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Angel Eyes starring Jim Caviezel and Jennifer Lopez

Posted on December 3, 2011 Written by ripitup

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Jennifer Lopez Angel Eyes movie poster
Angel Eyes starring Jim Caviezel and Jennifer Lopez. A film by Luis Mandoki. Image via sweetslyrics.com

 

Catch (Jim Caviezel) is a loner who spends his days wandering about and helping people when he can.

Sharon (Jennifer Lopez) is a single cop who has a problematic relationship with her family.

When Catch saves Sharon’s life during a chase, they connect. Catch is nothing like the guys around her, and she can’t help but being drawn to him. But the mystery about him is annoying her as he doesn’t seem to want to share anything about his own life while he’s more than happy to be involved in hers. But as they don’t want to stop being around each other, Catch makes more of an effort and Sharon ignores the things that don’t make sense. But Catch’s past- a past that he doesn’t remember all that well-eventually catches up with them. Can the relationship survive what he has gone through?

Jim Caviezel and Jennifer Lopez in Angel Eyes
Jim Caviezel and Jennifer Lopez in Angel Eyes. Image via angel_cineclub.de

Angel Eyes is a sweet romantic drama with a decent story. Sure, there are a few things about the movie I’d have done differently (such as some scenes, the timeline and mostly the soundtrack).

But it is entirely watchable and likeable, especially if you are a romantic who enjoys emotional stories that haven’t been injected with extra tragedy to be a tear-jerker.

Attention to the word extra: there is a tragedy in the core. This is the first movie I had seen Jim Caviezel in and needless to say he made a good impression. The guy can pull off tall, dark, mysterious and handsome.

 

You’re strongly recommended to ignore the  genre label on IMDB as it is also featured as a thriller. It’s not. It’s good old fashioned romantic drama directed by Luis Mandoki who directed When a Man Loves a Woman, Trapped, Message in a Bottle, White Palace and more. And frankly, it does deserve a bit more than 5.5 (its imdb rating).

 

Fun note: Terrence Howard has a supporting role as one of Jennifer Lopez’s cop buddies, and Jeremy Sisto plays her brother.

 

Other Articles on the Cast

Also on Jim Caviezel

Jim Caviezel Trivia

High Crimes starring Jim Caviezel & Ashley Judd

Person of Interest starring Jim Caviezel and Michael Emerson

 

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Also on Jennifer Lopez

Monster in Law starring Jennifer Lopez, Jane Fonda and Michael Vartan

The Back-up Plan starring Jennifer Lopez and Alex O’Loughlin

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: angel eyes, angel eyes 2001, angel eyes cast, angel eyes jim caviezel, angel eyes movie, drama, Jennifer Lopez, Jennifer lopez angel eyes, Jennifer lopez movies, Jeremy sisto, Jim Caviezel, jim caviezel angel eyes, jim caviezel movies, Luis Mandoki, luis mandoki movies, mystery, romance, Terrence Howard

Keith starring Elisabeth Harnois & Jesse McCartney

Posted on December 1, 2011 Written by ripitup

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Keith Plot Summary- No Spoilers

keith movie poster
Keith starring Elisabeth Harnois & Jesse McCartney. With Jennifer Grey. Image via lh5.ggpht.com

Natalie (Elisabeth Harnois) is the perfect high school student: she has a partial tennis scholarship to Duke, she edits the school newspaper, has a great GPA and doesn’t miss a school party. Her parents (mother played by Jennifer Grey) couldn’t be prouder-yet they are still monitoring her achievements closely just to make sure. At one party, she finally meets the new handsome foreign student Raff (Ignacio Serricchio) and starts dating him. Her whole life is one perfect checklist.

