Sunday, August 31, 2014

Belle






Movie Title--  Belle

Release Year--  2013

Running Time--  1 Hour and 24 Minutes

Director--  Amma Asante

Cast--  Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Tom Wilkinson, Emily Watson, Penelope Wilton, Sarah Gadson, Miranda Richardson, James Norton, Tom Felton, Sam Reid, Matthew Goode

In the 18th century the mixed race daughter of a Royal Navy officer is raised by her aristocratic great-uncle.




Dido Belle Elizabeth Lindsey (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) is a illegitmate mixed race child that is taken by her father, Captain Sir John Lindsey (Matthew Goode), a Royal Navy officer to his uncle and aunt, Lord and Lady Mansfield (Tom Wilkinson and Emily Watson), for them to raise while he is away in the Navy.  She is to be raised as her position requires not by the color as her skin and she is raised along side her cousin Elizabeth Murray.





I liked this film.  Now that I have seen it the one time, I probably will not see it again but it was worth one look.  The story is very interesting, parts of it being true while of course elements of fiction are mixed in to give it an underlying love story.  

I enjoyed Tom Felton's role in the film, I really think that he does a great job at being a snot nosed little villain.  Tom Wilkinson always does a great job in any film he is in as well.  As far as this film goes, if you like historical period films this one is a pretty good one to view.  Sit down on a rainy afternoon with this film and Don't Forget the Popcorn!  (I am going to leave you with the real commissioned portrait of Belle Lindsey and Elizabeth Murray)



Saturday, August 30, 2014

Philomena







Movie Title--  Philomena

Release Year-- 2013

Running Time--  1 Hour and 38 Minutes

Director--  Stephen Frears

Cast--  Judi Dench, Steve Coogan, Sophie Kennedy Clark, Sean Mahon, Peter Hermann, Michelle Fairley, Anna Maxwell Martin

The true story of Philomena Lee and the search for her son who was forceably adopted.




Martin Sixsmith (Steve Coogan) has lost his job as the Labor government adviser and to get back into the swing of working, he has decided to write a book about Russian history.  He goes to a party where a woman overhears him talking and approaches him about writing about her mother, Philomena Lee (Judi Dench), who was forced to give her son up for adoption fifty years earlier.  Martin is not keen on the idea of writing a human interest piece but after some thought, decides to meet with Philomena.  

As a young woman, Philomena meets a young man and after an encounter with him, becomes pregnant out of wedlock.  Her father sends her to live with the nuns at Sean Ross Abbey in Roscrea, Ireland.  After giving birth to a baby boy, she is forced to work at the abbey to pay off her debt to the nuns.  She works seven days a week and she gets to see her son for a hour a day until one day when he was adopted without any warning.  She keeps her son secret from all of her friends and family but she continues for years to visit the abbey to get information, only to be told by the nuns that they can not help her.

Together, Philomena and Martin travel to the abbey, only to get no where.  Before Philomena leaves, she is given an envelope that contains the contract that she has signed saying that she would not search for or try to contact her son.  At the inn they are staying at, Martin is told that the nuns deliberately destroyed all the paperwork pertaining to the adoption of the babies and that the babies were actually being sold to American citizens.  

Martin does more research but comes to a dead end in Ireland but does find a lead in America and invites Philomena to travel with him, knowing that he will not get far without having her there to inquire about her son.  Martin learns that Philomena's son Anothony was renamed Michael once he arrived in the United States.  He had grown to become a lawyer and a senior official in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations.  Martin and Philomena embark on a journey together to find out about Michael and what his life was like in America.




I really, really enjoyed this film.  It was heart-breakingly sad at points, especially knowing that it is a true story.  The story of Philomena Lee is very sad; she is given no choice in the adoption of her son, she spends years and years searching for him, only to learn that he had been sold to America.  On the other side of this story, Martin Sixsmith is disgraced and trying to find a way to get back on his feet when he is handed a human interest story that he may not have wanted but helped to uncover a big injustice committed by the Catholic Church's oversight in the Irish adoptions.

