Sunday, May 19, 2013

Lay the Favorite: Movie Review


   



Tried to turn an unbelievable true story into a fun ride but forgot about the stupidity.
“Lay the Favorite” has many dissenters, most complaining that it’s completely unbelievable. It’s true, it is. Beth (Rebecca Hall) is a ditzy bimbo who quits her job as a stripper and moves to Las Vegas to become a cocktail waitress. A great idea! (Sarcasm). Instead, as soon as she arrives, she gets a very lucrative job as a sports bettor for a bookie who isn’t a bookie since bookmaking is illegal. Apparently, she’s a genius with numbers and words. 2012

Directed by: Stephen Frears

Screenplay by: D.V. DeVincentis

Starring: Rebecca Hall, Bruce Willis, Joshua Jackson, Catherine Zeta-Jones

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Mud: Movie Review



Arkansas, a boat, a tree, two boys, girls, love, snakes and Mud.

Mud (Matthew McConaughey) is the central adult character. He lives in a boat in a tree on an island in Arkansas. And he is dirty. He probably hasn’t bathed in weeks, if not years. He also muddies the truth a bit – just a bit, to reflect his version of the world. Our teenage boy protagonists hesitantly take him at his word – there’s no reason for him to be any less dependable than their own parents and guardian.   2012

Directed by: Jeff Nichols

Screenplay by: Jeff Nichols

Starring: Matthew McConaughey, Tye Sheridan, Jacob Lofland, Ray McKinnon

Monday, May 13, 2013

The Oranges: Movie Review


A plethora of actors show how to make a dysfunctional family dramedy funny.

“The Oranges” centers on two families, each with mom and dad and former teenage daughter (now a twenty-something daughter), living across the street from each other in West Orange, New Jersey. It’s kind of like a dysfunctional family dramedy except the families really do function normal enough and well enough prior to the beginning of the plot. And also it’s a comedy. It poses some fairly serious questions but presents them all in a light-hearted, humorous fashion.   2011

Directed by: Julian Farino

Screenplay by: Ian Helfer, Jay Reiss

Starring: Leighton Meester, Hugh Laurie, Alia Shawkat, Oliver Platt