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آوریل 15, 2008

21 (2008)

Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 4:15 ب.ظ.

21 (2008)

Cast: Jim Sturgess, Kevin Spacey, Kate Bosworth, Aaron Yoo, Liza Lapira

Movie Details

Title: 21
Running Time: 122 Minutes
Country: USA
Genre: Psychological Thriller
Greed is good and comes without a hint of conscience in “21,” a feature-length bore about some smarty-pants who take Vegas for a ride. Loosely based on the nonfiction book “Bringing Down the House” by Ben Mezrich, and adapted for the screen by Peter Steinfeld and Allan Loeb, this bankrupt enterprise asks you to care about a whiny M.I.T. moppet, Ben Campbell (Jim Sturgess, serviceable), who because he can’t afford Harvard Medical School (boo hoo), starts counting cards to rake in some serious cash.

The conduit to Ben’s journey of counterfeit self-discovery is a racially, ethnically, sexually balanced gang of other greedy bright things (the most appealing being Aaron Yoo, wasted as the kooky, sexless Asian guy), run by an equally avaricious math professor, Micky Rosa (Kevin Spacey on autopilot). Using a system of mnemonic devices, goofy hand signals and a talent for numbers, the team has devised a way to beat the bank. (In Las Vegas, Laurence Fishburne and his knuckles will have something to say about that.) Because Ben doesn’t want to use his poor widowed mother’s savings to go to Harvard, he decides to ditch his qualms if not his sense (because he really has none) and signs on.

And so it’s off to Vegas they go, where they count the cards, take the money and run. Amid the din and glare of various casinos, the director Robert Luketic, whose credits include “Legally Blonde,” engages in other dodgy business: he cribs from Wong Kar-wai’s “Chungking Express” period (Ben sits motionless as the world races by); borrows from the David Fincher of “Fight Club” (camera tricks for kicks); lifts from Martin Scorsese’s “Casino” (throw the money in the air like you just don’t care); and pays homage to universal whoredom by restaging the “Pretty Woman” shopping montage. He also tosses in some gleaming rides, a couple of PG-13 pole dancers and a Rolling Stones remix that both Dad and the kids can enjoy.

Ben ogles the chintzy glamour and the chesty blondes spilling out of their dresses, and the movie does exactly the same. He particularly likes it when his skinny school crush, Jill, clambers aboard and offers him a lap job, for which I hope the young actress Kate Bosworth was well compensated. Like everything else in “21,” Jill can be bought for the right price, as of course can Ben and, by extension, us. The filmmakers try to soften this idea mostly by furnishing Ben with a sob story. They turn his desire to attend Harvard into something tantamount to an inalienable right, one that’s impervious to ethical standards or personal morals, which means that “21” is either a very cynical or a very smart take on the power elite.

“21” is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). Most of the on-screen lust is for money.

21

Opens on Friday nationwide.

Directed by Robert Luketic; written by Peter Steinfeld and Allan Loeb, based on the book “Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions” by Ben Mezrich; director of photography, Russell Carpenter; edited by Elliot Graham; music by David Sardy; production designer, Missy Stewart; produced by Dana Brunetti, Kevin Spacey and Michael De Luca; released by Columbia Pictures. Running time: 2 hours 3 minutes.

WITH: Jim Sturgess (Ben Campbell), Kate Bosworth (Jill Taylor), Laurence Fishburne (Cole Williams), Kevin Spacey (Micky Rosa), Aaron Yoo (Choi), Liza Lapira (Kianna) and Jacob Pitts (Fisher).

Copyright © New York Times | iran-buy.com | kingcomputer.ws
كارگردان: رابرت لوکتیک
بازیگران: جیم استورجس، کیت بازورث، لارنس فیشبرن
رنگ: رنگی
ژانر: : درام :
درجه فیلم: PG-13
فروش هفته: 11
فروش کل: 62.27
مدت زمان فیلم: 123
امتياز منتقدان از 100: 48
حاشيه هاي فيلم: هزینه تولید فیلم 35 میلیون دلار بوده است.

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21 – Official Site

21 (2008)

21 (2008 film) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leatherheads |کلاه‌چرمی‌ها| 2008

Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 4:06 ب.ظ.

Leatherheads (2008

Director: George Clooney
Cast: George Clooney, Renee Zellweger, John Krasinski
Rating: PG-13 (Profanity)

Movie Details

Title: Leatherheads
Running Time: 113 Minutes
Status: Released
Country: United States
Genre: Romantic Comedy, Period, Sports

In the good old days, around 1925, according to “Leatherheads,” professional football was a lot more fun, a rough, ragged enterprise, untrammeled by corporate influence and unconstrained by rules and regulations. And in the slightly more recent old days — the ’30s and ’40s, more or less — movies were also more fun. They had zip, pep, moxie, trains, hats and double-entendres.

“Leatherheads” makes the second case as strongly as it does the first, but mainly by showcasing its own dullness and timidity. The picture labors so strenuously to approximate some of the old screwball spirit that it winds up in traction. The actors, writers and directors who made those old studio whirligigs spin — Clark Gable and Carole Lombard; William Powell and Myrna Loy; Preston Sturges and Frank Capra and all the rest — made it look easy. By contrast “Leatherheads,” the third and by a wide margin the weakest movie directed by George Clooney, looks to have been nearly as hard to make as it is to watch.

Mr. Clooney, mugging and flexing his eyebrows and lingering needlessly in the frame when he should be taking care of business behind the camera, plays Dodge Connolly, aging star of a Duluth, Minn., football squad on the verge of bankruptcy. The professional game is a marginal, low-rent undertaking played in front of sparse crowds in cow fields. The glamour is all at the collegiate level, where lantern-jawed scholars in smart uniforms fill vast stadiums with ardent fans.

Dodge, a smooth-talking sharpie on and off the gridiron, persuades Princeton’s star player, Carter Rutherford (John Krasinski), to join the Duluth team. Carter and his oily manager, C. C. Frazier (Jonathan Pryce), agree. A while later Mr. Clooney and Mr. Krasinski punch each other in the face.

But in the meantime they and we make the acquaintance of Lexie Littleton (Renée Zellweger), a fast-talking, ambitious lady reporter for The Chicago Tribune who admires the sound of her own voice and the sight of her own legs just in case no one else will. They all do, of course, because the script (by Duncan Brantley and Rick Reilly) requires them to. It also stuffs Ms. Zellweger’s mouth with hard-boiled witticisms that have all the intoxicating fizz of Diet Coke.

But since it’s Prohibition, everyone drinks whiskey until the cops raid the speak-easies. The music, by Randy Newman, gooses the action along in a desperate effort to create an atmosphere of madcap Jazz Age insouciance, and the screenplay multiplies subplots in the same doomed cause. Before he was a football hero, Carter was a war hero, and Lexie aims to use her womanly wiles and her journalistic smarts to debunk his claims of battlefield glory. This sets up a botched farcical climax that will require several viewings of Sturges’s “Hail the Conquering Hero” to chase from your mind.