Dame Judi Dench and Steve Coogan are great together, although there are times that Coogan makes you just want to slap him because of his attitude and outlook toward everyone around him.  I would recommend this film to anyone but I will warn you, you may need tissues for this one and of course, Don't Forget the Popcorn!

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Dreams of a Life






Movie Title--  Dreams of a Life

Release Year--  2011

Running Time--  1 Hour and 31 Minutes

Film Type--  Documentary

Cast--  Zawe Ashton

A documentary about Joyce Carol Vincent, a woman who died in her North London bedsit and wasn't discovered until three years later, with her television still on.




In 2006, repo men were sent to the North London bedsit (for anyone unclear, a bedsit is a one room flat (or apartment) that is common in the UK) of Joyce Carol Vincent but instead found a badly decomposed body with the television still playing and unopened Christmas presents surrounding her.  The Police determined her cause of death to be due to natural causes since the medical examiner concluded that the remains were mostly skeletal, so badly, in fact, that she had to be identified by her dental records.  The blurb that was published in the paper said very little about her and did not include a picture.  A neighbor said that he had smelled funny smells coming from the bedsit but never reported it because the thought that maybe it was actually from some garbage bins nearby.

Some of her friends were interviewed and none of them realized that the small blurb about the woman in the paper was the same person that had been their friend and all of them were horrified to hear that she had been dead for three years before anyone even knew she was there.  One man is particularly shocked that she had four sisters and not one of them cared enough to report her missing.  

Very little is known about Joyce but here are a few facts:

Joyce Carol Vincent was born in October 1965 to a mother from India and a father from Grenada.  She was the youngest of five girls.  Her mother died when she was 11, leaving a profound impression on her.  She had an emotionally strained relationship with her father after her mother died.  She was not proud of her father, whom often acted as if he were 20 or 30 and wished that he would act more his age.

The friends whom were interviewed described Joyce as petite, attractive and annoyingly happy.  They also said she was well spoken and although she spoke softly she always spoke clearly.  They said she seemed well educated and that they always assumed that she were living a very middle class life, although she was actually living much more lowly than that.  It was said that Joyce never really seemed to have her own interests and she just became involved in whatever the man she was currently dating was interested in.  Joyce is described as a drifter and that sometimes her friends would not see her for six months or so at a time.

What nobody knew was that after she left her well paying job in 2001, she stayed for a while in a domestic abuse shelter and took on a job as a cleaner in a motel, although all of her friends had said she had always hated to do manual labor.  In November 2003, she was admitted to the hospital after vomiting blood and was treated for a peptic ulcer.  Under next of kin on her forms she listed her bank manager.  She died in December 2003.




This is a sad story.  It really makes a person step back and look at their lives.  This woman, who by all accounts seemed very well liked just drifted away from everyone she knew and after she died, no one knew she was even gone.  She had gone so unnoticed that it took 2,400 Pounds of debit for anyone to even discover that she had died.

This really was not my favorite documentary.  It is sad and tragic but since she was so badly decomposed when she died, there is no way to tell if she died of natural causes or if she had fallen victim of foul play, so the whole thing just fades out with only speculation from the people that knew her as to what may have happened.  

The people that were interviewed were pleasant for the most part and had mostly good things to say but at the same time, sometimes they strayed a little and it seemed like they were almost making fun of her, which for some reason strikes a cord with me as I was taught to not speak ill of the dead.

What this all comes down to is that although the story is interesting and sad, the film is a little underwhelming.  There is no conclusion about her death, since not enough could be learned from the body and the people that knew her didn't really know her at all because she kept herself distanced from everyone.  If you are looking for a documentary to watch, you time will probably be better spent finding another.  If you want to know about Joyce Carol Vincent and her very tragic story, you can get what you are looking for from Wikipedia in just a few minutes, don't waste your hour and a half on this one, you will only be disappointed.  Don't Forget the Popcorn.

