Thought I'd stick everything in here, all in one place.
Easy A Will Gluck, 2010
Emma Stone, Penn Badgley, Thomas Haden Church
After a little white lie about losing her virginity gets out, clean cut high school girl Olive (Emma Stone) sees her life paralleling Hester Prynne's in "The Scarlet Letter", which she is currently studying in school - until she decides to use the rumor mill to advance her social and financial standing. I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that I'm astounded by how much I enjoyed this. After seeing some decent to good reviews I expected little more than a fun high-school flick I could switch off to. What I got was this generation's
The Breakfast Club.
It manages to draw you in a number of ways. The affable, goofy charm of the gorgeous Emma Stone makes Olive incredibly easy to like and we care about her right from the get go. She has star quality in abundance and it shows. Her turns in
Crazy, Stupid, Love.,
The Help and
Zombieland make it clear she has a massive future, but this is where she gives her best performance to date, for my money anyway.
The story, whilst simple, feels very fresh in its delivery, and is thickly layered with a brand of comedy that is all at once razor sharp, superbly written and performed with aplomb. It's deceptively smart, too, a quality that is sorely missed in the majority of teen-centric comedy releases these days. Direct reference is made to them in the movie itself, but even before it does I'm feeling twinges of a kind of bright, inventive humour akin to John Hughes' wonderful and iconic youth films of the 1980s, only culturally up-to-date.
The supporting cast was one more thing I found myself really digging. Thomas Haden Church, Lisa Kudrow, Malcolm McDowell, Patricia Clarkson, hell, even Amanda Bynes wasn't
completely insufferable. Stanley Tucci was undoubtedly the stand-out, though, as Olive’s liberal dad. He’s hysterical.
I would encourage any doubters to give this a chance. There's a lot more to it than I think a lot of people expect.
From the trade-off tab:
American History X Tony Kaye, 1998
Edward Norton, Edward Furlong, Beverly D'Angelo
Recommended by DexterRiley
Norton's performance is good enough to carry the entire thing. One of the things that struck me as most remarkable was the way in which he portrays Derek in the 'after prison' parts of the movie, the thought that I could feel even a grain of sympathy for a man clearly so despicable is both terrifying and awe-inspiring and a testament to how well performed and how well written the part is. Of course the tirade of hate we see from in the flashback sequences and how committed he is to that is just as impressive.
But I never felt as if the story really lived up to expectations, mostly because it lacked focus. The narrative following Derek's attempt to reform his brother is good but too much time is spent on Derek's own reformation to dedicate the time needed to make the main story pop. Both are extremely well made and acted across the board, but it felt as if I was watching two separate movies roughly sliced together.
and some quickies...
Charlie Wilson's War (Mike Nichols, 2007)
Entertaining, and certainly more fun than it has any right to be. I would watch Philip Seymour Hoffman in
anything. Always superb.
The Men Who Stare At Goats (Grant Heslov, 2009)
Wispy nothingness when it comes down to it, but the cast try hard and the wackiness is more charming than annoying.