a law of quantum physics asserting how objects, once connected, affect each other forever, no matter where they are. It was the Irish physicist John Bell's argument against Bohm's and de Broglie's postulation that "hidden variables" accounted for electrons' non-local, faster-than-the-standard-speed-of-light criterion for entities to be able to affect each other in two separate places. Essentially, inequalities found in laboratory data (this theorem is also referred to as "Bell's Inequality") showed how hidden variables definitely could not fully account for non-local, quantum affectations. There are no "hidden variables." In other words, local realism is false, or at best an outdated explanation mutually exclusive to a transcendent, quantum and always-mysterious reality. Non-localized reversal of effect and cause, Bell's theorem is beautifully counter-intuitive against much of what we learn of western science. This idea that consciousness- an implicate order- transcends our material world is essentially what Lanzone explicates in his fictional mathematician solving the "P = NP" age-old conundrum- the idea that there is a mathematical equation, able to be discovered, that can non-locally act as an oracle, breaking security codes and overwhelming others' ability to cope with or repel such knowledge.

How can we quantify and put a price on such knowledge? How can one nation or entity "own" a universal principal? A mathematical algorithm? A genetic cell line? A genetic sequence? "Travelling Salesman" is a film that one can watch repetitively, each time brainstorming more questions, more conundrums, more fractalizations of the eternal mysteries of life and existence and the evolution of human reasoning. This is the realm of the Best Art Has to Offer. Lanzone is a filmmaker- and artist- to surely watch, and follow. Simply unbelievably excellent filmmaking. This is a film to seek out- and it has earned its well-deserved place in the famous New York International Film Festival. Kudos!
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Film: All-Around Excellence; Bullock: An Understated, Powerful Masterpiece
7 December 2009
Everyone involved in this film's production must have been at the very peak of their game- no pun intended- because the movie fires on all cylinders and continues to do so after every genuinely earned laugh, genuinely earned tear, and genuinely earned ear-to-ear smile. In fact, that is a better "Summary" for this film- genuine. The adjective works. I found myself entranced by the humor the writer injected into the dialogue and banter interspersed between a poignant biographical drama. I found myself astounded at what great cinema can achieve- a panoramic, lyrical look at race at an individual level, and what one individual's kindness and love can transform in another's life. All in all, a film that reminds you how the truest stories are the ones that leave you speechless, with eyes watering.

Above all, Bullock absolutely won me over. She takes the film not only to another level, but to a Best Actress nomination for herself, and perhaps even a Best Picture nod. Her acting is subtle, understated brilliance, yet hard and powerful when she needs to be. Actresses like Kate Winslet and Julianne Moore could even- WHO'D HAVE THOUGHT!?- take a lesson here- in places where Bullock could have cried, could have shouted, could have done any number of Hollywoodized set pieces, she restrains herself and lets the story, and the life of her character, tell this story. I will be very surprised if she doesn't get, at the very least, a nomination. She certainly deserves it. Kudos!
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Guidelines for Building Aura and Feeling: Excellence
29 October 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Truly good film- very anti-much of what Hollywood spews out nowadays; truly creative and innovative in many, many ways, but mostly in the way the camera and actors interact and decide what and which ways to see and not see what is going on- truly brilliantly done film. I feel having a scene with the demonologist would have added a great deal to the overall knowledge and eeriness of the film... This work vacillates between suspenseful and frightening, however some moments are not so much scary as they are comical- a true panoply of emotions here. All in all, well worth your time and money.

I found myself wanting to converse with the actors at different points in the film, which doesn't always happen in explicit Hollywood-produced fare, which I think attests to the naturalism and reality inherent to how this was done.
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Star Trek (2009)
Kinetic, Subtle, Multi-Layered Masterpiece
1 May 2009
Bravo and kudos all around- J.J. Abrams has taken the fetid clay of a rotting entertainment franchise and fashioned a breathtaking, stand-alone, beautiful film.

It is not only the visual, non-stop cinematic intrepidness of this enterprise, but the glorious production value, the actors who you truly feel researched and understood the nuances of the Star Trek story as well as their individual character(s), and the experienced editing/sound quality that contribute to this film's greatness.

