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Adore starring Naomi Watts, Robin Wright & Xavier Samuel: Sexy, Twisted and A Bit Weird

Posted on August 20, 2013 Written by ripitup

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Adore 2013 drama starring Naomi Watts, Robin Wright and Xavier Samuel
Adore 2013 drama starring Naomi Watts, Robin Wright and Xavier Samuel. Image via filmeserialee.blogspot.com

Lil (Naomi Watts) and Roz (Robin Wright) have been best friends and neighbors since they were kids. They are always there for each other, including the death of Lil’s husband. Roz is still married to universtiy lecturer Harold (Ben Mendelsohn), and both women have good-looking boys in their 20s- who are also best friends.

Roz’ seemingly happy marriage gets a bit disrupted when her husband gets a better job in Sydney, and naturally wants both his director son Tom (James Frecheville) and his wife with him. But Roz doesn’t want to leave her gorgeous beach house, her best friend or her gallery.  However she asks for some time to adjust to the idea and make the arrangements.

She never gets to make any arrangements, and she also gives in to temptation by sleeping with Ian (Xavier Samuel), Lil’s son, who is smitten with her.  When Ben sees this, he makes a pass on Lil, and when Lil rejects him, he tells her what he saw.

Lil can’t seem to digest this, but she doesn’t confront Roz. Instead, she gives in to Ben’s attempts. She and Roz later decide that this should be a one-time mistake, and they should stop, but neither women can.

Because they’re all happy despite the weirdness of the situation, they all decide to go along with it. And they are happy for a while, until Ben gets involved with a play in Sydney and meets somebody else.

From then on, all their relationships resemble a bomb, with the timer running…

 

Analyzing Adore  (with some spoilers)

Adore is, by subject matter, a strange movie. What makes it strange to me, is not that two women fall for younger men or two young men fall for older women. And if you forget for a second that these women are best friends who have known the sons since they were babies, it seems only logical that there would be sexual attraction. Xavier Samuel is stunning, and James Frecheville is also quite good-looking, especially in the scenes where he is vulnerable. As for the women, we are talking about two of Hollywood’s most beauiful actresses here. So no, I have nothing against age differences in couples.

What I find appalling is the idea that the women would go for each other’s sons. It’s one thing to meet and fall for a stranger who is older/younger than you. It’s another to sleep with the adult version of the baby whose diaper you probably helped changed at some point.

And even if you can gets past that, there is the fact that Roz is married to a really decent guy. Sure he does get occasionally feel left out, but given how close the women are, it is only natural. As far as he know, he doesn’t lie or cheat or misbehave. He wants to be close to his family. So it is all very unfair to him.

And let’s say we want to give into temptation and hey, it is Ian who makes her happy, there’s how far Roz takes her loyalty to liln. As when Ben screws up, she also ends her relationship with Ian. This really wounds Ian, and he later starts a relationship with a girl around his age.

Guess what? Sexual attraction and addiction like that, and one of our couples haven’t quite stopped their affair. Hence the bomb analogy…

Adore, albeit having a somewhat uneasy theme, is not a boring movie. It has gorgeous scenery, good acting, beautiful actors and gets you thinking. It’s about going after your heart (and hormones) vs. doing the right/expected thing, and how sometimes the right choice isn’t so obvious. It’s about how hurting one person in the short run can turn out to be a good thing in the long run- but hurting another person for their good can backfire big time in the long run.

The right thing would have been not to have started anything. Then it would have been to be honest with all parties involved. Then of course Tom shouldn’t have tried to have his cake and eat it too…

But apart from Harold, nobody really does anything right in the movie. And maybe except from the boys’ wives, who are truly clueless. Then again, Tom’s wife didn’t exactly do a very professional thing when she jumped into bed with her director. That almost never goes right…

So it is full of mistakes and twists you see coming, but you just can’t resist. After all it is a sexy, twisted drama and there’re no surprises. But if this movie proved one thing to me, is that I wouldn’t mind moving to Australia…I’m just saying.

