Archive for January, 2011

Little Fockers

Not a whole lot of thougthful plot here and it is the formula antagonism seen in Meet the Fockers and Meet the Parents. The movie is a mindless bit of entertainment and coming in at 1 hour and 38 minutes, not a big waste of time. It is beginning to be pretty boring seeing Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson who are the same character regardless of the movie. Although Pam Focker has been played by Teri Polo in all three movies, she looks different in this movie – not as attractive. The bimbo played by Jessica Alba is way overdone and is never fully resolved in the end. Let’s hope this is the end of the Focker as it is now too much formula and repetitive.

Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars but watchable.

Takers

A seasoned team of bank robbers, including Gordon Jennings (Idris Elba), John Rahway (Paul Walker), A.J. (Hayden Christensen), and brothers Jake (Michael Ealy) and Jesse Attica (Chris Brown) successfully complete their latest heist and lead a life of luxury while planning their next job. When Ghost (Tip T.I. Harris), a former member of their team, is released from prison he convinces the group to strike an armored car carrying $20 million. As the “takers” carefully plot out their strategy and draw nearer to exacting the grand heist, a reckless police officer (Matt Dillon) inches closer to apprehending the criminals.

Not a bad watchable flick. In this one, you are cheering for the criminals. Not a bad ending for a movie that makes you sympathetic to the bad guys.

Rating:  3.5 out of 5 stars.

The Social Network

In 2003, Harvard University student Mark Zuckerberg has the idea to create a website to rate the attractiveness of female Harvard undergraduates after his girlfriend Erica Albright breaks up with him. Mark hacks into the databases of various residence halls, downloads pictures and names of female students and, using an algorithm for ranking chess players supplied by his best friend Eduardo Saverin (essentially the Elo rating system, written on a window pane recalling a scene of A beautiful mind), he creates in a few hours a website called “FaceMash.com”, where male students can iteratively choose which of two girls presented at a time is more attractive.

Mark is punished with six months of academic probation after the traffic to the site brings down parts of Harvard’s network, and becomes vilified among most of Harvard’s female community. However, the popularity of “FaceMash” and the fact that he created it in one night, while drunk, brings him to the attention of Cameron Winklevoss and Tyler Winklevoss, identical twins and members of Harvard’s rowing team, and their business partner Divya Narendra. As a result, he gains a job working for the Winklevoss twins as the programmer of their website, Harvard Connection.

Soon afterwards, Mark approaches his friend Eduardo and tells him of his idea for what he calls “Thefacebook”, an online social networking website exclusive to Harvard University students. He explains this would let people share personal and social information securely. Eduardo agrees to help Mark, providing a thousand dollars to help start the site. Once complete, they distribute the link to Eduardo’s connections at the Phoenix S-K final club, and it quickly becomes popular throughout the student body. When they learn of Thefacebook, the Winklevoss twins and Narendar believe that Zuckerberg stole their idea while simultaneously stalling on their website; Cameron and Divya want to sue Mark for intellectual property theft, but Tyler convinces them they can settle the matter as “Harvard gentlemen” without resorting to the courts.

At a lecture by Bill Gates, fellow Harvard University student Christy Lee introduces herself and her friend Alice to Eduardo and Mark. She asks that the boys “Facebook us”, which impresses both of them. The girls invite them to a bar, where they have sex in the toilet. Mark later runs into his ex-girlfriend, who is not aware of The Facebook’s existence because she is not a Harvard University student. Stung by this, Mark decides to expand the site to more schools. Christy, Mark, and Eduardo later return to Mark’s room where they outline the structure of the company and their plan for moving forward.

As The Facebook grows in popularity, they expand to other schools in the Northeastern United States, while the Winklevoss twins and Narendra become angrier at seeing “their idea” advance without them. Tyler refuses to sue them, instead accusing Mark of violating the Harvard student Code of Conduct. Through their father’s connections they arrange a meeting with Harvard President Larry Summers, who is dismissive and sees no potential value in either a disciplinary action or in Thefacebook website itself.

