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Taps starring Timothy Hutton, Tom Cruise and Sean Penn

Posted on August 2, 2010 Written by ripitup

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Taps starring Timothy Hutton, Tom Cruise and Sean Penn
Taps starring Timothy Hutton, Tom Cruise and Sean Penn. Image via img38.imagefra.me

Bunker Hill Military Academy has been raising students (boys) and educating them for over a century. The students’ ages vary from 12- 17 and they all love their school. General Harlan Bache (George C. Scott) loves being a part of this school and he is very proud one of his new students; Brian Moreland (Timothy Hutton) who he has just assigned to be the Cadet Major. Respected and loved by his friends, Brian couldn’t be happier. His new rank gets celebrated by his friends Shawn – Cadet Captain (Tom Cruise), and Cadet Captain Alex (Sean Penn).

However Brian can’t really get to enjoy his new status as the General declares that the school has only 1 year to transfer students and then it will be closed. However he is determined that he and his students can save their school within that one year. Unfortunately, all his plans go to waste when by accident, he shoots and kills a civilian, trying to break up a fight. And now the school is to be closed even sooner and all the weapons are to be confiscated.

Half the school has gone for summer vacation. The rest is depressed, but Brian has other ideas. Why not protect their school? They all love the idea so soon they take back the weapons, store food and start defending. Unfortunately, no one else outside the school seems to regard this as the innocent act  that is. Media, parents, sheriff, cops and soon national guards get involved and are all more than willing to see this as an act of terrorism. All the kids want is to have their school back but pretty soon it turns into a battle of iron wills, and it just maybe a battle that will cost more than anyone bargained for…

I just loved this 1981 gem, Taps. I first thought it would be a comedy about an all boys’ school but soon, it just proved to be one engaging drama with some action attached. It is fun watching Tom Cruise, Sean Penn and Timothy Hutton all so young. They are all good, so is Evan Handler – Sex and The City’s Harry Goldenblatt. You just might not recognize him so young, thin and well, with hair. He plays Edward West.

The story has a very emotional storyline and even though it didn’t get to me as much as John Travolta’s Mad City did, I really enjoyed the experience.

This is a lovely film on loyalty, honor, friendship and sense of belonging. Based on the novel Father Sky by Devery Freeman. Directed by Harold Becker. Rated 6.5 on Imdb. This is an 80’s film that should be checked out both for its story and acting; as well as for nostalgic value.

 

Other Posts featuring Tom Cruise

Knight and Day starring Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz

Tom Cruise Trivia: 24 Facts About Tom Cruise

Tom Cruise: Love him? Hate him? Maybe both…

4 Good Movies with Awesome Soundtracks: Shoot ‘em up, Jerry Maguire, Reality Bites and Vanilla Sky

Lestat, Dracula and Other Vampires

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: drama, Evan Handler, George C. Scott, Harold Becker, movies, Sean Penn, taps, Timothy Hutton, Tom Cruise

Shelter starring Julianne Moore and Jonathan Rhys Meyers

Posted on August 1, 2010 Written by ripitup

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Shelter starring Julianne Moore and Jonathan Rhys Meyers
Shelter starring Julianne Moore and Jonathan Rhys Meyers. Image via covershut.com

What the hell? Yes, there will be spoilers. But trust me this movie is really bad so it is to your advantage to know.

Yes, it is not a good thing when a film starts just fine, albeit a bit slow but promises to be an intelligent thriller with a touch of horror and drama and fine acting but then ends up including witches, extremely religious undertone, a villain who is just one of the most ridiculous and pointless villains in history and all that…

I got out a little bit of a rant and now I feel better.

Now, for the record, I really like Julianne Moore. She is a terrific actress and a really pretty woman even without make-up. And it is no secret that I love Jonathan Meyers. He is a great actor and yes, most movie addicts prefer when a decent script comes with talented actors who also happen to be pretty.