 

Also on Naomi Watts

21 Grams starring Naomi Watts, Sean Penn & Benicio Del Toro

Fair Game starring Naomi Watts & Sean Penn

Naomi Watts Trivia

The Painted Veil with Naomi Watts

The International starring Clive Owen & Naomi Watts

Dangerous Beauty starring Rufus Sewell & Catherine McCormack feat. Naomi Watts

Also on Robin Wright

State of Play starring Russell Crowe, Ben Affleck, Rachel Mcadams and Helen Mirren & Robin Wright

Reviews of 4 Nicholas Sparks Movie Adaptations: A Walk to Remember, Nights in Rodanthe, Message in a Bottle and The Notebook 

Also on Xavier Samuel

The Twilight Saga: Eclipse starring Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart, Taylor Lautner, Jackson Rathbone and Xavier Samuel

 

 

 

 

 

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: Adore, adore 2013 movie, adore cast, adore movie review, adore naomi watts, Ben Mendelsohn, james frecheville, Naomi Watts, naomi watts adore, Robin Wright, Xavier Samuel, xavier samuel adore

Solomon and Gaenor starring Ioan Gruffudd & Nia Roberts: A Period Love Story

Posted on August 14, 2013 Written by ripitup

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Solomon and Gaenor starring Ioan Gruffudd
Solomon and Gaenor starring Ioan Gruffudd & Nia Roberts. Image via movies.zap2it.com.

Detailed Plot (Minor Spoilers)

1911, Whales.

Solomon (Ioan Gruffudd) is a young Jewish man living with his family, working as a packman for his father’s cotton shop and getting a bit fed up with the strict rules of the religion and attitudes of his family.

It’s an era where most people are not doing well. Welsh men work the mines and the Welsh and Jews just tolerate each other. Not that they are a fan of The English, either.

So when Solomon runs into a lovely Welsh girl named Gaenor  (Nia Roberts) during one of his door-to-door runs, he introduces himself as Sam Livingston, an English packman. She is soon lured by his gentle manners and attention, and they start seeing each other.

While her brother isn’t thrilled, Gaenor is certain that Solomon is serious so Gaenor sleeps with him.  She wants to meet his family, but he keeps making excuses- knowing his family would never accept a non-Jew.

It all goes well until she becomes pregnant. Solomon doesn’t know, and he hasn’t asked her to get married or meet his parents. So she leaves him. She also has to bear the reaction of her church and his father insists she married the guy. She’ rather give the baby away then be with a guy who doesn’t seem to love her properly.

Solomon does his best to see her, despite the violent reactions of his brothers. Upon his insistence, she searches for his secret and finally confronts him.

He is afraid to lose his family, but also doesn’t want to lose Gaenor.

Running away seems to be only option, but friends and family provide obstacles that will bear tragic results…

Solomon & Gaenor, Ioan Gruffudd
Image via allmovies.com.

Love vs. Prejudice, Society, Family & Religion

Solomon and Gaenor is a strange love story. I say strange because like its characters, it comes and goes between daring and shy, subtle and obvious, conventional and understanding (though Solomon’s family is strictly set on the prejudiced mode).

Solomon’s lying about his name and backgrounds is a form of rebelling to the mutual prejudice in the town as well his parents’ unflexible lifestyle. While it isn’t nice to lie to Gaenor, I can sympathize with why he did in the beginning. She probably wouldn’t have been that open to dating a Jew, and even if she was open-minded enough, her parents wouldn’t let probably let her. And she’d be more inclined to listen.

But of course it isn’t fair for Gaenor, who has a mind of her own despite the traditions and conventions of the era and religion she belongs to. It was her choice to sleep with Solomon before they were engaged or something, but then again she didn’t have any reason to believe she wouldn’t be.

Solomon should have at least explained her the situation before they got intimately involved, but hey there is only so much maturity in him before his infatuation and hormones get in the way.

That’s the problem with semi-conformity. If he had the nerve to tell her the truth, stand up to his parents (and face the consequences of rejection), the story would have had a different kind of ending.

And while it is not easy losing your family, you should remember Solomon was never that happy with them, didn’t quite belong. It was heart-breaking when his father wouldn’t even include him in a prayer – because hey, he is an adult.

And remember, in the end he was sort of excluded anyway, and he did choose to risk whatever is left of their support, as well his life, to be with her at the end.

I was surprised by, and towards the end respected, Gaenor’s father. Considering his reaction to the red dress, I semi-expected him to shun her and throw her to the street after she got pregnant. But he encouraged marriage to the father, if she wanted to keep the baby. Considering the era, he was pretty damn cool about it in the long run. So was her mom, supporting her decision if she didn’t want the guy.

Her brother was a bit of a jerk, but Solomon did deserve some of it. 1911 or 2013 – I can’t imagine too many brothers reacting differently regardless of personality or education. Here’s a dude who lied to and impregnated her sister and wasn’t begging for marriage (as far as he knew)…

*

Weird as it might be when it comes to some of the character reactions, it is for the most part a decent and lovely story about following your heart and being your own person despite the society’s and family’s dictation and having to suffer through the consequences – as well as the consequences of bad timing and bad luck.