Lexie, at least, has a clear goal in mind, which is more than can be said for “Leatherheads.” Mr. Clooney is known to be high-spirited as well as high-minded, and it’s perfectly reasonable that he would follow the earnest moral inquiry of “Good Night, and Good Luck” with a lighter, looser excursion into the American past. It is also interesting to note that all three of the movies he has directed (“Confessions of a Dangerous Mind” was the first) share a passing concern with the ethical problems of journalism and the conundrums of celebrity culture at various points in 20th-century history.

What is harder to comprehend is how Mr. Clooney turned out such a sloppy, haphazard and tonally incoherent piece of work. “Leatherheads” lurches hectically between Coen brothers-style pastiche and John Saylesian didacticism, while Mr. Clooney works his brow and his jaw and waits in vain for his charm to kick in and save the day. Unless he’s just vamping until the director shows up and gives him some clear instructions.

Copyright © New York Times | iran-buy.com | kingcomputer.ws

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كارگردان: جورج کلونی
نویسنده: دانکن برانتلی، ریک رایلی
بازیگران: جورج کلونی، رنه زلوگر، جاناتان پرایس
رنگ: رنگی
ژانر: : عشقی :: درام :: کمدی :
درجه فیلم: PG-13
کشور: ایالات متحده
استودیو: یونیورسال پیکچرز
افتتاحیه: 4 آوریل 2008
فروش هفته: 6.21
فروش کل: 21.91
مدت زمان فیلم: 114
امتياز منتقدان از 100: 56
جملات تبليغاتي: ابتدا، قوانین خیلی ساده بود. خیلی هم نبودند.
خلاصه داستان:

یک کمدی رمانتیک بر پایه مسابقات فوتبال در دهه 20. یک اسطوره فوتبال پا به سن گذاشته (کلونی) و یک ستاره فوتبال تازه نفس که او برای تیم حرفه‌ای دانشجویی‌اش جذب کرده است برای به دست آوردن قلب یک دختر شجاع روزنامه‌نگار تلاش می‌کنند. داستان در 1925 می‌گذرد.

حاشيه هاي فيلم: هزینه تولید فیلم 58 میلیون دلار بوده است.
ویژه: فیلم تازه جورج کلونی، ستاره خوش چهره و محبوب هالیوودی بعد از فیلم بسیار موفق «شب بخیر و موفق باشی». به قولی ترکیب «هر یکشنبه موعود» با «دختر جمعه‌هایش». ©cinemaema

Leatherheads (2008)

Leatherheads – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leatherheads Movie | Trailers, Photos, Downloads & Story | Now In

The Ruins |خرابه‌ها| 2008

Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 4:02 ب.ظ.

The Ruins |خرابه‌ها| 2008

Director: Carter Smith
Cast: Jonathan Tucker, Laura Ramsey, Jena Malone, Shawn Ashmore

Movie Details

Title: The Ruins
Running Time: 91 Minutes
Status: Released
Country: United States
Genre: Adaptation, Action, Thriller

Watch Out for That Malevolent Jungle Vine

More disgusting than scary, “The Ruins” is the latest in a long line of horror films about upper-middle-class travelers being terrorized in unfamiliar environments. It is also, unfortunately, a movie that is nowhere near as original as its monster, a strain of malevolent, seemingly intelligent jungle vine with a taste for human flesh.

Adapted by Scott B. Smith from his best-selling novel of the same title, and directed by Carter Smith (not related to the author), the film follows four attractive young Americans (Jonathan Tucker, Jena Malone, Shawn Ashmore and Laura Ramsey) as they join a handsome German, Mathias (Joe Anderson), on a trip to jungle ruins in Mexico to meet up with Mathias’s brother and his archaeologist girlfriend.

In slasher-movie tradition, these happy wanderers prove as stupid as they are arrogant, disregarding the bad-omen appearance of a couple of spooky Mayan children, seemingly on loan from “Apocalypto” and rappelling down into the gloomy depths of a temple without a plan or a clue. Back in the day, Richard Pryor might have mined a comedy routine from this movie.

With its numerous images of well-off first-world tourists being devoured by a third-world environment and forced to contemplate hacking off infected body parts, “The Ruins” could have been the most politically provocative horror film since “Bug” was released last year. It settles for gore and pain instead.

كارگردان: کارتر اسمیت
نویسنده: اسکات اسمیت
رنگ: رنگی
ژانر: : تریلر :: فیلم نوار :
درجه فیلم: R
کشور: ایالات متحده
فروش هفته: 3.25
فروش کل: 13.41
امتياز منتقدان از 100: 48
جملات تبليغاتي: وحشت گسترش می‌یابد.

The Ruins

The Ruins (2008)

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Superhero Movie |فیلم ابرقهرمانی| 2008

Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 3:56 ب.ظ.
Director: Craig Mazin
Cast: Drake Bell, Sara Paxton, Christopher McDonald, Pamela Anderson

Movie Details

Title: Superhero Movie
Running Time: 85 Minutes
Status: Released
Country: United States
Genre: Comedy, Satire

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To call “Superhero Movie” a satire, or even a parody, of the genre specified in its title would be misleading, since those terms imply at least an attempt at wit. But no real mockery is intended by this harmless, mindless grab bag of slightly used gags, which lampoons some of the conventions of recent comic-book epics and adds the expected staples of juvenile humor: urine, vomit and intestinal gas.

There’s some other stuff too, of course. Brassieres, for example, sprinklings of timid ethnic and homophobic humor, and more references to Internet phenomena like YouTube, MySpace and Craigslist than you’re likely to encounter in a real superhero picture. Oddly, though, the narrative template is shockingly ancient: it’s the first Spider-Man movie, which came out, like, six years ago. Who even remembers?

There are also references to the “Fantastic Four,” “X-Men” and “Batman” franchises, all mild enough to avoid offending fans or litigious copyright holders. And there are a few moments that might elicit a chuckle, including a Tom Cruise impersonation that has already circulated on the Web. The presence of Leslie Nielsen does not in itself bring laughter, except insofar as you may be reminded of other, funnier movies.

Otherwise, it’s a long 85 minutes, which may, come to think of it, be a trenchant bit of satire in its own right. Most superhero movies these days are much too long and way too expensive. “Superhero Movie” manages to feel that way even though it could hardly be shorter or cheaper.

Those requiring a plot summary are invited to write their own and share it with friends, a more satisfying exercise than actually seeing the movie. But people will do that too. “Superhero Movie” occupied two screens at the Times Square multiplex where I saw it with a select group of cinephiles at 10:45 on Friday morning, and I’m sure the crowds will be large as the weekend progresses. And then it will be forgotten until a few months from now, when the next gaggle of earnest, troubled, costumed crime fighters take over those screens and make me look back in sorrow at this missed opportunity to cut them all down to size.

كارگردان: کریگ مازین
نویسنده: کریگ مازین
بازیگران: دریک بل، سارا پاکستون، پاملا اندرسون
رنگ: رنگی
ژانر: : کمدی :: اکشن :
درجه فیلم: PG-13
کشور: ایالات متحده
استودیو: دایمنشن فیلمز، ام جی ام
افتتاحیه: 28 مارس 2008
فروش هفته: 3.11
فروش کل: 21.2
مدت زمان فیلم: 85
امتياز منتقدان از 100: 33
جملات تبليغاتي: بزرگترین فیلم ابرقهرمانی تمام دوران! (با در نظر نگرفتن بقیه)

C cinemaema

Smart People |آدم‌های زرنگ| 2008

Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 3:43 ب.ظ.

