It’s not going to get on many Top 10 lists (especially when released in 2010, the best year for movie releases in my lifetime), but The Other Guys is fun. One of my only complaints about the great year for movies that was 2010 was that it lacked a great horror film and a great comedy. Though I have not seen it, I thought Get Him To The Greek might be the comedy movie I was looking for. While that is a movie I will still watch, it no longer has the potential to be the top comedy of 2010. I believe that ranking belongs to The Other Guys.
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Category Archives: Comedy
Take This Waltz (2012)
I’m officially calling Michelle Williams the best actress of my generation. Some people will agree with this statement, but many more will probably disagree. I think most people would say she is a very good actress but will be more hesitant to say excellent. To call her the best is a bold statement. But that’s what she is. To those who would quickly dismiss this statement, I encourage them to explore her complete filmography. She has some gems out there that are relatively unknown. Williams is very deserving of the three Academy Award nominations she has received (Best Actress in a Leading Role – Blue Valentine 2010, My Week with Marilyn 2011, Best Actress in a Supporting Role – Brokeback Mountain 2004). It is merely a matter of time before she wins her first of many Oscars.
Young Adult (2011)
Young Adult is one of those movies that some people will love and some will hate, while others will only be able to decide if they love it or hate it once it concludes. It is more of a polarizing movie than most. People will remember this movie more than they would an average $10 million budget dramedy. This is particularly true for many Generation Xers who can identify with its lead character Mavis (Charlize Theron – Monster, North Country), a woman approaching 40 who is going through a major midlife identity crisis.
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Carnage (2011)
Roman Polanski’s (The Pianist, Rosemary’s Baby) star-studded Carnage, a movie adapted from the successful Tony Award Winning God of Carnage, translates on the big screen as unsuccessfully as the play, I imagine at least) plays successfully on stage. I envision Yasmina Reza written One Act as an intriguing character study that unfolds before our eyes on stage, something we don’t get much chance to see in a play. Though I have not seen God of Carnage and do not plan on doing so, I imagine it as being similar to Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman in the sense that there are just a few characters which, in turn, allows us to see these characters developed deeper and in a more meaningful way than would a play like Romeo and Juliet. The whole time I was watching this movie, I kept asking myself why this play was made into a film and how it drew the interest of Polanski and the four (including three Academy Award Winning) actors. As a play, I envision this being great. As a movie, I asked myself, “Why?”. Continue reading Carnage (2011)
50/50 (2011)
Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Inception, G.I. Joe: Rise of Cobra) further exemplified what I predicted of him after seeing 2009’s (500 Days) of Summer, which was that he was the next big thing in Hollywood. Gordon-Levitt (just 29 at the time) had already shown his abilities as a supporting actor in several critically acclaimed movies, including Stop-Loss, The Lookout, and Brick. However, these movies failed to top $11 million at the box office. (500 Days of Summer generated $32 million domestically and earned Gordon-Levitt a Best Actor in a Comedy or Musical Golden Globe Nomination. Though he did not win the award that year (Robert Downey Jr.’s won for his role in Sherlock Holmes), it opened the door for more starring roles for the young actor. This included the opportunity to star in 50/50, a movie where he earned his second Best Actor in a Comedy or Musical Golden Globe Nomination.
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