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Mamma Mia! (2008)
It's not the play; get over it and you'll enjoy it.
To enjoy this film, it helps to leave some expectations at the door. One is that "ABBA sound." This isn't it. That sound was created in a studio with a mixing board, etc. Some of that sound was in the stage play and it worked there because the majority of the audience is far enough from the stage to really think that gorgeous sound is coming from just the cast on stage. But when the camera is right in the actor's face, and that face is several stories high, the music must come from the singer.
In that regard, the movie is very good because of that authenticity. Put it this way, you and I would never have a chance to be part of the ABBA sound. But we do have a chance, if we leave our inhibitions behind, to live life to the fullest and just break into song from time to time. The movie works very well at that because of the high level of skill from the actors, the sets and setting and the bright light of the cinematography. (Was Thomas Kinkade ass't DP on this?!) Also suspend your beliefs on monogamous marriage. It's just a movie, church folk...and otherwise it's a feast for the senses. Yes, a little too much estrogen, but mid-life women need their moments. Think of it as Under The Grecian Sun (including the bed jumping scene). Guys, you might want to just download some iTunes of ABBA's hits if you can't be man enough to go with your wife to see this.
And that giant sucking sound you hear is the escalating costs of destination weddings! Who will settle for the little church on the corner (or worse, the Justice of the Peace), after seeing the beauty of the Creation on this location.
Thank you Benny, Bjorn, Frida and Agnetha for bringing this music to my generation. And thanks to the movie production for letting the current generation eat from film version of a smörgåsbord.
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion (2001)
Lower your expectations and you will enjoy this.
The summary for this movie provided by our pay per view cable server (who writes these anyway?) described this as a "Tracy and Hepburn" effort. That's the main reason I dialed in, but was disappointed because it did not live up to that billing. The age difference in Allen & Hunt is too great to believe there is any romance between the 2 main characters (when I get to 66, I may change my mind). Perhaps the cable "reviewer" meant to say Powell & Loy, considering the genre, but it's not even that. It is good, though. Once you realize this is an old Woody and miscast Helen (either her or her character is not funny), sit back and enjoy the script, direction and sound track. Good performances by the support team, too.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966)
How can a movie have so much going for it and still be bad?
The directing is very good; it's by Mike Nichols, so you would expect that. The writing is very good since it's Ernst Lehman. Even the acting is superb with Sir Richard and his wife Elizabeth. Why, then, does this movie fail? I think it must be the subject matter. There is no subject matter except a thinly veiled use of marriage conflict to string together the lines. Oscars were passed to actors, who were themselves passing out due to massive alcohol intake. I can't think of a single reason to recommend this movie.
Irreconcilable Differences (1984)
This would be on my list of the Ten Worst movies ever made.
Why is this billed as a comedy? It isn't even close. The concept might work with a better script and directing. Even the acting is poor; there is no chemistry between Long and O'Neal. A nude Sharon Stone couldn't save this movie!
The Lonely Man (1957)
This is a different type of western.
This isn't the cowboys vs. indians or "saved by the Cavalry" formulaic western. There is characterization! Jack Palance delivers a great performance. He can act when the script and director allowed him. Tony Perkins seems to be the same character as he was in Tin Star. Great outdoor scenery; the studio should have paid the extra cost to film this in Technicolor.
Sergeant York (1941)
Good clean movie for a large audience.
This is not just a war movie. It is that, but it has characterization, dialogue and other aspects of good movies. On the war front, it is definitely the "soft side of war" totally unlike Pvt. Ryan. Yet the real life hero of this movie, Alvin York, has said numerous times and ways how bad war is and he did not want to profit from this movie. It's a good look at religious based C.O. view of fighting in a war.