Smart People 2008

Director: Noam Murro
Cast: Dennis Quaid, Thomas Haden Church

Title: Smart People
Running Time: 95 Minutes
Status: Released
Country: United States
Genre: Drama, Comedy

A Disagreeable Academic, and a Tonic Named Sarah Jessica Parker

If you are in the mood for a movie about the rejuvenation of an aging, widowed college professor — and don’t pretend you aren’t — then this is a weekend of rare and unexpected abundance. By some miracle of film industry serendipity, two such movies are opening today in limited release. Even more bizarre: each is pretty good.

In “The Visitor”, Richard Jenkins plays an economist whose flagging joie de vivre is restored when he takes up drumming. “Smart People” is more or less the same deal, except that its protagonist, played by Dennis Quaid, is a specialist in Victorian literature, and his flagging joie de vivre is restored when he goes to bed with Sarah Jessica Parker. Whatever gets you through the semester, I guess.

Seriously, though, what these two films — one a restrained drama, the other a frisky comedy — share is less the situation of their main characters than the superior work of the men who portray them. There is something about impersonating thwarted intellectuals, their early promise and ambition fading into vanity and irrelevance, that inspires a certain kind of actor to tap into deep veins of pathos and wit. Jeff Daniels struck the modern template for this kind of performance in “The Squid and the Whale,” and in their different ways Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Quaid live up to his high standard.

Mr. Quaid, his handsomeness distorted and obscured by stooped shoulders, a sagging belly and wayward facial hair, plays Lawrence Wetherhold, an English professor at Carnegie Mellon whose general unpleasantness seems less like a personality trait than like a belief system. His narcissism is a seamless coat of many colors, a weave of grief for his dead wife, resentment at how much the world demands of him and the conviction that he is smarter than everybody else.

His son, James (Ashton Holmes), an aspiring poet and a student at the college, finds Lawrence’s imperiousness nearly intolerable, while his daughter, Vanessa (Ellen Page), carefully tends the flame of her father’s ego and takes him as a role model in contrarianism. Secure in the sense of her own superiority and proud of her political conservatism, Vanessa is Diablo Cody’s Juno rewritten by Ayn Rand.

Actually, the excellent script for “Smart People” is the work of Mark Jude Poirier, a fiction writer who has clearly spent enough time around English departments to have studied the tribal ways of the literary professoriate with ethnographic rigor. The scenes of Lawrence in the classroom or in department meetings are among the most frighteningly, comically accurate such moments I have ever seen on film.

That may sound like a minor accomplishment, but the great virtue of “Smart People,” attributable to Noam Murro’s easygoing direction as well as to Mr. Poirier’s wandering screenplay, lies in its general preference for small insights over grand revelations. There is a fairly busy plot, and some of its developments — an unplanned pregnancy, a flicker of quasi-incestuous sexual interest, the acceptance of a poem by The New Yorker — clatter onto the screen like carelessly flung darts. But to a greater extent than in most comedies, the narrative seems more like background or scaffolding than like the engine that drives the characters, who are propelled instead by their own colliding, confusing, idiosyncratic energies.

Lawrence, sour patriarch and weary pedagogue, may dominate the landscape, but the people surrounding him are much more than mere foils or supporting players. Ms. Page is both sharp and brittle, but as she did with Juno, she allows Vanessa’s callowness and uncertainty to show through her veneer of sarcastic poise. Ms. Parker, as Janet Hartigan, a former student of Lawrence’s whose undergraduate crush on him is revived when they meet in a hospital emergency room (she as doctor, he as patient), cuts her natural charm with a very real sense of anxiety and disappointment. And above all there is Thomas Haden Church, suavely stealing scenes from Mr. Quaid in the slightly implausible but nonetheless charming role of Lawrence’s ne’er-do-well adoptive brother, Chuck.

Chuck, whose refusal to act his age seems as defiant and deliberate as his brother’s decision to act much older than his, crashes in Lawrence’s guest room and strikes up an occasionally awkward friendship with Vanessa. Lawrence, meanwhile, pursues an equally awkward affair with Janet, whose consequent rivalry with Vanessa is both unstated and unmistakable.

Over the course of the movie everyone changes, but the filmmakers don’t force them into preordained postures of redemption. They are defiantly fixed in their personalities even as they show — and eventually acknowledge — some room for improvement. But none undergo the kind of hokey, wholesale transformations that too often turn brisk comedies into damp melodramas. They, and the filmmakers, are too proud — and too smart — for that kind of nonsense. The ordinary nonsense of human imperfection will do just fine.

“Smart People” is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). It has swearing, drug use and two lingering glances at Mr. Church’s naked buttocks.

SMART PEOPLE

Opens on Friday nationwide.

Directed by Noam Murro; written by Mark Jude Poirier; director of photography, Toby Irwin; edited by Robert Frazen and Yana Gorskaya; music by Nuno Bettencourt; production designer, Patti Podesta; produced by Bridget Johnson, Michael Costigan, Michael London and Bruna Papandrea; released by Miramax Films. Running time: 1 hour 34 minutes.

WITH: Dennis Quaid (Lawrence Wetherhold), Sarah Jessica Parker (Janet Hartigan), Thomas Haden Church (Chuck Wetherhold), Ellen Page (Vanessa Wetherhold), Ashton Holmes (James Wetherhold), David Denman (William) and Camille Mana (Missy).

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كارگردان: نوام مورو
نویسنده: مارک پویریر
بازیگران: دنیس کواید، الن پیج، سارا جسیکا پارکر، توماس هیدن چرچ
رنگ: رنگی
ژانر: : عشقی :: درام :: کمدی :
درجه فیلم: R
کشور: ایالات متحده
استودیو: میراماکس فیلمز
افتتاحیه: 11 آوریل 2008
فروش هفته: 4.2
فروش کل: 4.2
مدت زمان فیلم: 95
امتياز منتقدان از 100: 58
جملات تبليغاتي: گاهی زرنگ‌ترین آدم‌ها چیزهای زیادی باید بیاموزند.
خلاصه داستان: یک زوج جوان وارد خانه یک پروفسور تازه طلاق‌گرفته می‌شوند و اتفاقات جالبی برای پیرمرد می‌افتد.

C)cinemaema

مارس 31, 2008

Dr. Seuss› Horton Hears a Who! |هورتون صدای یک هو را می‌شنود!| 2008

Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 2:45 ق.ظ.