Enter Keith (Jesse McCartney). Keith hates what the popular kids do and he thinks that arranging one’s life according to their future college is just stupid. He is impulsive, fun-loving and likes living his way. So when he becomes Natalie’s lab partner at a chemistry class, their personal differences drive Natalie crazy at first. The last thing she needs is a lazy, stupid lab partner with no goals…

But she quickly realizes that Keith is actually really smart and really interesting. So despite a non-problematic romance with Raff, she can’t resist hanging out as “lab partners” with Keith. But the more she hangs out with him, the more she starts liking him and starts realizing that she doesn’t really know anything about him. And his quirkiness might have completely different foundations than she thought.

As Natalie falls for Keith, she starts questioning her own” goals”- which seem to be more her parents’ than hers- her picture perfect relationship with Raff and whether she should be with Keith. There is only one problem: What the hell is Keith hiding?

Why Keith Is Worth Watching

Keith is sweet, touching and feels real. Just when you think you watched all the high school romances with potential tragedies lurking ahead, a film comes along and tells you the story in a way that moves you, makes you laugh and maybe even cry a bit.

As opposed to the popular girl clichés, neither Nat nor her best friend are cheerleaders. Also the boy that is doomed to lose the girl- the popular guy- is not shallow, or mean in anyway. Sure, he is not the most interesting character, but he is exactly the type of guy you’d want to date at least once in high school. It is also cool that the leading character is not conventionally good-looking, or that it is not the victory of the nice outcast vs. the mean popular kid. If someone acts like a jerk, it is either Keith to Nat, or Nat to Raff.

The two main characters are far from perfect, and they screw up a lot of things. The dialogue and scenes are highly refreshing and entertaining, and it does deserve that 7.5 rating on IMDB. One viewer compared the film to Cameron Crowe (Jerry Maguire, Elizabethtown, Vanilla Sky)’s  style, and I can see that. I love Crowe, and I really loved Todd Kessler’s Keith.

As to Keith’s motives, and when he really started to fall for Nat, the audience is divided. I for one believe that Keith already had a crush on Natalie before they became lab partners, and that he was as crazy about Natalie as she was about him. If anyone wants to see this story in which a girl stupidly screws up her life for a guy who mistreated her, you are missing out on a lot. And saying that Keith had no right to act way is well…over-simplifying things. Unless you went through the exact same thing at 17, you really aren’t the one to judge his actions and reactions.

Highly recommended to all ages and sexes. And it feels a lot more natural than a Nicholas Sparks adaptation. 8/10 from me.

Fun notes:

Fun to see Jennifer Grey as the boring mother whereas she is most famous for being the idealist girl falling for a dancer and standing up to her father because of it in Dirty Dancing.

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: drama, Elisabeth Harnois, elisabeth harnois keith, Ignacio Serricchio, Jennifer Grey, jesse mccartney, jesse mccartney keith, Keith, keith 2008 movie, keith movie, keith plot, keith review, movies, romance, todd kessler

Person of Interest starring Jim Caviezel & Michael Emerson

Posted on November 27, 2011 Written by ripitup

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Person-of-Interest-jim-caviezel-michael-emerson
Person of Interest starring Jim Caviezel & Michael Emerson.Image via divxplanet.com

Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) is a rich computer genius who the world believes to be dead. After 9/11, he has built a smart machine for the government which can detect potential mass crimes before they happen. Unfortunately, the machine can also detect other crimes. Since the government wasn’t interested, and Finch couldn’t let it go, he  the machine to send him the suspected person’s social security number. Finch wants to help these individuals who the government isn’t interested in helping, and needs a man with a certain skill set.

John Reese (Jim Caviezel) is an ex-military/government agent, and he is damn good at tracking, fighting, using weapons, disappearing and a lot more. The world also thinks he is dead, and ever since he lost the love of his life, he doesn’t care about anything anymore. Spending his days like a homeless drunk, he is spotted by Finch, who of course knows that Reese isn’t dead.

When a subway incident puts Reese on the radar of the NYPD detective Carter (Taraji P. Henson), Finch bails him out and offers him the job of helping people that alerted his machine. At first Reese is reluctant, but Finch persuades him that he can help others from getting hurt, and he indeed has the resources to provide him.