It’s well worth a watch if you love tragic love stories that has some believable obstacles and good actors. And yes, I’ll go the shallow route here and admit I don’t exactly blame Gaenor for not controlling herself. Ioan Gruffudd is his usual gorgeous self in the movie, and his character (especially before we saw his timid, conflicted side) was quite lovely.

Made in 1999, written and directed by Paul Morrison. Was nominated for Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film – though the majority of the film is in English, realistically there’s also Yiddish and Welsh.

 

 

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: drama, Ioan Gruffudd, ioan gruffudd solomon and gaenor, Nia Roberts, paul morrison, romance, solomon & gaenor, Solomon and Gaenor, Solomon and Gaenor 1999 movie, Solomon and Gaenor cast

Pavilion of Women starring Willem Dafoe, Luo Yan and John Cho: A Cheesy but Lovely Romantic Drama

Posted on August 7, 2013 Written by ripitup

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pavilion of women-willem dafoe
Pavilion of Women image via silverdisc.com.

 

Pavilion of Women Story

Madame Wu (Yan Luo) is from a wealthy, important family in pre-World War II China. Although she has a somewhat modern mind, she’s embraced her traditional roles, and is in the process of finding her husband a second wife “because she wants to retire”. Despite the objections and disgust her modern-thinking son Fengmo (John Cho), she settles on a nice, naïve girl who seems a lot more age-appropriate for Fengmo.

Enter Father Andre (Willem Dafoe) who works at the orphanage, is great with kids and is a modern, knowledgeable man. He first impresses (and shocks) Wu and her friends, when he saves the life of Wu’s friend during childbirth. Then Wu hires Andre (who insists on his payments be whatever the kids at the orphanage need) to tutor his son. She later joins his lessons herself, and becomes further impressed with his way of thinking.

As they get to know each other, a strong mutual attraction grows.

Add her son’s feelings for his father’s bride and the war, and things get way too complicated and dangerous for these three characters.

Based on the novel of Pearl S. Buck, adapted to screen by Yan Luo and Paul Collins. Directed by Ho Yim in 2001.  

On Society, Traditions and Relationships

This blog features a series of post on movies where I think cheating is OK (something I don’t support in real life, but the movies in question feature some extraordinary stories and circumstances), and this movie does belong there as I totally approve (and understand) Wu’s falling for Andre (I mean it is a wonderful human being played by the ever lovely Willem Dafoe).

But as outrageous as the idea of a man getting a second wife might seem to a feminist (as in I believe both sexes are equal and one sex having more power/authority/privileges pisses me off to no end), but I think it is a great way to stop having sex with your obnoxious husband. In a time where you don’t get to choose or do much as a woman, and when/if you are not exactly happy with the man you are married to, this seems more like a solution that a problem.

Although, unlike Wu, I’d so find a girl I didn’t like to marry my husband. I mean the “other” wife was so sweet and innocent.  Poor girl. Getting a woman to marry that man would be a sweet revenge.

Of course the core values of the society are questionable. Like not letting a man near a pregnant woman would almost kill both the woman and her baby, Wu’s not initially approving her son’s feelings for his father’s new bride (as if that was the more unnatural thing), saving face being more important than anything, letting the poor kids suffer because they are not yours….The list goes on.

The Movie: The Good, The Bad, The Ugly

Wu is a wonderfully flawed character that gets on your nerves as much as gets you to root for her. And just like Wu, while being pretty flawed, it has its charming points.

The Good:

  • Willem Dafoe
  • All concepts covered – love, individuality, tradition vs. free will, religion, cultural differences vs. universality of feelings, friendship, education- the irony on how the poor kids got to have a better education…
  • John Cho, though his character could have been more screen time with his romance

The Bad:

  • The exaggerated acting
  • The horribly overdone and overly loud music

The Ugly:

  • The husband (yikes!)
  • The mother-in-law (yikes!)

“The Bad” turned off a lot of movie fans. Some watched it in the “so bad it is good category”. I would have enjoyed the movie more with more natural acting and Chinese (maybe even without subtitles!). And then there’s the music department that thought they were shooting an opera. The opera fits where Dafoe’s character plays it- the rest of the time it gives the movie a soapy feeling.

But I loved Dafoe’s lines, the conversations between him and Wu, the personality of the son, and how well hypocrisy is shown…

Worth Watching?