It will be very hard to top. Hopefully this isn't the capstone of Roddenberry's intellectual brainchild, but it certainly may be...ROUNDS OF LOUD, LOUD APPLAUSE! The creators and visionaries and consumers of science fictional exploration would be, and are, very proud.
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Frenetic Cuts and Lethargic Pace Hamper Otherwise Powerful Story
19 October 2007
I really wanted to love this film. The cinematography was gorgeous, the acting very believable, the story compelling, and the plot very moving.

However, whereas the frenetic time-cuts/image flashing of say, a film like Requiem for a Dream, are extremely appropriate to THAT story, this film's extreme time cuts/image collaging seemed to detract and annoy from the slow, beautiful message of the original novel.

I think, in general, the novel was a tough one to translate to film. Which perhaps is always the case, but this story dealt with so many issues, so many side-lines- with a murder mystery at its heart- that when you finally get to the end of the film, you're a bit bored and very confused.

A jumble, but an okay jumble. I'm glad I saw it, despite all my criticisms.
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Not Since "Children of a Lesser god" Have I Been So Touched and Moved by a Resonating Commentary about Relationships, Love, and Healing
18 October 2007
Wow. Wowzers. Truly, truly, truly beautiful, thoughtful, original, striking, melancholic, comedic, compelling, well-acted, well-filmed, well-written film about a man struggling to fall back in love with life.

The last time I felt this sad and happy and borderline exhilarated at the end of a movie for what it taught me about love was when I first saw Children of a lesser god.

And, like that film- mark my words- watch for Ryan Gosling being nominated- and, like Marlee Matlin, very likely winning- the Academy Award.

See this movie. Just like Children of a lesser god, it just may move you to tears.
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The Brave One (2007)
Making the Whole World Thoughtful
17 September 2007
This film is sophisticated on many levels: the way it interpenetrates Foster's character's psyche, exploring her need to exact revenge after her fiancé is brutally murdered, its dissection of American isolationism and the dangers therein, and the paradox of living in a populated city where loneliness exists within every brutality as much as every happiness.

I admire the film for two reasons: one, the way it flips a seemingly straightforward revenge-drama into an articulate exploration of EXTREME pain, and INTENSE grief, and how it refuses to judge the main character, letting the story speak for itself and its viewers decide if what Foster does- and what she receives for what she does- is in fact justice or a cop-out.

Folks, movies aren't supposed to preach or take sides or even necessarily make statements. Sometimes ART needs to EXIST as art, as emotions exist as emotions. That is the beauty of catharsis. Indeed, Jodie Foster's beautiful performance will- hands down- earn her an Oscar nod come January.
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Hairspray (2007)
Unadulterated EXCELLENCE that compels on so many levels
21 July 2007
This movie works in so many layered ways, it's hard to know where to begin. First off, one can pretty much guarantee Travolta getting an Academy Award nomination for his pitch-perfect, subtle, not-too-over-the-top-but-just-the-right-amount-of-camp, incredibly talented portrayal of Edna Turnblad. This is the kind of role made for movie-stars needing a turn-around comeback, something to remind audiences of why John Travolta is a movie star in the first place. Every scene, every vowel, every mannerism is dead-on as Travolta's characterization almost steals the entire movie from the music, costumes, message, and story.

Secondly, the music and choreography are ingenious. Scene transitions are so beautifully done, the highs and lows of the story conveyed so well with a narrative arc so wide and narrow in all the right places, that it is hard to say a bad thing about this movie.

Lastly, the finale caps the whole movie and reminds us of a timeless message: the one that love and change are intricately linked, and that people who try to oppress and go against a tide of equality are the ones who lose the most in history's pages.
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Overall, and In General, Woody's BEST, Outshining both Annie Hall and Manhattan
13 July 2007
This is on my top three favorite films of all time, along with Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, and Million Dollar Baby.

Everything just WORKS in this movie- the brilliant humor, the conflicts, the relationships, the time frame, the dialog, the eclectic music, the architecture, the art, the quotes, the poetry, and the most uplifting, tearfully happy final scene and sentence.

I very much feel this film is Allen's capstone and high-water mark in his career; the way he understands the difficulties and vulnerabilities of people in relationships astounds me. The way he probes eternal themes like understanding your heart and seeking elusive happiness despite immense material comforts is hard-won brilliance- and finally, his religious skepticism and questioning with the final "wonder bread" prop during his experiments with Christianity is absolutely hysterical.