After that, they start their cases with a number. They find out who the number belongs to, but they don’t know what the crime will be, or if the person will be the victim or the guilty party. Finch feeds Reese the intel, and Reese starts tracking their person of interest.  Nothing is ever what it seems to be, and they always find a way to get advantage of it. For instance instead of killing or jailing one of the dirty cops (Kevin Chapman) they catch, Reese makes him his inside source.

Of course there are two big puzzles: what happened to Finch (he has had a serious injury and walks with a strong limp- we don’t know how that happened or he wanted to disappear) and Reese (who killed his girlfriend and why).

person-of-interest-jim-caviezel-as-john-reese
Reese (Jim Caviezel) is on the job, tracking their current person of interest.

Person of Interest is very addictive. It has character development, drama, mystery and plenty of action. It has two main and two supporting characters, and the relationship between Finch and Reese is a lot of fun.  While Reese at first seemed angry and depressed, each episode slowly reveals his subtle sense of humor and dibs at uncovering more about Finch. Finch knows a lot more about Reese than the audience, and the audience has a lot of questions about both. He is very determined about keeping himself a closed box, and Reese is tempted to open it up slowly.

Reese is the ultimate action hero. Yes, he is a good guy. Yeah, he doesn’t feel great when he has to kill people. But he really doesn’t mind if he has to kill scum. He kicks ass, and it is fun trying to see a bunch of mean but no-so-skilled and/or well-trained bad guys try to go at our 6′ 2″ (1.88 m) hero.

And as cool and professional Reese is, he is not short of using empathy with the people he is trying to save. Everything isn’t black and white with him. Example? An ex-soldier who’s robbing banks to look after his dead friend’s kids without killing anyone is a guy who deserves a second chance in Reese’s book.

I also love the fact that Finch and Reese aren’t trying to save the whole world. They’re helping one person at a time, and entertaining us while doing so.

It’s a lot of fun to see Carter trying to catch Reese when she constantly ends up with the description “Tall man in a suit”…

Recommended. Currently 8.2 on IMDB. 10/10 from me. But then again, I have always been a sucker for the cool spy stuff without the supernatural elements where we are not saving the world. And as my favorite shows are slowly losing their edge (Castle got darker and less funny, where as The Mentalist got lighter and funnier), A Person of Interest hooked me from episode 1. And you know a shows rocks when it is great enough with a higher purpose (catching Red John) or without presenting a possible on-screen couple.  Just pure good writing and good acting. Try it!

 

Favorite Lines & Scenes:

Season 1, Episode 5

Finch: Mr. Reese-any sign of a threat?

Reese (not having spotted a threat for a while and watching the judge eat fast food): Does cholesterol count?

*

Season 1, Episode 5

Reese: Thank you.

Finch: I beg your pardon?

Reese: For giving me a job

Finch: (offering the personal suggestion he refused in the beg. of the episode) Try the eggs Benedict Mr. Reese, I’ve had them many times. (Reese smiles after Finch leaves).

*

Season 1, Episode 6

Finch: Do you know what she does yet?

Reese: She does favors. For a price. She’s a fixer.

Finch: Assuming that she’s the victim, any idea who’d want to take her out?

Reese: Who wouldn’t?

*

Season 1, Episode 6

The Fixer (Zoe): You never did tell me your name.

Reese: John. My name is John.

The Fixer: (amused) Of course it is. So, John, how did you know I’d be in trouble?

Reese: Given your choice of career, doesn’t seem much of a stretch. You might consider a new line of work.

The Fixer: You’re the one to judge.

*

 

Season 1, Episode 7

Reese is watching a high school teacher whose number came up.

Reese (on the site, talking to Finch through his earpiece): What’s the story, Finch?

Finch: He’s a high school history teacher working in the Brighton Beach School District. Lives alone. Never married. Not much to go on.

Reese: (teasing) Maybe he has students after him. You know teaching can be a dangerous profession.