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Neighbors






Movie Title--  Neighbors

Release Year--  2014

Running Time--  1 Hour and 36 Minutes

Director--  Nicholas Stoller

Cast--  Seth Rogen, Zac Efron, Rose Bryne, Ike Barinholtz, Carla Gallo, Dave Franco, Halston Sage

A couple adjusting to life with a newborn baby is highly discouraged when a fraternity moves in next door.





Mac (Seth Rogan) and Kelly Radner ( Rose Byrne) are a couple dealing with the problems that new parents have after bringing home a newborn.  They are trying to maintain their old lifestyle while trying to adjust to having a baby in the house, which only causes them to alienate themselves from their friends.  The house next door is for sale and they soon find themselves new neighbors to the Delta Psi Beta Fraternity.  

Mac and Kelly go next door to introduce themselves to the leaders of the fraternity, the President Teddy Sanders (Zac Efron) and the Vice President Pete Regazolli (Dave Franco).  That evening the party at the fraternity house gets a little loud, so Mac and Kelly go next door, only to be invited in and they party all night long and in the morning Teddy makes them promise to call him if they get too loud instead of the cops.  However when the house has another loud party the following night, Mac and Kelly break their promise and call the cops, causing the two houses to go to war.




I really have mixed reviews about this film.  The frat house scenes were pretty good, the scenes that Rogan, Bryne and Efron were together in were pretty good but I didn't really enjoy the scenes that Rogen and Bryne were in without Efron.  I just didn't think that the scenes between Rogen and Bryne were very funny and at times they were even tedious and boring.  I think my favorite part about this entire film was whenever it was just Efron and Rogen in a scene together.  If you watch closely, at times you can even see Efron starting to smile before he says his lines or before he makes any movement; it just seems like the two of them actually enjoyed working together and it shows in the finished product.

Another small problem I have with the film is that Mac and Kelly Radner are supposed to be the adults and at times they are worse than the college students.  Instead of trying to come up with adult ways to take care of the problem next door, they act childish about it and scheme as if they are still in college themselves.  After one or two of those scenes it really made me want to cheer for the fraternity over the "good" neighbors.

Although I did have a few problems with this film, I did really enjoy it.  I would recommend this film to a friend, especially if I thought they needed a good laugh.  Expect a few laugh out loud moments with this one and Don't Forget the Popcorn!



Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Trust Me






Movie Title--  Trust Me

Release Year--  2013

Running Time--  1 Hour and 30 Minutes

Director--  Clark Gregg

Cast--  Clark Gregg, Felicity Huffman, Allison Janney, Niecy Nash, Amanda Peet, Sam Rockwell, Saxon Sharbino, Paul Sparks

Howard Holloway is a down on his luck agent and ex child star that is looking for a break.  He finds it in the form of Lydia, a 13 year old prodigy and on the brink of closing a deal that will catapult them both in to the big time, he begins to realize that his young client may not be all that she seems.




Struggling talent agent Howard Holloway (Clark Gregg) can't ever seems to buy a break.  On an audition with one of his young clients, Howard offends casting director Meg (Allison Janney) and costs the boy the job.  His mother is outraged and fires Howard on the spot.  He then stumbles across Lydia (Saxn Sharbino), who immediately takes a liking to him and insists he be her agent, despite her father, Ray's (Paul Sparks), objection to him.  

Feeling that his luck was changing, he asks his neighbor, Marcy (Amanda Peet),  whom he has been interested in for a while to have dinner with him and surprising him, she agrees.  As they are closing the movie deal, Lydia reveals to Howard that she is being abused by her father and he feels like he can't let her continue living in a potentially harmful situation, so she helps to have her taken away from her father.  After hearing that this has cost her the role of a lifetime, Lydia flees, causing a final confrontation to occur at the theater where they are unveiling the characters for the movie.




This movie was a little strange.  I think that Clark Gregg did a great job and that his young co-star Saxon Sharbino did as equally well but although the story is sad, it wasn't very strong.  Don't get me wrong, I don't regret sitting through the film but I think that a stronger story would have helped the film seem more believable.  Also, even though I liked Clark Gregg's performance, he did seem to come off as a little awkward and even almost a little cliche.  He has the appearance of one of the only good guys left in Hollywood, so at times the way he acts almost reflects that, the character of Howard Holloway seems to keep up the good guy act even when he doesn't have to, and it comes off very disingenuous.  


