Flight

by Edward Dunn


FLIGHT
R
138 Minutes
Director: Robert Zemeckis
Writer: John Gatins
Denzel Washington, Don Cheadle, John Goodman


I'm too high
But I ain't left the ground
I'm too high
I'm too high
I hope I never ever come down
-Stevie Wonder TOO HIGH
(1973)

Cast
Whip Whitaker...Denzel Washington
Don Cheadle...Hugh Lang
John Goodman...Harling Mays
Kelly Reilly...Hooker/Heroin Addict/ Nobel Laureate

And Now For Your In-Flight Entertainment


Captain Whitaker flies for Generic Airlines. He's a complete burnout with no redeemable qualities. After a long night of screwing, drinking, and snorting with a common harlot.  The captain was ready to fly a large commercial aircraft. He woke up, put on some aviator sunglasses, and 'winged', what would turn out as his most difficult flight.  In the midst of violent turbulence, he performed some breathtaking aeronautical heroics.

In the aftermath, his co-pilot lost the use of his legs, and a few people died. No biggie, everyone else is cool, they survived. In summary: a complete tragedy—prevented by one magnificent man.

His heroics became less impressive, (one could argue more impressive) when the toxicology report came in. Whip was drunk and high on cocaine, while saving all those lives. This negates everything: at least that was the main premise.

Since he was such a hardcore alcoholic; I assumed Mister Whitaker had endured great life tragedy, like his son accidentally died after huffing model airplane glue. Only knowing he has a problem with alcohol isn't satisfying. If there's no reason for the constant drunkenness. Then part of the movie is missing.

I like Denzel. Denzel Washington, not the other Denzel. But he's never played a convincing bad guy. Maybe it's the smile, but even in TRAINING DAY (2001), and AMERICAN GANGSTER (2007). He seems ineffective at playing unsavory characters. I've called Will Smith 'the black Tom Hanks'. It's clear to me now, Denzel is better suited for that label.

I Get High With A Little Help From My Friends

Like THE FLINTSTONES MOVIE (1994), John Goodman was the best part of this film. Playing a 'Tennille-like' figure to the captain. He was Whitaker's drug dealer, alcohol supplier, and accomplice/confidant. On the day of an important hearing. After Whip has been drinking all night. Harling gets called in to 'resuscitate' him. He does this with almost scientific-like precision, with spaced out doses of cocaine, in many of its forms.

If we can learn anything from Darryl Strawberry: don't show up to a hearing drunk and coked out. Things won't turn out very well. The story concludes with Whip testifying at a  hearing. He breaks down, and finally takes responsibility:

          'I'm drunk right now, because I'm an alcoholic.'

A watchable movie that isn't very satisfying. This is one film the FAA should have never cleared for landing; FLIGHT is about as unimaginative as that analogy.

No, wait...I can come up with something better. Bette Midler might say, 'there is no wind beneath the wings of this movie'.

Final Boarding Call


Watch this on a long plane ride on your laptop. If only to see the horrified look on the guy's face sitting next to you. Priceless.

Final Verdict: 65 out of 100

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Skyfall

by Edward Dunn


SKYFALL
PG-13
143 Minutes
Director: Sam Mendes
Writers: Neal Purvis, Robert Wade, John Logan, Ian Fleming
Daniel Cwraig, Javier Bardem, Naomie Harris

'Sometimes the old ways are the best.' -Movie Dialogue

CAST
Daniel Craig ... James Bond
Judi Dench ... M
Javier Bardem ... Silva Naomie Harris ... Eve
Wolf Blitzer ... Situation Room Corespondant

A complex plot, I won't bore you with the details; as I'm piecing this review together with only the theatrical trailer and interviews with the people involved with SKYFALL. All you need to know is a professional hit man (not the wrestler) killed a colleague and now it's time for the perpetrator to die hard with a vengeance.

Yes, this is one more action movie involving computer hacking, and decrypted Excel spreadsheets. But it's not as boring as it sounds.

SKYFALL takes a more serious tone than earlier Bond films. This time around, we find out much more about James Bond the character, and his past.

It took many a year, but Agent Constant Drinking has finally caught up with James Bond. But he's still up to the task.

Additionally, M's superiors are trying to make her voluntarily retire. Throughout her long tumultuous career she's carelessly endangered the lives of many her agents, and now she must answer for her many transgressions.