Allen makes a film a year, and largely- lately- it's always hit or miss. But Woody sure hit the ball outta the park with this one. 10/10, Grade A, Don't Miss It! Barbara Hershey should have been dominated for an Oscar. She deserved it much more than Wiest or Caine.
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Bug (2006)
Unique, But Disappointing- An Off, Off, Off, Off Broadway Avant-Garde Piece that Translates Poorly into Film
26 May 2007
As much as I wanted to love this film, I cannot say that I did. What begins as an eveloping, highly compelling character study degenerates into ridiculousness and embarrassing dialogue. The process of delusional paranoia into which these characters engage is too quick, too symbolic, and too unexplainable to a general audience. What would perhaps have been highly enjoyable in a New York theater became something to laugh at in the neighborhood cinaplex. :-( Such a shame, too; Judd does give an incredible performance that probably would have landed her an Oscar nomination if not for the awfulness of the entire movie.
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300 (2006)
Heart-Rendingly Beautiful & Unusually Resonant for Modern Times
24 February 2007
It has been a while since a movie's moved me enough to write about it on IMDb.com, but this movie takes the cake. And while, as you will hear from every reviewer, its visuals are staggering, its acting fierce, its battle scenes unprecedented in movie history, and its graphic effects and story polyglot and stunning, what resonated with me the most about this film- surprising, since the visuals can punch you and leave you forgetting everything else- is the history and story behind it all.

For, in today's world, we battle terrorism and those who would seek to destroy freedom, democracy, knowledge, and the right to earn one's way in a lawful society. This film speaks to an age-old battle between what is good and what is evil. Truly timeless.
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Terrifying and Beautiful, Stone's Cinematic Tribute is A Bold and Exacting Momument to Heroism...In Every Form
10 August 2006
I loved this movie- I have to say, and it wasn't because I wanted to love it. Rather, I went into the theater with very low expectations, thinking Hollywood, thinking exploitation, thinking miscast and misdirected intentions, but still wanting to see how it all turned out. And I was very, very surprised and very, very happy I did, because Mr. Stone has redeemed what has been (of late) an extremely disappointing and dissipating career. With bold cinematic candor and haunting artistic eloquence, Stone reminds us of the evil in our world, and what we can do about fighting it and replacing it with love. By remembering heroes and courage, Stone has crafted what just may be the finest film released this summer. And most importantly, "World Trade Center" reminds us how art- especially film- can create lasting testaments to the power of the human spirit to overcome obstacles and ultimately triumph.
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Inside Man (2006)
Compelling, Quality Film-making (CAUTION- spoiler within)
26 March 2006
All in all great film. Spike Lee navigates the waters of mainstream film-making and unique, quirky, innovative scripts with great ease. Perhaps the most smooth, enjoyable, thought-provoking, flawless Lee film I've yet seen. Jodie Foster is a stand-out. Only two slight flaws: (WARNING: SPOILER AHEAD)

1) Clive Owen's accent- woh there boy- are you American or British or Australian? Choose your nationality and stick with it- highly distracting. Not a sign of good acting here.

2) If Case was so ashamed of his dark past, why did he keep the HIGHLY INCRIMINATING paper document in the safety deposit box? Why didn't he just destroy it and keep the diamonds? It makes no sense.
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Powerful Commentary on Unconditionality, Love, Acceptance, Growth
19 February 2006
This is perhaps the most moving and thought-provoking film about love and being in a relationship that I have ever seen. Matlin takes your breath away as you fall in love with her and she breaks your heart. Randa Haines documents, meticulously, the real effort and struggle that must go into negotiating a romantic relationship between any two individuals, and also the priceless dividends we reap by doing so- namely, love, home, friendship, acceptance, family: life.

"Children of a Lesser god" allows you to think, feel, and experience the things all good movies should. I highly recommend it...Matlin gives an awe-inspiring performance, 100% deserving of the Oscar she won for it. William Hurt balances the entire film, a feat which perhaps made him even more deserving of an Academy Award. All-in-all, if you want to watch a movie that tackles the timeless and immortal themes of love, communication, our relationship to the world, our relationship to our significant other, and most importantly our relationship to ourselves, I highly recommend this film. It will move you to tears.
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My favorite film; despite small melodrama toward end, a gorgeous, humbling, sensitive, carefully wrought film about pain, and about how love heals pain
27 November 2005
For most of my life I've sort of stated that the well-received, sort of hyped Best-Picture type films (Fight Club, American Beauty, Godfather, English Patient, etc. etc. etc.) have been my favorite films.