Overall it was predictable.  Although the film shows you the end at the beginning, after Howard meets Lydia, it isn't very hard to see how their relationship leads to it.  The strongest acting in the world could not have supported this story to make it a hit but I do feel it is worth the watch.  As you do watch it, you can't help but feel bad for Howard.  If you decide to watch this one, Don't Forget the Popcorn.

Monday, August 25, 2014

Fright Night







Movie Title--  Fright Night

Release Year--  2011

Running Time--  1 Hour and 46 Minutes

Director--  Craig Gillespie

Cast--  Anton Yelchin, David Tennant, Colin Farrell, Toni Collette, Imogen Poots, Dave Franco, Christopher Mintz-Plasse

Charlie Brewster finally has everything he has always wanted; he is now running with the cool crowd and has the hottest girlfriend in school but when he suspects his new neighbor is a vampire, no one will believe him.





Charlie Brewster (Anton Yelchin) in his senior year of high school has finally fallen in with the cool crowd and is even dating Amy (Imogen Poots), the hottest girl in school, so when one of his old friends, Adam, goes missing he doesn't pay it too much attention until his other old friend Ed (Christopher Mintz-Plasse) corners him in the hall.  Ed threatens to expose Charlie's old nerdy life to the whole student body if he doesn't help find out what happened to their friend Adam.  Ed tells Charlie to meet him after school or a video will go viral of them role playing in the back yard.

Charlie goes home after school to see his mom, Jane Brewster (Toni Collette), in the front yard with the new neighbor Jerry (Colin Farrell).  He gets a text from Ed and rushes over to Adam's house.  As they look around Adam's house, Charlie gets more and more fed up with Ed telling him that his new neighbor Jerry is a vampire that ends with Charlie telling Ed that he doesn't want to be his friend anymore.




When Ed is walking home, he encounters Jerry and he admits to Jerry that he knows he is a vampire.  After a chase and some manipulation, Jerry overtakes Ed.  The next day at school, Ed is missing during role call, making Charlie suspicious about Ed's where abouts.  As Charlie starts to investigate Jerry, Jerry begins to attack more people, so Charlie decides to go into Las Vegas to seek out the help of magician and renown vampire hunter, Peter Vincent (David Tennant).  When Charlie starts to explain to Peter what is going on, Peter doesn't believe him and kicks him out.  

Jerry gets tired of Charlie snooping around and blows up his house, then chases Charlie, Amy and Jane into the desert where a confrontation puts Jane into the hospital.  Charlie gets a phone call from Peter telling him that he will give him the information that he needs but will not help him but after Amy gets taken, Charlie tells Peter that he is going to kill Jerry or die trying and heads to Jerry's house for his final stand.





I actually thought that film was pretty funny.  I am not sure if it was meant to be and if it wasn't, then maybe this film missed it's mark but overall, I was highly amused.  My favorite character in the film and the funniest was Peter Vincent played by David Tennant.  He was over the top, funny and even a little raunchy.  To me, he was the most amusing part of the whole film.

I was not sure about Colin Farrell in this film, he seemed way too serious for this film at certain points and a tad comical at other's, I was never very clear exactly how he was supposed to play his part.  I think that overall this film was alright.  If you are looking for an unintentional laugh, I would say go ahead with this one but if you are looking for a serious horror flick, you will be sorely disappointed.  Laugh along with this film and Don't Forget the Popcorn!

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Disconnect






Movie Title--  Disconnect

Release Year--  2012

Running Time--  1 Hour and 55 Minutes

Director--  Henry Alex Rubin

Cast--  Jason Bateman, Alexander Skarsgard, Max Thieriot, Paula Patton, Andrea Riseborough, Hope Davis, Frank Grillo, Colin Ford, Jonah Bobo, Haley Ramm, Aviad Bersnstein

Three different stories centered around the negative effect of social networking .