Finch: Yes, I imagine espionage is a much safer choice, Mr. Reese.

Reese laughs.

 

person-of-interest-jim-caviezel-michael-emerson
Finch and Reese image via whataboutmichaelemerson.wordpress.com. The scene dialogue is below. Enjoy.

 

Season 1, Episode 7

Finch: What if you miss?

Reese: Wouldn’t know. Never have.

*

Fun Notes:

  • The series is produced by J.J. Abrams (Lost, Alias, Alcatraz) but not written or created by him. The series was created by Jonathan Nolan.
  • Michael Emerson also starred in Lost, J.J. Abrams hit show that went on for 6 seasons.
  • In episode 7, The Witness, Reese is trying to protect a high school teacher from two different mobs and eventually they hide out with one of his students. His student is reading The Count of Monte Cristo, and upon the student’s comment that the character Edmond is “cool, a survivor” a subtle grin appears on Reese’s face- as  Jim Caviezel starred as Edmond, aka The Count of Monte Cristo in the 2002 movie version.

 

Other Posts on Jim Caviezel

Jim Caviezel Trivia: Interesting Facts about the Person of Interest Star

High Crimes starring Jim Caviezel, Ashley Judd & Morgan Freeman

 

 

 

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Filed Under: TV shows Tagged With: drama, Jim Caviezel, jim caviezel person of interest, kevin chapman, michael emerson, person of interest, person of interest cast, person of interest jim caviezel, person of interest quotes, person of interest review, Taraji P. Henson, thriller, TV shows

High Crimes starring Jim Caviezel, Ashley Judd & Morgan Freeman

Posted on November 25, 2011 Written by ripitup

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High Crimes starring Jim Caviezel, Ashley Judd & Morgan Freeman
High Crimes starring Jim Caviezel, Ashley Judd & Morgan Freeman.

Tom (Jim Caviezel) and Claire Kubik (Ashley Judd) are a happily married couple. Very much in love, they are trying to have a baby, despite Claire’s crazy schedule as a successful lawyer. However their happiness gets challenged by one shocking incident: Tom is arrested, and taken to a military facility. This is how Claire learns that her beloved husband Tom is in fact Ron Chapman, an ex-sergeant who changed his identity because he was being accused of multiple murders. Despite her shock, Claire believes Tom’s innocence, and decides to defend him when the appointed military lawyer (Adam Scott) turns out to be a rookie. She also enlists the help of the brilliant former military attorney Charles W. Grimes (Morgan Freeman).

To make matters more complicated, her carefree sister (Amanda Peet) moves in with her, and starts dating the rookie. Moreover the judge seems to be favoring the opposing counsel (Michael Gaston), and doesn’t seem to be care whether Tom is innocent or not. Claire himself occasionally doubts her husband, but she knows in her heart that he is a good man and she needs to win this. However the military seems determined to do anything to sabotage her and her case, and the sole survivor of the murderers is not happy about her either. Can Claire and her team survive all this and free Tom?

*

High Crimes is a very entertaining and absolutely engaging legal drama/thriller from 2002. The acting is great, and it offers many twists and turns that makes you change your mind about Tom’s innocence again and again. It’s only fault is the ultimate twist, and when it comes. Anyone who has seen multiple movies will notice that the ending will offer something different than the outcome of the trial. And not all actions of characters (main and supporting) will make sense at the end. But these can be ignored, as the movie is a lot of fun to watch. It’s currently rated at 6.1 on IMDB. And I believe it is the delivery of the ending that stopped it from being rated at 7 or higher. A well-earned 7/10 from me. The acting, however, especially Jim Caviezel’s gets an 8.

Based on the novel by Joseph Finder.

 

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: adam scott, Amanda Peet, Ashley Judd, drama, high crimes, high crimes cast, high crimes movie, high crimes movie review, Jim Caviezel, joseph finder, michael gaston, Morgan Freeman, movies, thriller

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