And the story starts out pretty cool: Psychiatrist Cara Jessup (Julianne Moore) believes in her science but she believes in God as well. Even the random street murder of her husband hasn’t faltered her faith, but her young daughter (Brooklynn Proulx) and Cara’s father, also a psychiatrist (Jeffrey DeMunn) refuse to believe in God after the tragedy. Despite all this, they seem to be a happy and easy-going family, along with Cara’s younger brother Stephen (Nathan Corddry). However it all gets disrupted when Cara’s dad wants her to observe a new patient: David (Jonathan Rhys Meyers).

As it turns out, her father wanted him to take him on as sort of a challenge. Because Cara doesn’t really believe that Multiple Personality exists and her father not only believes that it exists but he also believes David has it and he is intent on showing this to her daughter.

Multiple Personality Disorder or not, David does seem to have more than one identity and as Cara looks further into the case, she notices that those identities belong to already dead people. To David or Adam or whoever is possessing his body at the moment is pretty certain he is him. How the hell does he know so much about their lives in the first place? And can the murders be connected?

Actually, up until Cara found out what the connection was, the movie was pretty solid and engaging. Then it turned into an aimless nightmare, let go of the science, included a weird -looking old woman (seriously? We still get the same extremely old and ugly woman witch with just as weird “acquaintances” )? And it is shame because this could have been one of the most creative and refreshing movies done on Multiple Personality Disorder…

To me, the second half was a disaster and I am really going to think twice before seeing a Julianne Moore movie. I absolutely hated Blindness, Chloe – though much better than Shelter and Blindness, is average. But this was really bad. And while Jonathan’s acting is really good, good acting can’t save a horrible script. I think Jonathan makes better choices than Moore for the most part but avoid this one and Octane, even if you are a fan.

Obviously all opinions are subjective. So I think that it is safe to suggest you might like this film if you liked Kevin Costner’s The New Daughter or Simon Baker’s Not Forgotten. If you didn’t like those, stay away from this one.

Written by Michael Cooney. Directed by Måns Mårlind and Björn Stein, both are Swedish.

6/10 for the first half, 1/10 for the rest.

Other Posts featuring Julianne Moore

Chloe starring Julianne Moore, Liam Neeson and Amanda Seyfried

Laws of Attraction starring Pierce Brosnan and Julianne Moore

Benny and Joon starring Aidan Quinn, Johnny Depp, Julianne Moore and Mary Stuart Masterson

Other Posts featuring Jonathan Rhys Meyers

From Paris with Love starring John Travolta and Jonathan Rhys Meyers

Jonathan Rhys Meyers Tribute

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: Björn Stein, Brooklynn Proulx, horror, Jeffrey DeMunn, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Julianne Moore, Michael Cooney, movies, multiple personality disorder, mystery, Måns Mårlind, Nathan Corddry, thriller

Cake starring Heather Graham, David Sutcliffe and Taye Diggs

Posted on July 30, 2010 Written by ripitup

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Cake starring Heather Graham, David Sutcliffe and Taye Diggs
Cake starring Heather Graham, David Sutcliffe and Taye Diggs. Made in 2005. Image via divxplanet.com

Pippa Mcgee (Heather Graham) is a beautiful, free-spirited, fun-loving and committed-phobic girl. She makes a living as a freelance travel writer and loves her fun and responsibility free life. She absolutely hates the pink bridesmaid dress she has to wear. She doesn’t enjoy weddings either. And it is at this wedding that she meets a handsome stranger, Ian (David Sutcliffe). But to her surprise and disappointed, this cute and witty guy doesn’t really want to make out with a drunk girl who won’t really remember anything in the morning. Trust Pippa to find the one decent and old-fashioned guy around.

