Top

Wanted - movie reviews

March 21, 2008

vm_sx100_sy140_.jpg

Oh well i guess 2 articles in 1 day  should mean something, so i will just ride the wave. Today we talk about ‘Wanted’ the next super movie, with , , and . What i most love here, is that the is , the of NightWatch , DayWatch , and the upcoming Twilight Watch . Although people started ranting about good movies gone bad, and companies taking over successful foreign productions, and turning them into crap, i have to say that this isn’t a law of how things should be.

That’s why i present you the second which most of you saw already maybe, and in my opinion it looks awesome. The actors are grade A, and judging from the past experience with and from the , i think the movie will be both fun to , and a pleasant experience.

Now, enjoy the :


Source - XeoNEWS

Drillbit Taylor - movie review

March 21, 2008

01210.jpgA cleverly placed cameo early on in reveals that the filmmakers are keenly aware of the territory in which they tread. It’s a reference to the 1980 My , in which a bullied teen hires a loner to get his back. But where that went for the more poignant, coming of age vibe, this is much more interested in making you laugh. More often than not, it succeeds.Wade (Nate Hartley) and Ryan (Troy Gentile) are nervous about the first day of high . They should be. No sooner do they arrive, inadvertently wearing the same shirt, than Wade’s attempts to protect one diminutive (David Dorfman, who’s grown maybe two inches since playing ’ son in The Ring) from the bullies (Alex Frost and Josh Peck) land them on said bullies’ crap list.

Desperate for protection from the thugs’ merciless abuse, Wade posts an ad on the Internet for a . After enduring a parade of whack jobs (which produces one of the ’s funniest sequences) they cannot afford, homeless scam (Owen ) steps in and agrees to solve their on the cheap. While his plan is to bleed them for every dime they and their rich parents have, he grows to love the kids, and one of their teachers (a somewhat wasted Leslie Mann).

:


Fortunately, it’s not nearly as schmaltzy as it sounds. Putting together a like this is no easy task. The man-child suddenly loaded with mentoring duties setup is an easy road to Syruptown, but screenwriters Kristofor Brown and Rogen (yes, that Rogen) deliver a solid script that misses that exit completely, delivering a PG-13 version of the banter that made the latter’s Superbad script so infectious.

Despite a less-than-favorable track record that includes Without a Paddle and , Steven Brill finds just the right balance of sweet, absurd, and outrageous to keep us charmed. Even a montage of abuses heaped upon our heroes is hilarious without making us lose sympathy for them. The influence of producer Judd Apatow seems apparent here, since that mix seems to be his specialty.

The comic chemistry of the three pint-sized leads is considerable. While Gentile often comes off as a mini-Jonah Hill, that’s not exactly a bad thing. Hartley gives the ’s strongest performance, finding a range within his character that’s probably not even necessary for the he’s in. And Dorfman plays off the other two with a feverish intensity that never plays too broad.

is basically on autopilot here, but for the purposes of this , that’s exactly what you want. He’s ably backed by his homeless posse (with a particularly winning turn by Danny McBride) who, in a clever sequence, all pose as substitute teachers at Wade’s .

doesn’t have anything particularly new to say about bullies or using violence to stand up for yourself. And though it’s all in good fun, it’s still kind of difficult to work a My premise in a post-Columbine age. But the never pretends to take on anything so daunting. What it sets out to do, and effectively so, is to wring some giggles out of the insecurities we all feel on that first day of .

Source

Bottom