Dr. Seuss› Horton Hears a Who! (2008

Alternate Titles: Dr. Seuss› Horton Hears a Who, Horton Hears a Who

Director: Jimmy Hayward
Cast: Jim Carrey, Steve Carell, Dan Fogler, Carol Burnett
Rating: G

Movie Details

Title: Dr. Seuss› Horton Hears a Who!
Running Time: 88 Minutes
Status: Released
Country: United States
 Genre: Adaptation, Family, Animated

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    What distinguishes “Horton Hears a Who!” from the other recent Dr. Seuss film adaptations —“How the Grinch Stole Christmas” and “The Cat in the Hat,” in case you need reminding — is that it is not one of the worst movies ever made. That’s faint praise, I know, and I’m even willing to go a bit further. There are aspects of “Horton,” directed by Jimmy Hayward and Steve Martino under the auspices of the 20th Century Fox animation unit responsible for the “Ice Age” movies, that are fresh and enjoyable, and bits that will gratify even a dogmatic and orthodox Seussian.

    Unlike “The Grinch” and “The Cat,” “Horton” does not try to flesh out the good doctor’s graphical world by means of sets, prosthetic makeup and the other accouterments of live-action moviemaking. The animation is free, supple and brightly colored, and the crazy curves and angles that Seuss arranged on the page pop into three dimensions with rubbery energy and elastic wit. Who-ville in particular — that speck-borne town with its spindly machinery and gravity-defying architecture — is a wondrously kinetic place. And the Jungle of Nool, where Horton passes his time and fights for survival of the Whos, is appropriately lush, inviting and strange.

    But if “Horton Hears a Who!” offers a showcase of the visual inventiveness and technical flair that characterizes Hollywood-financed children’s animation these days, it also shows some of the limitations of the computer-animation, talking-animal genre. The filmmakers revel in the imaginative freedom their image-making technology affords, and use it with self-confidence and flair, especially in action sequences. (A chase through a field of bright pink clover is lovely and thrilling.)

    When it comes to telling the story, however, and drawing out the dimensions of the characters, this “Horton” supplements Dr. Seuss’s fable with pages from the battered, worn-out Hollywood family-film playbook.

    All kinds of extraneous elements are added to the story. The Mayor of Who-ville, voiced by Steve Carell, is a beleaguered dad who has trouble communicating with his son, a moody emo boy named Jo-Jo. The problem with this father-son reconciliation narrative is not that it is un-Seussian — though such intergenerational melodrama almost never figured in Dr. Seuss’s work — but that it’s tired and sentimental. You don’t get the sense that the writers (Ken Daurio and Cinco Paul) actually believe in it. It just feels like something they know they’re supposed to do.

    The excitable sidekick is another such requirement, and here that duty is taken on by Seth Rogen in the role of Morton, a motor-mouthed mouse who is Horton’s best friend. Mr. Rogen’s casting, like Mr. Carell’s, is less a stunt than a kind of pop-culture insurance clause. Get some box-office-proven comedians to do the voice work — Jonah Hill, Isla Fisher and Dan Fogler make up part of the B team here, in smaller parts — and you can’t fail.

    And “Horton Hears a Who!” probably won’t, at least as a commercial proposition. But the star whose presence is clearly meant to be its gold-plated guarantee of success — Jim Carrey as Horton — is also the source of its most egregious failure. Mr. Carrey, who also played the Grinch, can be an agile and restrained actor when the mood strikes him. But the steadfast elephant is a vehicle for an endless, grating avalanche of clowning and riffing. Mr. Carrey not only breaks character with his goofing, he also all but destroys the nobility and sweetness that make Horton such a durable hero of children’s literature.

    Horton is loyal, stubborn and compassionate — traits that are all drowned out in the static of Mr. Carrey’s performance and the hectic proliferation of subplots. It is lucky that just enough of the basic story survives to give the movie a touch of gravity and suspense. Horton, hearing the voices of the Whos on their little speck, must protect them from a moralizing kangaroo (Carol Burnett) and her henchfolk, who include a Russian vulture (Will Arnett) and a band of aristocratically named apes.

    Meanwhile, the citizens of Who-ville must band together to make their presence known in the larger universe. It’s a marvelous tale, and a hard one to ruin. And the makers of “Horton Hears a Who!” haven’t, though I fear it was not for lack of trying.

    DR. SEUSS’ HORTON HEARS A WHO!

    Opens on Friday nationwide.

    Directed by Jimmy Hayward and Steve Martino; written by Cinco Paul and Ken Daurio, based on the book by Dr. Seuss; music by John Powell; produced by Bob Gordon; released by 20th Century Fox. Running time: 1 hour 28 minutes. This film is rated G.

    WITH THE VOICES OF: Jim Carrey (Horton), Steve Carell (Mayor), Carol Burnett (Kangaroo), Will Arnett (Vlad), Isla Fisher (Dr. Mary Lou LaRue), Amy Poehler (Sally O’Malley), Seth Rogen (Morton), Jonah Hill (Tommy) and Dan Fogler (Councilman) .


    Copyright © New York Times | iran-buy.com | kingcomputer.ws

    كارگردان: استیو مارتینو، جیمی هیوارد
    نویسنده: کن داریو، سینکو پل بر اساس کتابی از دکتر زئوس
    بازیگران: جیم کری، استیو کارل، کارول برنت، سث روگن، ایسلا فیشر
    رنگ: رنگی
    ژانر: : کمدی :: خانواگی :: انیمیشن :
    درجه فیلم: G
    کشور: ایالات متحده
    استودیو: فاکس قرن بیستم
    افتتاحیه: 14 مارس 2008
    فروش هفته: 25.1
    فروش کل: 86.47
    مدت زمان فیلم: 88
    امتياز منتقدان از 100: 71
    جملات تبليغاتي: یک فیل، یک جهان، یک قصه.
    خلاصه داستان: یک فیل به نام هورتون با موجودات میکروسکوپی به نام هو آشنا می‌شود که تا به حال اصلا به حضورشان باور نداشته است. او تصمیم می‌گیرد از این موجودات که حتا قیافه‌شان حیوانات جنگل را به خنده می‌اندازد و دنیای عجیب و غریب‌شان محافظت کند.
    حاشيه هاي فيلم: هزینه تولید فیلم 85 میلیون دلار بوده است..cinemaema©

    Horton Hears A Who

    Horton Hears a Who! (2008)

    Shutter | شاتر | 2008

    Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 2:43 ق.ظ.