Bu?t Pippa’s carefree life takes a blow when her father Malcolm (Bruce Gray) has a heart-attack. Since he has to rest for a long while, he leaves it to Pippa to run his bridal magazine. Pippa involuntarily agrees and tries to adjust to the idea that she will have to be tuned in on anything bridal. But she is in for a surprise, when that handsome stranger- Ian- turns out to be a trusted employee of her father and he is willing to stick around and help her out. Pippa now has to deal with faltering sales, men who want to take over the magazine, her romance with the handsome photographer Hemingway Jones (Taye Tiggs) and her hard to define attraction for Ian…

Cake is a fun romantic comedy that has two potential romances going for it. Pippa first meets David Sutcliffe’s Ian and then Taye Diggs’ Hemingway. But it is pretty apparent she has a lot in common with Hemingway, so he starts dating him. But then again maybe opposites do attract and she and Ian are not exactly opposites after all. Of course you can guess who she will end up with. Of course you know things will work out for Pippa one way or the other. The reason to watch romcoms- especially the conventional ones- is just to see how the ride goes, not how it ends. That being said, this is a romantic comedy for girls. Yes, a guy who is a fan of the genre can enjoy it and Heather Graham is gorgeous. But other than that, I can honestly say most guys won’t really enjoy the plot.

Sandra Oh co-stars as Pippa’s best friend and it is refreshing to see her in a role other than Grey’s Anatomy’s Christina.

Written by Tassie Cameron and directed by Nisha Ganatra. Ignore the imdb rating if you like a decent romcom. It is 4.8 I’ll give it a 6, minimum.

For guy-friendly romantic comedies, you can check out:

The Invention of Lying starring Ricky Gervais

Ghost Town starring Ricky Gervais and Téa Leoni

Forgetting Sarah Marshall starring Jason Segel, Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell and Russell Brand

What Women Want starring Mel Gibson and Helen Hunt

Yes Man starring Jim Carrey and Zooey Deschanel

500 Days of Summer starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Zooey Deschanel

Shallow Hal starring Jack Black and Gwyneth Paltrow


And three more fun movies with romance, comedy and action:

  • Knight and Day starring Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz – this one is action and comedy dominant but it is romantic as well.
  • Bird on a Wire Mel Gibson and Goldie Hawn– Same  genre as Knight and Day
  • The Sorcerer’s Apprentice– while it is mainly fantasy and adventure/action, it is also quite romantic too.

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: Bruce Gray, Cake, comedy, David Sutcliffe, Heather Graham, movies, Nisha Ganatra, romance, romantic comedy, romcom, Sandra Oh, Tassie Cameron, Taye Diggs

Inception starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseoh Gordon-Levitt, Ellen Page, Marion Cottilard, Ken Watanabe and Tom Hardy

Posted on July 29, 2010 Written by ripitup

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Inception poster
Inception stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Ellen Page, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ken Watanabe, Cillian Murphy, Marion Cotillard and Tom Hardy. Written and directed by Batman Begins, The Dark Knight and Memento director Christopher Nolan. Image via: filmofilia.com

Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) has a highly unusual career: he extracts information (secrets) from people’s dreams when they are asleep, by joining in on the dream. He works with a team and his most frequent member is Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt).

Though his assignments are exciting, Cobb is far from being happy because his job isn’t exactly legal, and he is declared a criminal in the States, where his two little children live. He is also starting to lose his unique ability or at least getting a huge blow with the constant interruptions from Mal (Marion Cottilard), with who he seems to have a very complicated past with.

Cobb finally seems to have a shot at seeing his children, however, when he makes a very risky agreement with the powerful businessman Saito (Ken Watanabe). This time, the mission is not to extract information but to plant a thought in someone’s head, and make him think that this was his idea all along. Their “subject” is Robert Fischer Jr. (Cillian Murphy), the son of Saito’s biggest competitor. Now that Robert Sr. is dying, Jr. will be left to rule the business and it is best for Saito if he lets his father’s business fall apart.