Just because someone is 'chronologically challenged', doesn't mean they can't do the same things a younger person can ... in a way that is much less efficient.

No one is getting fired or forced into early retirement. The only termination that's going on is those of other people's lives.

Call Christopher Walken and have him give his creepiest guy in the world...I mean creepiest Bond villain trophy to this guy. The actor who portrays the villain in NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN is in this. Here, he's just as creepy...well maybe not. It's tough to compete with that guy.

Daniel Craig has only been in three of these Bond films. After the next  couple of 007 movies. I imagine Daniel Craig will want to play other roles; like former James Bond actor in a Gray Goose Vodka commercial.

If I may address one complaint. After Eve almost kills him with a sniper rifle, Bond later goes on to say, 'you gave it your best shot'. It's bad writing, and it's bad comedy, no excuses.  This is a legitimate criticism, and not just a pot shot.

Final Verdict: 90 out of 100



The Dog Who Saved Halloween

by Edward Dunn


THE DOG WHO SAVED HALLOWEEN (2011)
PG
85 Minutes
Director: Peter Sullivan
Writers: Jeffrey Schenck, Peter Sullivan,
Stars: Gary Valentine, Dean Cain, Elisa Donovan

'You don't love me, you just love my doggy style. '
-SNOOP LION, OR THE ARTIST FORMERLY KNOWN AS SNOOP DOGGY DOGG (1992), and SNOOP DOGG (1998)(I'll have to review 'BONES' next Halloween)

Smoking is cool

Cast (* Indicates actors who appeared on the show BLOSSOM)
Gary Valentine    ...     George Bannister
Dean Cain    ...     Ted Stein
Elisa Donovan    ...     Belinda Bannister
Lance Henriksen    ...     Eli Cole
*Joseph Lawrence    ...     Zeus
*Mayim Bialik    ...     Medusa

SCARY STORIES TO TELL IN THE DARK

 

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Here Comes The Boom

by Edward Dunn


HERE COMES THE BOOM PG 105 Minutes Director: Frank Coraci Writers: Kevin James, Rock Reuben, Allan Loeb Kevin James, Henry Winkler, Salma Hayek CAST Kevin James...Scott Boom Salma Hayek...Bella Flores Henry Winkler...Marty Streb Greg Germann...Principal Betcher Joe Rogan...Himself

People are always bad mouthing PAUL BLART. I say it doesn’t get enough credit. In the previews, it looked awful, but it’s a solid C- film. So I gave this movie a chance, and I left the theater completely devastated.

The film unfolded like an episode of KING OF QUEENS; except with the sitcom, you can hear laughter in the background.

I know this sounds like that movie WARRIOR. Unlike WARRIOR, the face of MMA, and miscellaneous douchary, Joe Rogaine…I mean Rogan, is in this one.

I used most of my UFC jokes on that WARRIOR movie. But I haven’t used those KFC jokes yet. Kevin James lost 80 pounds to play an out-of-shape, high school biology teacher.

Mr. Boom is a science teacher. A budget shortfall might end all extracurricular activities. He needs to solve this. Boom used to wrestle in high school. Naturally, he assumes entering an MMA competition would be the best way to fix this budget issue. So every day after school, Jackie Chan gives him the martial arts training he so badly needs.

Hot For (a) Teacher

Scott is an astute character. He knows Salma Hayek is far enough past her prime, where a high school teacher could easily date her.

You got to have some contrived conflict between the romantic interest and another woman. But that never happens. HERE COMES THE BOOM is too good for such clichés, and coherent plot lines.

Henry Winkler is good, he’s always at least tolerable, even in bad films. Just once, it would be nice to see him as “The Fonz” again, like an adult, Principal “Fonz” that sleeps with all the female faculty members. I’m including the unattractive ones as well. Because, well, he’s just that kind of guy.

Scott’s opponent had the same entrance music: “HERE COMES THE BOOM”…AWK-WERD… It goes against the general etiquette practiced in the Mixed Martial Arts world. The other guy knew the song didn’t belong to him. It’s kind of like two women wearing the same dress before fighting each other in the octagon.

Who’s the Voss?

I almost forgot. His real last name isn’t Boom. It’s Voss, but does it really matter? I was half-expecting a character name so lazy and on-the-nose it might as well explain the whole plot. That kind of lazy writing is definitely plausible, but it’s really more the domain of Tyler Perry.