But then I saw "The Spitfire Grill". Or rather, I saw a preview for it. And I somehow knew that this film would surpass all others in its beauty and simplicity.

The story is simple, the themes universal, the cinematography drop-dead gorgeous, and the music haunting. Allison Elliot and Ellen Burstyn are prime actors of their generations. If you ever want to watch a film about the mistakes we all inevitably can make, the relationships and friendships we all eventually have to form to heal us, and the power of forgiveness and helping others, and the transcendent, trans formative power of love and connecting to nature in a way that reminds of our unity, watch "The Spitfire Grill." I don't think I've ever cried more emotionally at the end of a movie, and not a hard sobbing, but more like a life-draining, emotionally cathartic cry. Absolutely unforgettable.
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Rent (2005)
left me speechless, speechless
8 November 2005
this movie made me cry. out of joy and sadness combined. the music makes me want to sing and love. the music heals. the story inspires. the music heals. i'm glad musicals are still made. :-) wow. that's really all i can say. beautiful. exquisite. gorgeous. bountiful. soulful. well-edited. and unbelievably acted. and unbelievably directed. with unbelievably beautiful cinematography. and choreography that knocks your socks off. i loved this movie. it's wonderful, and heartening, that in a world and nation so full of hate art can be produced such as RENT! that reminds, affirms, validates, expresses, navigates, investigates, perpetuates, stimulates, fumigates, explicates, redirects, and instigates nothing other than love. and enjoying the moment. and not holding onto the past. timeless lessons. timeless music. Oscar gold written all over this.
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Bee Season (2005)
An UPENDING, incredible film- packs an emotional wallop...meticulously details how families can spiral into and out of control
29 October 2005
This is one of the most powerful movies I've ever seen. Richard Gere gives, in my opinion, a career-best performance, and don't be too surprised if you see his name in a many Best Actor nominee lists pretty soon. Julia Binoche is flawlessly observant and unendingly compassionate toward her very damaged character...the portrayal is done perfectly, with no mental scar left unillustrated. But the secret weapon of this movie is Flora Cross- words cannot begin to describe how talented this young actress is, and it boggles my mind to conceptualize the future work awaiting her.

This movie is powerful because it details, much more authentically than films like "Ordinary People" and "American Beauty", the way a family can start out with the hopes of happiness and the grasp toward achievement, community, and fulfillment, but end up discovering what, alas, we all discover eventually- that our need for control and refinement and altering others' lives often leads to ours and their unhappiness. "Bee Season" also evokes the need of God in our lives- in whatever way we define that, whether it be religious community, personal spirituality, or deep connections to others. Mostly, the message of this film seems to be that spirituality, as Saul defines it, often disconnects and alienates, rather than connects and fulfills. Oftentimes the little embraces and big love we give to our families and friends on a day-to-day basis constitute divinity in our lives.

A+...Powerful...You don't want to miss it.
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Red Eye (2005)
Caffeine For a Sleepy Box Office- Beautiful, Enthralling, and SMART- Wes Craven at his Finest
17 August 2005
This is the most suspenseful movie I have seen since Spielburg's "Jurassic Park." If every film had the talent and experience of Craven's direction, the stunning acting ability of McAdams and Murphy, and the articulate sensibility of Ellsworth's writing, more and more movies would be made like this. Grade A, and very unexpectedly GOOD! Watch out- this just may be a sleeper hit, perhaps even bigger than "Mean Girls" was last summer- and deservedly so. Murphy and McAdams have such chemistry- you can tell each really enjoyed making this film. Those are the best kinds of movies- the ones where you can see, either because of excellence, sincerity, or ease, the joy with which all the filmmakers took in producing what you are watching. Enjoy this film! You're in for a ride.
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Intoxicating, Brilliant, Inspirational, and Multi-Layered- what films are meant 2 B
30 January 2005
Wow- what an incredible movie! There are so many layers to this film, one could almost see it 4 times and get something new out of it every time. I loved first and foremost its message that we create ourselves through our drive, loyalty, ambition, dedication, and work. Secondly, I love its insistence in the good of the American Dream, and I loved its excitement and beautiful, touching message toward the end. A movie about violence and ambition that evolves into a movie about love, hard-earned sacrifice, and doing something meaningful with one's life. Grade A entertainment with a beautiful message to boot! Hilary Swank and Clint Eastwood should both win their second Oscars for their contribution to cinema.
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Ray (I) (2004)
one of the most intense, inspiring, and beautiful films I have ever seen
25 October 2004
Sometimes I watch a movie and I'm reminded of how the word "inspiration" is