    Shutter (2008

    Director: Masayuki Ochiai
    Cast: Joshua Jackson, Rachael Taylor, John Hensley
    Rating: PG-13

    Movie Details

    Title: Shutter
    Running Time: 85 Minutes
    Country: USA
    Genre: Supernatural Horror

    Similar Movies

    • The Ring
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    • Pulse
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    Review Summary

    No, the deluge of Asian fright films remade in Hollywood hasn’t dried up yet. Not by the evidence of “Shutter,” produced by people behind the American versions of “The Grudge” and “The Ring” and itself a remake of the 2004 That film “Shutter.” Fans of J-horror (for Japan, where the genre was born; its conventions have since spread to South Korea and Thailand) will find “Shutter” familiar; others may just doze. As is often the case in these movies, electronics is the medium through which the afterlife contacts the living. In “One Missed Call,” cellphones impart fatal portents; in “The Ring,” it’s videotape. Here it’s photographs, lots of photographs, from a disposable camera, a Pentax, a Polaroid, any brand name you can flash on the screen. The focus of the snapshots is a wraith, that of a woman (the mesmerizing Megumi Okina) whom a newlywed Brooklyn couple — Jane (Rachael Taylor) and Ben (Joshua Jackson), a commercial photographer, on a working vacation in Japan — have apparently run over by accident. She vanishes but later dogs their steps in Tokyo and New York, sometimes in window reflections but mostly as a ghostly smudge in Ben’s pictures. Jane is determined to learn her identity; Ben is in no hurry, for good reason. The director, Masayuki Ochiai, conjures textbook J-horror miasma: clammy clinical interiors; overcast skies; diffuse cityscapes. He also gives Alfred Hitchcock a nod, with a sequence nakedly stolen from “Psycho,” and draws unease from his characters’ disorientation in a foreign city. Tokyo, in fact, may be the movie’s most fascinating player. But the mandatory bump-offs — a gouging through a viewfinder, a compelled suicide — lack novelty. Only a spectral smooch, in which a serpentlike tongue chokes Mr. Jackson, prompts a lasting chill. That is one nasty mouthful.-Andy Webster,

    Shutter tells the story of photographer Ben (Joshua Jackson) and his new wife Jane (Rachael Taylor). The film begins with the couple’s wedding, and the audience learns that they are planning to leave their apartment in Brooklyn for Japan, where Ben has been hired to take pictures for a particular client. The couple has made the decision to leave for Japan a few days early, renting a cabin so they can enjoy a shorter honeymoon. In the car on the way to the cabin, Jane gets lost and asks a sleeping Ben to check the map. While attempting to get their bearings, Jane sees a girl walk into the road. She hits the girl, and swerves off the road, crashing the car into a tree. They both fall unconscious. When she awakens, Jane realizes the girl could very well still be laying in the road, and rushes out of the car to find her, Ben on her heels. They find nothing, and Ben thinks that the girl was already found and has gotten the medical help that she would need. He also thinks the injuries weren’t life-threatening, as they cannot find any blood or evidence of a collision and wants to call for help. Later, help does arrive for them, and they are able to continue with their travel to the cabin, but Jane is haunted by the image of the girl. Ben’s neck is bothering him, since the accident. Jane tells him he needs to get it checked out. Ben chooses to ignore it, and at the cabin, they are able to enjoy a few day long honeymoon, and Ben wants to take pictures to record the event.

    Days later, Ben has to report for work with his friend Bruno (David Denman) Jane accompanies him but is somewhat left to her own devices as Ben needs to meet with the clients right away. We learn that Ben is fluent in Japanese, while Jane is not. Later, the pair are taken to their home, a building of which they are the sole occupants, and also the home of Ben’s photography studio. Jane notices an alcove where an old chair sits, and the image sticks with her. After meeting Ben’s assistant Seiko (Maya Hazen), Jane again is left to her own devices while Ben works. She eventually gets the photos from the honeymoon, which are full of a mysterious light, and in showing the photos to Ben, makes the realization that something is off with them. Ben simply assumes there was an error with the camera. Seiko mentions that the light is not from a camera error, but from spirit energy. Interested, Jane asks how she knows what the light is, to which Seiko responds that her ex-boyfriend runs a spirit photography magazine. She insists that Jane meet her ex the next day after work. That night, Ben, Jane, Bruno, his date and Adam (John Hensley) go out to a traditional Japanese restaurant. Here we learn that Adam is a model agent, but that his motives may not be in the best interest for the models.

    The next day, Jane heads with Seiko to see the spirit photography magazine founder, and Seiko’s ex-boyfriend, Ritsuo (James Kyson Lee). While there, Jane learns that the magazine is mostly full of fake photographs, but that 1) a Polaroid picture cannot be faked and 2) a psychic named Murase (Kei Yamamoto) was written up by the magazine for his efforts in analyzing the photos. Later, Jane tells Ben about her visit and asks him to go with her. Ben’s neck continues to bother him, and he goes to the doctor. While there, he is weighed a couple of times, and the doctor tells him that there is no source of injury, but that he will give him some medicine for the pain. Rattled himself by the presence of the light in some of his work photos which have landed him in hot water with the client and a random encounter with ‹someone› in the darkroom, he agrees to travel with Jane to visit Murase.

    Once at the home of Murase, Jane and Ben show him the photos and tell him that there was an accident and they believe this spirit may be that of the girl Jane hit. Ben serves as translator between the two. Murase takes the photos and begins to speak very emotionally, but Ben does not translate all of what he says, and tells her they are leaving. Ben does tell her that spirits bond with humans when extreme emotions (love, hate, anger, etc) are involved.

    Jane later looks at the photos of the project that were ruined by the light, and decides to go visit the office building in the photo that the light seems to be around. Armed with a borrowed Polaroid camera from Ben’s studio, she heads to the building to take pictures and see if she finds any proof of the spirit’s presence in the building. When she gets there, she goes to the floor where the light has gathered, and takes pictures in the empty office. She has her first encounter, and learns the girl’s name Megumi Tanaka through a picture frame that falls on the ground and shatters. Megumi is in the photo and when looking at it, Jane learns that her husband Ben took the photograph.

    When she confronts Ben about it, he admits that he and Megumi were involved in a relationship, but that she became obsessive and clingy, despite the fact that her traditional Japanese family did not approve of the pair. If anything, the disapproval made Megumi even more clingy to Ben, who was trying his hardest to balance work and his blossoming relationship. Megumi’s father, the main person who did not approve of the pair, dies, and Megumi becomes obsessive and even at one point becomes suicidal. Realizing this is too much for him to handle, Ben ends the relationship with Megumi. Ben, admitting that he never loved her, gets Adam and Bruno to speak to her about the fact that the relationship is over and that she needs to stop following him around. Jane is upset with that, but decides they have to find Megumi. Ben talks to Bruno, who says that he recently saw Megumi on the street, she was pointing at him.

    Adam is at his photography studio taking pictures of a prospective model, an Russian hostess that he mentioned at the dinner. He asks her to take off her clothing, except her underwear, and goes to get his camera from a box full of pictures of scantily-clad women. We get the impression that his motives at this point are not good at all. He begins taking pictures and starts seeing Megumi through the camera lens. He keeps stopping taking pictures, which begins to irritate the model. He is ready to take another picture, and the next thing we see is that the camera lens has shattered in his eye.

    Meanwhile, Ben and Jane are at Megumi’s home looking for evidence of her location. They find her, seemingly having been dead for a long time, as flies and decay have began, along with bottles of potassium cyanide strewn along the floor. They are still in shock over this discovery when Ben receives a call from Bruno about Adam’s accident. Ben says that they will meet Bruno at the hospital.

    After being at the hospital for a while and Bruno does not turn up, Ben calls his cellphone in an effort to find out when he’ll get there. Bruno answers but does not say anything, and as the camera pans out, the audience sees that he is slicing up photographs (into shapes of origami) with a razor blade and his hands are all bloody. Ben tells Bruno’s voicemail that they desperately need him at the hospital because Adam didn’t make it. Ben and Jane leave the hospital and head to Bruno’s home to see if he is there.