So despite the things I could barely stand, I still like this movie. For one thing, I’ll give anything with Willem Dafoe a go, a habit I gained after watching The English Patient. People who consider Dafoe a bad actor do baffle me. I mean sure, each to his own, but Dafoe? Bad? Really?

I recommend the movie if:

-You want to check out Dafoe in a romantic role.

– You like seeing where characters grow, learning to overcome double standards and hypocrisy.

– You enjoy absolute contrasts between characters and cultures.

*

Sometimes you like cheesy despite yourself. For some people it’s Titanic. For some it is Notting hill. I choose to use my it’s cheesy but I like it anyway” card for Pavilion of Women (didn’t care for neither Titanic or Notting Hill.)

It could and should have been much better, but it is still fun it is own, weird, overdone way. And no, I probably wouldn’t have watched it till the end, had it not been for Dafoe…

 


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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: drama, ho him, John Cho, Pavilion of Women, pavilion of women cast, pavilion of women movie, pavilion of women movie plot, pavilion of women movie review, pearl s. buck novel adaptation, romance, Willem Dafoe, willem dafoe pavilion of women, Yan Luo

Monsters starring Scoot McNairy and Whitney Able: Before Sunrise During Alien Invasion

Posted on July 3, 2013 Written by ripitup

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monsters-movie-poster

 

The aliens attacked the earth 6 years ago, and since then, Mexican and American armies are trying to contain them in the infected zones.

Andrew (Scoot McNairy) is an American photographer in Mexico. When his boss asks him to accompany his daughter Samantha, he reluctantly agrees to take her to the coast.

At first Andrew thinks that she is some spoiled rich woman, and she thinks he’s just a guy who cares more about money than he does about people.

But as the journey proves to be longer and more complicated than expected, they get to know each other more, and resulting in a strong bond and attraction.

They prefer not to think about it much since she’s engaged, and he is to return to Mexico to take pictures but the journey is still far from over…

*

I love a good romance movie taking place in a limited time between two strangers.

I also like sci-fi films where it is much more about the human element than the fight with aliens.

Monsters is a surprisingly good combination of a romantic road movie and an analysis of the aftermath of the aliens coming. As the tagline spookily offers: They are no longer aliens. They’re residents.

Now, some people complain about how the romance was rushed towards the end. Well, the romance wasn’t rushed. It was just never in your face.

Because there isn’t supposed to be a romance. It’s just supposed to be a guy doing obligatory safeguarding to protect his job.

But that is not to say it is an unrealistic situation where two people who wouldn’t give normally give each other the time of the day happened to bond over a dangerous situation. Yes, there’s the “alien” element which does provide an overall surreal atmosphere both for us and them. Still, I have no problem believing  that these two could meet somewhere, and get to talking, the same connection would occur. It would possibly take longer, but it would happen.

That being said, the movie balances the “romance” with the after effects of the invasion on everyday life. There’s also the appearance of the aliens and their attacks.  Overall it is a delightful sci-fi/ drama road trip.

If you don’t want aliens but want to watch a more romance-oriented movie focusing on the meeting and connecting of two strangers, try Before Sunrise and Forget Me Not. I adore them both.

If you want a lot of alien attack scenes, well, I’d not even know where to start recommending them. You’ve probably already seen the Alien series.

And if you just want good old, mindless entertainment with a lot of action and some good humor, you could always give Independence Day a try.

Or you might want a post-apocalyptic world where there is no romance – just humans vs. other humans. Then be prepared to be awed (and depressed by) movies like The Road.

My point? There are many, many movies you can watch – movies dedicated to each element of the film unless you are happy with the combination.

Monsters, however, should be seen because of how everything is woven together. That’s where its charm lies.

The budget is low, but the result is sincere, emotional and engaging. It has its slow moments, and don’t expect to be scared. Some tension, though, will be provided.

I liked it, and hope it will also leave you with some warmth (and a bit sadness) too.

It was written and directed by Gareth Edwards, who was nominated for BAFTA for this effort.

Fun Fact: On-screen pair Whitney Able and Scoot McNairy were dating during the time of the movie (don’t know if they still are). According to IMDB, Scoot is the one who suggested her for the part. Now, that’s a good boyfriend for you.

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: Gareth Edwards, monsters, monsters 2010 movie, monsters 2010 movie plot, monsters 2010 movie review, Scoot McNairy, scoot mcnairy monsters, Whitney Able, whitney able monsters

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