This tells there different stories; one revolves around a couple that have lost a baby and have lost their connection with each other, one uses online gambling as an escape and the other uses a grief chat room.  The next is the story of a reporter that reports on an underage sex ring and the third is a boy that has no friends and two boys bully him by pretending to be a girl on a social networking site.  These three stories are not shown consecutively but weaved in and out of the other stories, with at least one person in each story connecting the other two stories together.




Typically, I don't like these kinds of films but I must say I liked this one.  I won't lie, I found the beginning of the film really difficult to watch and I think that is because I could see where one of the three stories was going to lead, but once I got about 25 minutes in I found myself completely drawn in.  

I thought that the story for this film was very strong, which I think needs to be important when a film has more than one plot line going.  It was very well acted, which also helps when there seems to be a lot going on through a film.  

It really makes you step back and look at social networking.  Everyday one of these scenarios or something similar happens but since it never happens to us, we never think about it or it's effects.  It helps serve as a warning to be careful what we are doing on the internet and to watch how much personal information we are putting out there about ourselves.

Honestly, I feel like if you liked the film "Crash" from 2004, there is a very good chance you will like this film.  If you have trouble following a plot this film will not be a very good one for you to view, especially since it jumps back and forth from each story.  If you are looking for a deep and even emotional look at how some people deal with some situations, this one will be just right for you.  

This film concludes our "True Blood" theme week.  I hope I helped you view something that you wouldn't have normally considered viewing.  If you plan on watching the "True Blood" series finale tonight, Don't Forget the Popcorn.


Saturday, August 23, 2014

Free Ride






Movie Title--  Free Ride

Release Year--  2013

Running Time--  1 Hour and 26 Minutes

Director--  Shana Betz

Cast--  Anna Paquin, Liana Liberato, Ava Acres, Drea de Matteo, Dani Garcia, Cam Gigandet, Brit Morgan

A mother in an abusive relationship moves her two daughters to Florida in the 1970's to make a better life for them and becomes a drug trafficker.




Christina (Anna Paquin) takes her two daughters, MJ (Liana Liberato) and Shell (Ava Acres) to Florida to start a new life after she has taken enough abuse from of her husband.  She moves into a hotel with her friend Sandy (Drea de Matteo), who gets her a job for her "Bossman" cleaning a house with the promise to move up if she does well.  It doesn't take long for Christina to get noticed and Sandy takes her to meet the "Bossman", who promotes her to a drug trafficker.  He moves her into a new home and gifts her children with a horse but they soon discover the reason for the gift is so the drugs can be hidden in the barn.  Christina then has to consider her new life and how best to keep her children safe.




The description that I gave for the film is a little vague but it is really the most important thing to know about this film.  I will say that this film was not my favorite but it really isn't one of the worse films I have seen.  Will I sit through it again?  No but it was okay enough to watch once.  

To me the story felt long and drawn out.  There were places the script could have been scrapped but the problem with that would have been it would have made the film too short, so I believe that some of the unnecessary parts were kept in just to give the film some length.  Some of it was kind of boring; it almost seemed like the high points were really high and the low points were really low with no real give in between.

If you are an Anna Paquin fan, I say go ahead and see this film, otherwise, this may be one to just skip.  What ever choice you make, Don't Forget the Popcorn!

Friday, August 22, 2014

13 Sins






Movie Title--  13 Sins

Release Year--  2014

Running Time--  1 Hour and 33 Minutes

Director--  Daniel Stamm

Cast--  Mark Webber, Rutina Wesley, Devon Graye, Tom Bower, Ron Pearlman, Pruitt Taylor Vince

Elliot Brindle feels his luck is about to change.  When his luck changes for the worst, he gets a strange phone call that could be salvation for him, promising him increasing amounts of money to complete tasks but it doesn't take long for the game to turn dangerous.