    When they arrive, they find all his picture frames are still on the walls, but the photos are all cut up on the table, and that the television is loud and blaring. Ben begins to look around for him, while Jane examines the photos on the table. She sees Bruno standing at the end of the hall, and it appears he is charging at her. Ben calls out to him, and Bruno runs past Jane (who dives out of the way) and jumps off the balcony of his high-rise and goes crashing onto the concrete. He is dead. Ben is visibly distraught.

    Ben and Jane have decided to return to New York at this point, when in a voiceover, Ben says that Megumi’s funeral will be in a few days, she will be cremated, and after the service, they can return home. When they return home to pack things, Jane opens a Fed-Ex that she has received containing photos of their wedding, and Jane makes the statement, «we aren’t going anywhere». Megumi is present in their wedding photos. They decide to leave the apartment and go to a hotel to spend the night.

    That night, Ben is haunted by images of Megumi in the room, her brushing her hair, her looking at him, her sitting on the floor, her initiating sex with him…all while Jane sleeps. He is very upset and somewhat frantic, and the ghost of Megumi confronts him with a kiss, and Jane wakes to find him choking. She watches him choke and attempts to help him, gets caught by the ghost in a curtain and smashed up against a window which cracks. In her desperation, Jane finally yells, «He didn’t love you!» to which Megumi stops. Ben is gasping for air, but alive.

    At Megumi’s funeral, her body is cremated. Ben and Jane watch the process and hold hands. They return to New York, where supposedly all is over. However, this is not the case. Ben is out, seemingly at work, when Jane wants to take a picture of the rose petal shaped heart Ben has left her with a disposable camera. However, the camera is full of ready-to-be-developed pictures. She heads out to start her day and takes the camera with her, to drop it off at a developer. When she returns home, she has the photos in an envelope. While preparing dinner, she opens the envelope and is shocked by what she sees. In the pictures, of her and Ben frolicking around while still in their wedding clothes, the ghost of Megumi is visibly in the photos, crawling towards the couple and eventually standing near a portrait of Jane that (most likely) Ben took. Jane looks in Ben’s belongings for the camera that he used in Japan, and finds the removable drive in the camera, which she loads into the computer, and is disgusted by what she finds.

    When Ben gets home, he can immediately tell something is wrong with Jane. He asks her what is wrong and she opens the laptop and asks him what the photos are of…and how he could do such a thing. We see the picture of Megumi, with Bruno and Adam, in a compromising position. Ben tells Jane that Megumi was crazy, she was obsessed and she wouldn’t stop harassing him. So when Bruno and Adam got involved, Adam suggested giving her some pills that were like sleeping pills but a little stronger, and photographing her in an compromising position that they could use to blackmail her against her prim and proper family to finally leave Ben alone. However, when the situation was happening, Ben took the photos but Adam and Bruno (more than likely drunk themselves) took advantage of Megumi and forced themselves on her. (The audience is led to believe this by the comments they make and the fact that they show the look on Ben’s face). Ben admits to Jane that the situation got out of control and he blames himself for not doing anything. Jane is disgusted, and realizes that Megumi was trying to warn her of the man she loves, that Megumi did not want to harm her at all.

    She starts to leave him, telling him that she needs time to think and then recants, saying she needs no time to figure out that he’s not the person she thought he was and that she’s done. Jane departs, leaving Ben alone in the apartment. Ben takes out a Polaroid camera and begins photographing the apartment looking for Megumi. He yells and screams for her. The pictures show nothing, and in anger, he drops the camera and it takes a photo. He picks up the photo and looks at it, and it shows Megumi is sitting on his shoulders. This explains his «injury» and why his neck has been hurting him so and why the nurse weighed him multiple times, his weight was that of 275, the weight of two people. In an effort to rid himself of her once and for all, hooks up a large amount of power to a photography light, which he puts to his neck. The power goes out in the building and we hear Ben’s screams.

    The next scene is in a hospital. A nurse is wheeling a tray of food and drink into a room. We see the patient in the room is Ben, who appears completely catatonic, his head slung over and head closely shaved. The nurse injects his arm with a needle, sets the food down on the table and leaves the room, locking the door behind her. As it closes, we see that the spirit of Megumi is hugging Ben, causing him to be slumped over due to her weight. Eventually showing us that Megumi got what she wanted to be with him forever.

    Copyright © New York Times & wikipedia | iran-buy.com | kingcomputer.ws

    كارگردان: ماسایوکی اوکیای
    نویسنده: لوک داوسون
    بازیگران: جاشوا جکسون، راشل تایلور، جیمز کایسون لی
    رنگ: رنگی
    ژانر: : تریلر :: مرموز :: وحشت :
    درجه فیلم: PG-13
    کشور: ایالات متحده
    استودیو: فاکس قرن بیستم
    افتتاحیه: 21 مارس 2008
    فروش هفته: 10.7
    فروش کل: 10.7
    مدت زمان فیلم: 85
    امتياز منتقدان از 100: 40
    خلاصه داستان: یک زوج جوان آمریکایی برای ماه‌عسل به توکیو می‌روند که متوجه یک چیز بسیار عجیب می‌شوند. عکس ارواح در میان عکس‌های خودشان. آیا این عکس‌ها تخیلی‌اند یا واقعی؟ و چه رابطه‌ای با تصادف وحشتناکی که چندی قبل شاهدش بوده‌اند دارد؟cinemaema©

     

    Shutter (2008)

    SHUTTER

    Apple – Trailers – Shutter

     

    Tyler Perry’s Meet the Browns |ملاقات با خانواده براون| 2008

    Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 2:43 ق.ظ.

    Tyler Perry’s Meet the Browns (2008

    Director: Tyler Perry
    Cast: Angela Bassett, Margaret Avery, Frankie R. Faison, Jenifer Lewis
    Rating: PG-13

    Movie Details

    Title: Tyler Perry’s Meet the Browns
    Running Time: 100 Minutes
    Country: USA
    Genre: Romantic Drama, Family Drama, Domestic Comedy

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    The Court Street 12-plex in Brooklyn is a perfectly ordinary movie theater, a vertically arranged variation on what is found in suburban shopping malls throughout the land. It is a place to watch Hollywood blockbusters in stadium seating with a concession-stand combo special in your lap. The crowds, though, are anything but generic, thanks to the cinema’s location. It’s an easy trip from both brownstones and housing projects, a short walk from the blue-collar Fulton Street Mall and the gentrified retail strips of Court and Smith Streets south of Atlantic Avenue. It’s one of those increasingly rare New York spots where the city’s various demographic strands cross and commingle.

    But since this is a week to speak openly about race, I should note that, at 11 o’clock on Good Friday morning, I was the only white person at a nearly full showing of “Tyler Perry’s Meet the Browns.” I was probably also the only person who was there for work rather than pleasure, though the pleasure in the room was pretty contagious. Mr. Perry has never received much love from members of my profession, and like his last few movies, “Meet the Browns” arrived in theaters on Friday without holding advance press screenings.