Through Christy Lee, now Eduardo’s girlfriend, Eduardo and Mark arrange a meeting with Napster co-founder Sean Parker. When Christy, Mark and Eduardo meet Parker, Eduardo becomes skeptical of Parker, noting his problematic personal and professional history. Mark, however, is impressed with Parker since he presented a similar vision of Facebook. Although no deals are reached, Parker suggests that they drop “The” from Thefacebook to make it simply “Facebook”.

Mark moves the company’s base of operation to Palo Alto, at Parker’s suggestion, while Eduardo remains in New York for seeking advertising support, When Eduardo visits from New York, he is angered to find that Parker is living at the house and making business decisions for Facebook. After an argument with Mark, Eduardo freezes the company’s bank account and returns to New York. Upon returning, Christy and Eduardo argue about his Facebook profile, which still lists him as “single”. Christy accuses Eduardo of cheating on her and sets fire to a scarf he gave to her as a gift. While Eduardo extinguishes the fire, Mark reveals on the phone that they have secured money from an angel investor through Parker’s contacts. As a result of Christy’s jealousy, Eduardo ends his relationship with her.

Meanwhile in England, while competing in the Henley Royal Regatta, the Winklevoss twins become outraged that Facebook has expanded to a number of universities there and decide to sue. Eduardo has also discovered the deal he signed with Parker’s investors allows them to dilute his share of the company from a third to less than one tenth of one percent, while maintaining the ownership percentage of all other parties. He confronts his erstwhile friend Mark and announces his intention to sue him. Later that night, Parker, along with a number of Facebook interns, is arrested for possession of cocaine during a party thrown on the occasion of Facebook’s 1 millionth member.

The framing device throughout the film shows Mark testifying in depositions in two lawsuits: one filed by the Winklevoss twins, and the other filed by Eduardo. In the final scene, a junior lawyer for the defense informs Mark they will be settling with Eduardo, since the sordid details of Facebook’s founding and Mark’s personality will make a jury highly unsympathetic. The film ends with Mark sending a friend request to his former girlfriend Erica on Facebook, and refreshing the page every few seconds waiting for a response.

The movie is  a montage of flashbacks and flash forwards. Jessie Eisenberg talks too fast and in th move has a much more extroverted sense of communication than has been displayed by the real Mark Zukerberg on the various TV interviews since the release of the video.
I certainly hope in real life he isn’t the ADHD idiot savant depicted in the movie. Does he deserve the worth of the company or should it go to the individual that actually came up with the algorithm. Nonetheless, Facebook is an entity that will go down in history as the one greatest factor in the de-intellectualization of America. Personally, it is useless waste of time and the moronic postings of the majority of users are nothing more than useless drivel.
Although I am not particularly a fan of Jesse Eisenberg as an actor, the story is worth a look. Wait for the $1 movie or catch it on your premium cable movie channels. It is certainly not worthy of an Oscar nod in any category.
Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars.

True Grit (2010)

Seldom are remakes as good as the original release. While no one can replace John Wayne as Rooster Cogburn, you really have to hand it to the Coen brothers to produce what should probably be the Oscar winner for Best Movie this year. Do not miss this movie on the big screen if at all possible.

Rating: 10 stars out of 5.

It’s a New Year

I did not realize how long it has been since I updated the blog and posted some new movie reviews. Wow, it’s been 12 months, a whole year! I guess time flies when you get busy. There was a time that I had not had an opportunity to see any movies on the big screen and either had to wait til they came to DVD or to one of the cable movie channels. Watching them there takes a bit of the real appeal a movie may have, at least from a review standpoing.

Well, I hope to do better and will begin updating it. I hope you will forgive me if I digress with some of the reviews of  movies that are no longer at the box office, but some are well worth seeing, even on the small screen or in an independent venue that may be running them as a second release.

2010 was not a great year overall for “wanna see” movies. Even the trailers left you wanting. Some of those, with interesting trailers and big name actors and actresses who were obviously picked for box office draw, were truly duds.

Nonetheless, a few review are forthcoming.

Happy New Year!