Elliot Brindle Mark Webber) is having trouble changing his luck but when he is called in to a meeting with his supervisor, he feels like there is change coming, the only thing is he doesn't expect that the change is for the worst.  He is fired from his job and he has to consider the extreme debt he is in and the people that depend on him; his mentally disabled brother Michael (Devon Graye) who is in jeopardy of being sent back to a mental facility, his pregnant fiancee Shelby (Rutina Wesley) and his father (Tom Bower) a racist, abusive old man who is being evicted.

Elliot goes out and while stopped he gets a mysterious phone call that challenges him to kill the fly he is battling with for $1,000, then he is asked to eat the fly to complete a challenge and earn more money.  The caller then explains that this is part of a game where he will have to complete 13 tasks for increasing amounts of money.  If Elliot accepts, he has to complete all 13 tasks in thirty-six hours.  The first few challenges are easy but they become increasingly more challenging, attracting the attention of the cops in the process.  When Elliot is no longer sure he wants to participate, the caller informs him that all the money he has won up to that point will be taken back if he gives up.  The game gets more and more dangerous as the cash prizes get higher, making Elliot take under consideration what is more important in life.




I wasn't very sure about this film when I started it but as it progressed, I found myself increasingly more interested.  The story was actually pretty good.  There are a few bloody scenes but it really isn't as bad as some horror films I have seen.  Watching Elliot Brindle progress with the tasks and seeing the effect each has on him makes you want to watch the story unfold.

I would actually recommend this film to someone that was looking to view a horror flick.  As far as this one goes, turn off the lights, sit back on the couch and enjoy the ride.  Oh yeah and Don't Forget the Popcorn!

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Little Murder






Movie Title--  Little Murder

Release Year--  2011

Running Time--  1 Hour and 37 Minutes

Director--  Predrag Antonijevic

Cast--  Josh Lucas, Terrance Howard, Deborah Ann Woll, Lake Bell, Cary Elwes, Sharon Leal, Noah Bean

After the damage caused by Hurricane Katrina, disgraced Detective, Ben Chaney, has a chance to redeem himself by helping the ghost of a murdered woman catch her killer.



Disgraced Detective, Ben Chaney (Josh Lucas) is told by his superior that it is time for him to get back to his job in the aftermath of a shooting in which he killed a child.  He is put on one of his co-worker's cases where he is to keep surveillance on a suspect by the name of Drag Hammerman (Terrance Howard).  During his stay in the house next door, the ghost of the previous tenant comes to him and asks for his help in catching her killer.  Chaney becomes obsessed with her and involves himself in a dangerous game of cat and mouse.




There isn't much description I can give about this film without reveling plot points or spoiling things all together.  This is filmed like a low budget film and that is never as apparent as it is in the first ten minutes or so.  The beginning of the film honestly looks as if it was filmed with hand held video cameras.  The quality of the film does improve as the story progress but not much.

I think that Josh Lucas is an alright actor but his character in this film is a little flat and soulless.  I did like Terrance Howard's performance, although most of it was sort of eccentric and maybe a little over played for this film.  There are two stories going on here but after the first twenty or thirty minutes of the film, the second story kicks in and the first part seems to be lost and the viewer almost forgets about it before it weaves it's way back into the ending.  

This film is very underwelming and I think it is one to just skip completely.  Sitting down to this film will just waste a hour and forty minutes of your time.  Put your favorite bowl and the popcorn popper back on the shelf for this one.  Until next time Don't Forget the Popcorn!

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Knights of Badassdom







Movie Title--  Knights of Badassdom

Release Year--  2014

Running Time--  1 Hour and 26 Minutes

Director--  Joe Lynch

Cast--  Steve Zahn, Peter Dinklage, Ryan Kwanten, Summer Glau, Jimmi Simpson, Danny Pudi, Margarita Levieva, Brett Gipson

Three best friends accidentally conjure up a demon from hell when they go into the woods for a Live Action Role-Playing weekend.