I’d say they intentionally tried to make a bad movie, but that would have required some forethought.

Final Verdict: 30 out of 100


7 Psycopaths

by Edward Dunn


7 PSYCHOPATHS
R
105 Minutes
Director: Martin McDonagh
Writer: Martin McDonagh
Colin Farrell, Woody Harrelson,
Woody, Sam Rockwell, Christopher Walken, Tom Waits


CAST
Sam Rockwell
...Billy
Colin Farrell  ...Marty
Christopher Walken ... Hans
Kevin Corrigan ...     Dennis
Woody Harrelson... Charlie
Bonny the ShihTzu  ... Bonny
Tom Waits...Zachariah
Christine Marzano ... The Hooker

'I make movies that nobody will see. I've made movies that even I have never seen.'

-Christopher Walken

7 PSYCHOPATHS is a lot like ZACH AND MIRI MAKE A PORNO (2008): it's a movie about making a movie. Largely a character driven story. This film is so complex, and nuanced. To explain it with words, or even diagrams for that matter, wouldn't do it justice.

The central character, Billy is the only genuine psychopath in this story. The other 6 psychopaths aren't psycho; there aren't very many people that can read minds.

Marty is an Irish, alcoholic writer, who doesn't seem to be very talented. I think Colin Farrell got this part because he didn't know that he was auditioning for anything.

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Stolen

by Edward Dunn


STOLEN
R
96 Minutes
Director: Simon West
Writer: David Guggenheim
Nicolas Cage, Malin Akerman, Josh Lucas

'A character is like an acrostic or Alexandrian stanza; read it forward, backward, or across, it still spells the same thing.'-Ralph Waldo EmersonCast
Nicolas Cage Will Montgomery
Josh Lucas Vincent
Danny Huston Tim Harlend
Malin Akerman Riley Jeffers
Sami Gayle Alison Loeb

Nick Cage walks into a crowded movie theater, holding a pistol to a
kitten's head, and says, ' I'm going to pass a collection basket around, give me all your valuables or the kitten gets it.' He fires is a warning shot in the air. When he gets the collection basket back, Nick notices someone put a copy of BANGKOK DANGEROUS in there.  So he shoots the kitten, but worry not, it wasn't a real cat, it was a prop from one of my movie reviews.

This story was an allegory; I'm saying Nick Cage steals your money because you pay to see the movies he stars in that don't have any real value. Most appropriately, the movie's named STOLEN.

I don't remember any of the plot details. Let me jog my memory by looking at the theatrical poster. 12 HOURS - $10 MILLION DOLLARS -1 DAUGHTER...STOLEN.

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Fat Albert (Retro)

by Edward Dunn


FAT ALBERT
PG
93 Minutes
Director: Joel Zwick
Writers: Bill Cosby, Charles Kipps
Kenan Thompson, Kyla Pratt, Omarion Grandberry                                                                                                     

Well it's time to open some fan mail.

I don't know how this person got a hold of my physical address. But here goes... Well Jimmy, to answer your second question. 'Heathcliff' is my favorite cartoon cat.

I'm talking about Dr. Heathcliff Huxtable. He was one cool cat.

To answer your first question, WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT? (1988). But going on about a movie I love isn't any fun. There is one cartoon/movie you need to avoid, FAT ALBERT (2004).

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Seeking A Friend For The End

by Edward Dunn


SEEKING A FRIEND FOR THE END
R
101 Minutes
Director: Lorene Scafaria
Writer: Lorene Scafaria (screenplay)
Stars: Steve Carell, Keira Knightley, Melanie Lynskey

Cast
Steve Carell     ...     Dodge
Keira Knightley     ... Penny
Nancy Carell     ...     Linda
Martin Sheen    ...     Frank (Dodge's Father)
Rob Huebel     ...     Jeremy
Rob Corddry     ...     Warren
Patton Oswalt    ...     Roache

 

My only friend

The End

(and)

...the end is always near

-JIM MORRISON


Kirk Cameron warned us about this in that LEFT BEHIND thing. I believe it was THE GROWING PAINS MOVIE. The overall message was cryptic, but there's something about legalizing gay marriage and/or Alan Thicke causing the rapture.

In a fake apocalypse, people would kill one another before anyone realized it was a hoax, by that point, it's no longer a fake apocalypse.

SEEKING A FRIEND FOR THE END tells a familiar story in a different way, without a fictional black president.

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