derived- namely, in-spiriting, or evocative of the human spirit. This is definitely such a film, with Jamie Foxx delivering a mind-blowingly real and harrowing

and moving performance. Kudos all around to everyone involved with this film, from the cinematography to the smooth and concise directorial feel. Hackford has definitely moved my heart, and I plan on seeing it again. I remember

feeling that way about "What's Love Got to Do With It?"
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Garden State (2004)
Genuinely hilarious and moving- but more than that, the dialogue is some of the most realistic I've ever heard
20 August 2004
What I love most about this movie was its accurate and funny and nuanced observations of life in suburbia, but more than that, life itself. You really get to know Andrew very well. If Braff doesn't garner at least a Best Original Screenplay nod for this, the Academy'll miss the mark. The story is really touching, beautiful, and moving as it encapsulates all the awkward and real and bizarre moments of those happily trapped in suburbia. It shows the transcending and liberating power of finding love. How love can be accidental. How love inspires you to improve yourself, have fun, and live in the present instead of ascribing all your hope to the future, and thus missing out on your entire life. That's what I think this movie's message was- enjoy every moment, and love every friend and every person that comes into your life and touches you with their love.
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Osama (2003)
Give Marina the Oscar
24 May 2004
This is a movie I will never want to see again, but am extremely fortunate and better for having seen. Despite its exquisite illustration of the gloom, depravity, barbarity, and hatefulness harbored by the Taliban regime, possibly the most fundamentally misogynistic political government to have ever existed, I am unable to look away from how beautiful and talented the lead actress Marina Golbahari is, and how she exquisitely and tragically portrays her character, and how heartbreakingly beautiful it would be if, unlike last year with Keisha Castle-Hughes incredible oscar-nominated but not oscar-winning performance, Marina was nominated and actually won. Because folks, if you watch this movie, she deserves it. From a beggar girl on the streets of Afghanistan to portraying the horror of her country's regime to winning America's most prestigious acting award- wouldn't that be an amazing story we could help create?
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Pretty Woman (1990)
live with levity, love without restraint, do good- a nuanced, beautiful film often mistaken for a "formulaic" pattern
13 May 2004
There is something about this movie that is so captivating and so

beautiful and so very truly genuinely moving that no matter how

many times I watch it, last night in particular, I am left speechless

and struck by the beauty of its simple story, the directness of its

message, and the sagacity and nuanced scenes between Roberts and Gere. Many might see this movie as frivolous fluff,

but there are some very deeply psychological scenes in here,

brilliantly portrayed by a gorgeous and talented Roberts (who,

throughout her career, does play only variations of this one

character- but hey, what an amazing character)- namely, the

scenes in the dimly lighted hotel dining room when Gere and

Roberts attempt to make out. See this movie if you want a great

story that cuts to the meaning of relationships, kindness, self- improvement and love as transcending all societal boundaries

and taboos. Highly recommended.
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beautiful and funny- a genuinely touching movie that reminds you to embrace your experiences
19 April 2004
What a @W#(*# movie. "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" is

about so many things- but mostly, I think it's about cherishing

every moment, even if it ends up in pain- to not squander any

relationship or regret ANYTHING- because it's all about growth-

and to forget is to lose the moments that make life everything it is.

This movie far surpasses many of the films I have seen in the past

few years. It is intimate and real. It taught me something, or

perhaps reminded me of something- that no matter how painful

any memory can be, one should not regret it, because pain is how

we become who we are- pain is how we learn- pain is a huge part

of the joy of life. For every unpleasant memory, there is a blissfull,

ecstatic experience attached, and this film reminds you to

embrace every moment and love every mistake.

And isn't Jim Carrey incredible? And Kate Winslet impeccable?

10/10- a heart-felt ride.
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