    Not that he needs us — critics, I mean. His work may be rooted in the experience of a particular group, but there is nothing exclusive about it. His ideas about family, religion, love and community — and the contradictions and collisions among those things — are unlikely to seem exotic anywhere.

    Mr. Perry, after all, is one of the few genuine populists left in American filmmaking. There are plenty of panderers and showmen, of course, and legions of market researchers and focus-group tweakers. But Mr. Perry built his audience the hard way and over the long haul, first on the traveling theater circuit catering to African-American audiences and then with a series of movies, beginning with “Diary of a Mad Black Woman” in 2005.

    Madea, the vociferous, big-boned grandmother Mr. Perry played in that film (and then in “Madea’s Family Reunion”), makes a brief, raucous cameo near the end of “Meet the Browns.” Not for any reason having to do with the picture’s many story lines, but just as a kind of lagniappe, a gift of pure silliness for the loyal public. Up until then most of the comic work has been capably performed by David Mann, playing a garishly dressed Southern fellow named Leroy Brown, and Jenifer Lewis, as his viper-tongued, liquored-up sister Vera.

    Those are some of the Browns encountered by Brenda (Angela Bassett), a hard-pressed single mother of three children who travels from Chicago to a small town in Georgia to attend the funeral of the father she never knew. Vera and Leroy, along with the relatively more staid Sarah (Margaret Avery), Cora (Tamela Mann) and L. B. (Frankie Faison), turn out to be members of Brenda’s extended family. They provide both broad humor and warm, hometown wisdom, two elements that combine with florid melodrama and hard-won romance to complete Mr. Perry’s entertainment formula.

    Other recurring traits in his films are stiff dialogue, uneven acting and a directing style that can best be described as functional. Still, the plentiful close-ups of Ms. Bassett’s face, one of the most beautiful and expressive in movies, nearly make up for the overall visual drabness.

    She sometimes seems too agile and refined an actress for material this broad — in her scenes with Rick Fox, who plays a possible love interest, she pretty much acts for both of them — but her skills come in handy when displays of large and intense emotion are required.

    Which is a lot. The plot is too crowded for summary here. Mr. Perry treats a story a little like a banquet table, loading it up with more stuff than is healthy or easily digestible. But this is an aspect of his generosity, his desire to sate and satisfy a hungry audience. What he serves up — a mixture of moralism and forgiveness, semibawdy humor and cautionary drama, mockery and affection — may sometimes lack coherence, but never integrity.

    His sensibility is sentimental and forgiving, but he does not soften his presentation of some hard facts of life. Poverty, drug dealing, the abandonment of children by their fathers — these are among the problems Brenda and her children face. Mr. Perry does not linger morbidly over them, but neither does he wish them away.

    His films are hardly realistic, but they aren’t exercises in pure escapism either. They offer comic relief and moral correction. And if they feel corny and hokey at times — O.K., a lot of the time — that is partly because they make everyone who sees them, white critics included, feel right at home.

    “Tyler Perry’s Meet the Browns” is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). It has some sexual innuendoes and drug references.


    Copyright © New York Times | iran-buy.com | kingcomputer.ws

     
    نویسنده: تایلر پری
    بازیگران: تاملا مان، آنجلا بست، تایلر پری
    رنگ: رنگی
    ژانر:
    درجه فیلم: PG-13
    کشور: ایالات متحده
    استودیو: لایونزگیت
    افتتاحیه: 21 مارس 2008
    فروش هفته: 20.01
    فروش کل: 20.01
    مدت زمان فیلم: 100
    امتياز منتقدان از 100: 48
    جملات تبليغاتي: کیف‌تان را جلوی در کنترل کنید.
    خلاصه داستان: یک مادر مجرد خانواده‌اش را برای مراسم تدفین پدرش به جرجیا می‌برد. او پدرش را هرگز ندیده است. او و خانواده‌اش در آن‌جا با خانواده کودن و خوش‌گذران براون آشنا می‌شوند.cinemaema©

    Meet the Browns (2008)

    Meet The Browns

    Meet the Browns (film) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Drillbit Taylor |دریلبیت تیلور | 2008

    Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 2:43 ق.ظ.

    Drillbit Taylor (2008

    Director: Steven Brill
    Cast: Owen Wilson, Alex Frost, Matt Gallini, Troy Gentile
    Rating: PG-13

    Movie Details

    Title: Drillbit Taylor
    Running Time: 102 Minutes
    Status: Released
    Country: United States
    Genre: Comedy

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    At the moment it seems as if no major Hollywood studio will release a comedy without Judd Apatow’s name somewhere on the label. This is perhaps overdue vindication for a man who once languished making brilliant television shows that too few people wanted to watch, but it also carries risks of backlash and brand dilution.
    As an admirer, mostly, of Mr. Apatow’s oeuvre, I was inclined to believe that “Drillbit Taylor” was a cheap knockoff, that the producer credit Mr. Apatow receives at the beginning was akin to the Rolex insignia on the watch I bought for $20 on Canal Street a while back. But it makes more sense to think of this dumb little picture, with Mr. Apatow’s wife, Leslie Mann, in a supporting role, and Seth Rogen, one of his alter egos, sharing credit for story and screenplay, as part of the Apatow discount line. “You get what you pay for,” the tag line on the advertisement says. I saw it free, and I still feel cheated.The premise is a mélange of familiar and somewhat more esoteric elements: the television sitcom “Freaks and Geeks,” of which Mr. Apatow was an executive producer; the 1980 high school drama “My Bodyguard”; Jean Renoir’s “Boudu Saved From Drowning” (or at least Paul Mazursky’s remake, “Down and Out in Beverly Hills”). Worthy influences all. But “Drillbit Taylor” is so ploddingly directed (by Steven Brill) and lazily written that it adds up to little more than a diffuse collection of second-hand gags and jokes, few of them funny.

    Three nerdy high school freshmen — a fat one (Troy Gentile), a tall one with glasses (Nate Hartley) and a shrimpy one with braces (David Dorfman) — find their pathetic efforts at coolness met with abuse from a pair of bullies. These are not just run-of-the-mill jocks but full-fledged sociopaths, in particular the one called Filkins (Alex Frost). To fight back the boys enlist the help of the title character (Owen Wilson), a good-natured homeless man who claims to be veteran of the Army Special Forces.

    Various entirely predictable, rarely amusing things happen, including a lot of punches to the face and groin. The only reliably funny thing in the movie is Mr. Wilson’s zoned-out, improvisational riffing, but his oddball comic intensity is shamelessly exploited rather than given material on which to feed. This is too often the way lazy filmmakers deal with gifted screen comedians. Point the camera at Mr. Wilson (or Will Ferrell or Ben Stiller or Jim Carrey), write a check and figure that the shtick will carry a movie at least as far as a decent opening-weekend gross. That’s a waste of talent, and “Drillbit Taylor” is a waste of time.

    “Drillbit Taylor” is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). It has some puerile sex jokes and drug references.

    DRILLBIT TAYLOR

    Opens on Friday nationwide.

