Friday, September 27, 2013

Thanks for Sharing



 
 
Jean, I went to see this movie as from the previews it looked like an entertaining comedy. That was not what I saw. This is a almost clinical study of 3 addicts. They are three men, two are sex addicts and one is an alcoholic. We go through all the 12 steps program including the dairies, tokens and meetings. It makes one think about how the addict's behavior affects their close friends and family. Then you really cringe when you see the relapse coming on and that surely happens.They do not sugar-coat the impact of addiction. I think I am more patience now about people with addictions than before. At the end they even bring before the camera a number of addicts who talk about their trials and struggles to just cope with everyday matters. If coping with addiction is your interest, this is your movie.  Dad
 
The Previews were:
 
American Hustle
Nebraska
The Summit
All is Lost

Friday, September 13, 2013

The Family





Jean, I walked into the theater thinking I was going to see a comedy. This had some comedy touches like De Niro going to a movie showing of "Goodfellas" and other touches along the way. But the violence is what I saw. That is, shooting a man and then chopping off all his fingers with an ax. The sound of the crunching of the bones included. Or hanging a man by his feet and then lowering him into a barrel of acid. Or beating nearly to death a man with a baseball bat and then doing just about the same with a tennis racket. The director, Luc Besson, is fine with the violence but with the humor, not so much. He has a fine cast of De Niro, Pfeiffer, and Tommy Lee Jones but they bought into quite a violent and bloody script. The movie moves to a very violent climax in the small French town in Normandy, bringing together all the family members and their former friends in the Brooklyn Mafia. Every type of weapon is used and the body count goes over 10 or 12. Besson handles that scene in a very effective manner .It has to be one of best of any  year in it's category, but all the underlying violence and killing just put me off and it hits you in the face in the first scene.(None of this was in the previews I saw of this movie.)
 
Dad
 
P.S. I have not seen Michelle Pfeiffer in some time. It is quite evident she is in the same school of nourishment as Kelly Ripa. The thinking is you have to be able to count every rib of the person.
 
P.P.S. The previews were:
 
Don Jon
Out of the Furnace
Dallas Buyers Club
Inside  Llewyn Davis
Thanks for Sharing