Cobb puts another team together for the mission. Along with Arthur, he recruits Ariadne (Ellen Page) –a young and very successful architect who can design the dream world they need, Eames (Tom Hardy) –a great thief and forger and Yusuf (Dileep Rao), a chemist who will provide them with the most powerful drugs to help intensify the dream stage.

But the mission is very dangerous and complex and Dom just might not have been honest with everyone. And Robert Fischer Jr. just might not be as an easy target as they initially thought…

Now, obviously this is not a movie where any plot summary can do justice. It is a brilliant movie with an awesome script, stunning visuals and a great cast. And the best part is, you don’t really need to be a science fiction fan to enjoy this film. I am not, for instance. You just need to have an interest in mind-benders and well, a little fantasy. Sure, there are people who didn’t like the film but I have a feeling they are not in the majority since the movie just got to number 3 on IMDB’s top 250 movies list, voted by over 88.000 people. And it is currently number 1 at the box office. Now, don’t let the 9.2 rating scare you. I know it scared me. I thought I would find a vastly overrated movie.

And while I’d not quite say it is the best third film ever made, it is certainly much more impressive, original and clever than most films that made it to that list, which is formed by movie-goers themselves. I also didn’t know what to expect as I didn’t exactly have a great time at Batman The Dark Knight (Batman movie co- written and directed by Christopher Nolan) and I do find it a bit too long and indeed overrated (don’t hate me, my idea of a good comic book character is Iron Man as he is not that “dark” and “serious”) and I definitely believe writer/director Christopher Nolan comes up with much better stuff when it is coming from his own imagination. While I am not a Dark Knight fan, I really love Memento, another Christopher Nolan film that is also on the top 250 list and I am pretty sure by this time you have either heard about or seen Memento.

I am not sure if I like Inception as much as Memento, but I definitely enjoyed the ride. I wasn’t all that engaged in the first 10 minutes of the movie but then the movie picked up pace and never really slowed down. But it is not all action and it is not all fantasy. And Nolan has made marvelous observations about the dream state and what we remember afterwards or how our dreams are structured. There is a chance you will end up having different interpretation of the movie, even with your friends. The emotions Cobb goes through are very humane and you can’t help but empathize with his pain. But I found all the actors to be perfect for their roles. And among with all the mind-bending, paradoxes and complexities that seem to threaten even sanity, the movie does have some really good one-liners to put a smile on your face. But of course they light the mood up for about a split second.

As with the different interpretations, this writer seems to have collected the most popular ones and presented them with their strengths and weaknesses. If you have seen the movie, I suggest you take a look at that review and compare notes.  But while that writer has his interpretation, and I have mine. My initial reaction to the film was in line with interpretation number 5 and I do want to believe in 6. But I mostly enjoyed reading number 3.

And obviously I’d love any comments here too. While I didn’t include spoilers in the summary, I do welcome them in the comments.

8.8 on IMDB. I think anywhere between 8-9 suits this movie fine. Brilliant. A little dark for my taste, but I just can’t resist it.

Note: Michael Caine has a small role as Miles, Cobb’s father. And both Michael Caine and Cillian Muprhy appear in both Batman Begins and The Dark Knight.

Favorite Scenes:

Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s fighting scene at the hotel, without the gravity.

The fall of the van to the water, synchronized with the dream levels.

Pretty much any chasing scene, as they are glorious.

The dreams falling apart.

Anything we find about Mal…

OK, I have a lot more. Please share yours.

[pro-player width=’530′ height=’253′ type=’video’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3XzUYd6nrU&feature=PlayList&p=7FD12EDD62CA1846&index=0&playnext=1[/pro-player]

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: action, Batman, batman begins, batman the dark knight, Christopher Nolan, Cillian Murphy, Dileep Rao, Ellen Page, imdb top 250, inception, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ken Watanabe, leonardo dicaprio, Marion Cottilard, memento, mystery, sci fi, thriller, Tom Hardy

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