    Directed by Steven Brill; written by Kristofor Brown and Seth Rogen, based on a story by Edmond Dantes, Mr. Brown and Mr. Rogen; director of photography, Fred Murphy; edited by Thomas J. Nordberg; music by Christophe Beck; production designer, Jackson De Govia; produced by Judd Apatow, Susan Arnold and Donna Arkoff Roth; released by Paramount Pictures. Running time: 1 hour 42 minutes.

    WITH: Owen Wilson (Drillbit Taylor), Leslie Mann (Lisa), Danny McBride (Don), Josh Peck (Ronnie), David Dorfman (Emmit), Troy Gentile (Ryan), Nate Hartley (Wade) and Alex Frost (Filkins).
    Copyright © New York Times | iran-buy.com | kingcomputer.ws

     
    نویسنده: کریس براون، سث روگن
    بازیگران: اوئن ویلسون، جاش پک، الکس فراست
    رنگ: رنگی
    ژانر:
    درجه فیلم: PG-13
    کشور: ایالات متحده
    استودیو: پارامونت پیکچرز
    افتتاحیه: 21 مارس 2008
    فروش هفته: 10.2
    فروش کل: 10.2
    مدت زمان فیلم: 102
    امتياز منتقدان از 100: 41
    جملات تبليغاتي: همانقدر که پول می‌دهید آش می‌خورید.
    خلاصه داستان: سه پسر نوجوان یک بادی‌گارد ارزان استخدام می‌کنند تا از آن‌ها در محل بازی‌شان محافظت کند.
    حاشيه هاي فيلم: بودجه فیلم تقریبا 40 میلیون دلار بوده است.cinemaema©

    Drillbit Taylor (2008)

    Owen Wilson in Drillbit Taylor | Official Movie Site | In Theaters

    Drillbit Taylor – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Apple – Trailers – Drillbit Taylor

    مارس 14, 2008

    10000 سال قبل از میلاد (10,000 B.C.)

    Filed under: پر فروشترین ها [Box Office Top] — iranbuy @ 12:58 ق.ظ.

    10,000 B.C.

    Alternate Titles: Ten Thousand BC, 10, 000 BC, 10000 B.C

    Director: Roland Emmerich
    Cast: Steven Strait, Camilla Belle, Omar Sharif, Marco Khanlian
    Rating: PG-13 (Violence

    Movie Details

    Title: 10,000 B.C.
    Running Time: 109 Minutes
    Status: Released
    Country: United States
    Genre: Drama, Adventure, Period

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    • One Million Years B.C
    .“Only time can teach us what is truth and what is legend.” This bit of fake-folk wisdom commences the voice-over narration of “10,000 BC,” and the more you think about it, the more preposterous it seems. If anything, time confuses the issue. But it’s best not to think too hard about anything in this sublimely dunderheaded excursion into human prehistory, directed by Roland Emmerich from a script he wrote with Harald Kloser, who also helped compose, using his better ear, the musical score.
    Mr. Emmerich has made something of a specialty in staging — with maximal bombast and minimal coherence — end-of-the-world scenarios. (See “Independence Day” and “The Day After Tomorrow,” though not on the same day if you can help it.) In the context of his oeuvre “10,000 BC” might be thought of as a kind of prequel, an attempt to imagine human civilization not on the brink of its end, but somewhere near its beginning.Yet even as the story begins, the old ways seem to be dying out, as the Yagahl, a tribe of snuffleupagus hunters who favor extensions in their hair and eschew contractions in their speech, prepare for their last hunt. In fulfillment of an old prophecy, raiders on horseback (“four-legged demons”) arrive to sack the Yagahl encampment and take a bunch of the tribespeople as slaves. Among them is the blue-eyed Evolet (Camilla Belle), whose beloved, D’Leh (Steven Strait), sets out with his mentor, Tic’Tic (Cliff Curtis), to rescue her.

    Along the way D’Leh and Tic’Tic have many adventures, involving bizarrely costumed humans and computer-generated creatures, among them a scary race of flesh-eating swamp ostriches. These reminded me of nothing so much as the angry chicken, designed by the stop-action maestro Ray Harryhausen, that menaces some castaways in Cy Endfield’s 1961 curio “Mysterious Island.” And at its best — which may also be to say at its worst — “10,000 BC” feels like a throwback to an ancient, if not exactly prehistoric, style of filmmaking. The wooden acting, the bad dialogue, the extravagantly illogical special effects may well, in time, look pleasingly cheap and hokey, at which point the true entertainment value of the film will at last be realized.

    Meanwhile back in the present, there is an awful lot of high-toned mumbo-jumbo to sit through. On his journey D’Leh (it’s pronounced “delay,” though most of the time he’s in a pretty big hurry) gathers a multicultural army to oppose the pyramid-building, slaveholding empire that has been bothering the more peaceful agrarian and hunter-gatherer tribes. These decadent priests seem like a curious hybrid of the Egyptians in “King of Egypt” and the Maya from “Apocalypto.” To reach them D’Leh travels overland from his home on the Siberian steppes through the jungles of Southeast Asia to the grasslands of Africa. But back then I guess it was all Gondwana, so the trip was easier.

    Other movies D’Leh (or rather Mr. Emmerich) makes his way through include “The Searchers” and “Ice Age,” though nothing in “10,000 BC” approaches the poetry of the scrambling squirrel and his errant acorn in “Ice Age.” Still, it is a mercy that the tigers and the other creatures don’t talk. It would be more of a mercy if the human characters, especially that narrator, observed similar discretion.

    But the big, climactic fight, complete with an epic snuffleupagus rampage, is decent action-movie fun. And as a history lesson, “10,000 BC” has its value. It explains just how we came to be the tolerant, peace-loving farmers we are today, and why the pyramids were never finished.

    “10,000 B.C.” is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). It has a lot of violence, none of it terribly grisly.

    10,000 BC

    Opens on Friday nationwide.

    Directed by Roland Emmerich; written by Mr. Emmerich and Harald Kloser; director of photography, Ueli Steiger; edited by Alexander Berner; music by Mr. Kloser and Thomas Wander; production designer, Jean-Vincent Puzos; produced by Michael Wimer, Mr. Emmerich and Mark Gordon; released by Warner Brothers Pictures. Running time: 1 hour 49 minutes.

    WITH: Camilla Belle (Evolet), Steven Strait (D’Leh) and Cliff Curtis (Tic’Tic).
    Copyright © New York Times | iran-buy.com | kingcomputer.ws

    كارگردان: رولند امریخ
    نویسنده: رولند امریخ، هارالد کلوزر
    بازیگران: کامیلا بل، استیون استریت، مارکو خان
    رنگ: رنگی
    ژانر: : درام :: حادثه ای :
    درجه فیلم: PG-13
    کشور: ایالات متحده/نیوزیلند
    استودیو: وارنر برادرز پیکچرز
    افتتاحیه: 7 مارس 2008
    فروش هفته: 35.73
    فروش کل: 35.73
    مدت زمان فیلم: 109
    امتياز منتقدان از 100: 36
    جملات تبليغاتي: یک قهرمان نیاز است تا جهان را تغییر دهد.©cinemaema

    10000 BC

    10000 B.C. (2008)

    10000 BC (film) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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