Two best friends, Eric (Steve Zahn) and Hung (Peter Dinkalge) kidnap their broken-hearted  friend Joe (Ryan Kwanten) and force him to play a part in their Live Action Role Playing weekend.  When Eric, a 26th level wizard tells the Game Master, Ronnie (Jimmi Simpson), that Joe is going to be joining their party, Ronnie tells him before they get started on their quests, Joe must be "reanimated" with their missing teammate's spirit and to use a simple summoning spell on him.  Eric then uses a book he got off the internet as a prop for his spell.  He sings the words from the book out loud the best he can in the language they are written to him and he unknowingly summons a demon from hell.  Joe, who is in the middle of the circle has a picture of his ex-girlfriend Beth (Margarita Levieva) and the demon takes her form.

After people start getting killed in the forest, Ronnie figures out what Eric has done and confronts him about the book.  When Eric admits he can not read the language inside the book and he just aquired it from the internet, Ronnie tells the group the history of the book and what he has summoned.  Eric and Joe, along with their small band of heroes including Ronnie, Gwen (Summer Glau) and her cousin Gunther (Brett Gipson) have to save the other LARPers from being consumed by the demon and send it back to hell.




I just have to say, this film is absolutely ridiculous.  Don't get me wrong, I did enjoy most of it but this is definitely not a film for everyone.  I really think that only a handful of people will like this film.  I have heard of LARPing or Live Action Role Playing before but I have never seen anything about it or participated in it before and I am sure that although this film exaggerates it some, from what I have heard, it is pretty accurate.  

The demon from hell story line I really could have done without.  I mean, sure there needs to be some kind of story to keep the film moving along but the introduction of the killer succubus into the story, turns what would be an otherwise funny story into a cheep feeling slasher film.

Overall, I really enjoyed this film.  As I mentioned before, this is not going to be a film that a lot of people are going to enjoy but I think that for the most part, it is worth the watch.  Just keep in mind that the whole demon thing, at least for the first half of the film, is a little corny.  Gather your best nerd friends together for this film and Don't Forget the Popcorn!



Tuesday, August 19, 2014

The Caller







Movie Title--  The Caller

Release Year--  2011

Running Time--  1 Hour and 31 Minutes

Director--  Matthew Parkhill

Cast--  Rachelle Lefevre, Stephen Moyer, Lorna Raver, Ed Quinn, Luis Guzman

Mary Kee moves into her own apartment while going through a traumatic divorce and starts an unlikely friendship with a mysterious, unknown caller named Rose.  When Rose reveals she is calling from the past, Mary tries to cut all contact, only to be met with terrible consequences.  




Mary Kee (Rachelle Lefvre) is going through a terrible divorce.  After moving into a new apartment she finds an old fashioned phone and it doesn't take long before she starts receiving phone calls from a mysterious woman.  Mary soon learns the caller's name is Rose (Lorna Raver) and she was involved with a man who lived in the apartment previously.  The two women strike up a very unlikely friendship but when Rose reveals that she is in 1979 and proves it by drawing a rose in the pantry, Mary starts to question her motives.

As Mary's phone calls become more and more troubling, a terrified Mary decides to cut all contact.  After a long silence, Mary plugs her phone back in to contact the landlord and the phone calls start again and this time they come with disastrous consequences.  




I will start by saying, this is not the best thriller I have seen lately but it definitely isn't the worst.  My biggest problem was I sat through this film wondering when the twist was coming.  Were we going to find out that Mary was crazy?  Was the woman on the phone really calling or was Mary having a break with reality because of her ugly divorce?  I feel like I had a hard time believing the story because it felt very far fetched.

I really enjoyed Rachelle Lafavre and Stephen Moyer's acting in this film and I liked the chemistry they had together.  They play a couple in the film but the feeling you get from them is almost as if they had known each other their whole lives, they just seemed to have a certain kind of comfort with the other that isn't seen that often  between co-stars anymore.

Anyone that is looking for something just a bit out of the ordinary (when it comes to this type of film anyway), this may be your thing.  An instant classic?  Not at all but it is worth the watch if you can't find anything else on.  Don't Forget the Popcorn!