To say that Frankie & Johnny capitalized on the success of When Harry Met Sally would be an understatement. While When Harry Met Sally was new, fresh, and celebrated, Frankie & Johnny felt played out, stale, and sometimes tiresome. This movie has all the cliches of a romantic dramedy. A middle-aged woman is down on her luck after several failed relationships. Off the street comes a man who enters her life. She doesn’t want to like him. She doesn’t want to be involved because she knows she will inevitably be hurt again. So, instead, she spends her nights alone. He keeps pressing, and eventually, she lets him in. They have complications. She questions why he likes her. He responds with the “just let life happen” type of response. We’ve seen this movie a million times and will see it a million more.
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Buried (2010)
There were two movies released in 2010 about a single individual trapped in a circumstance that most of us cannot even fathom, let alone endure. One of those was the Danny O’Boyle/James Franco Best Picture Academy Award nominee, 127 Hours. The other was a much lesser-known and slightly less well-received effort by first-time director Roberto Cortes and Ryan Reynolds (The Proposal, The Amityville Horror), called Buried. It’s hard to know how Buried would have done if it had been released in any other year. Unfortunately for Cortes and Reynolds, it was released just months before the true story of 127 Hours. It felt like there wasn’t a market for both movies in 2010.
The River King (2005)
Although I had never heard of 2004’s The River King, the DVD case piqued my interest when I saw it in the under-$5 bin at Walmart one day. I purchased the movie, but it sat on my shelf for a couple of years before I picked it up again when looking for something to watch. The case has piqued my interest once again. The movie hooked me within its first five minutes. While this was not a great movie, it was worth watching. The opening scene’s setting—a dead body discovered beneath a transparent sheet of ice in a narrow, winding river, amid a desolate forest in the depths of winter—was perfectly captured by director Nick Willing.