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 Step Brothers film poster
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.5 stars

 

Provider
CinemaSource
Review

A killer concept that has been turned into a sometimes amusing, occasionally hilarious summer laugh fest, Step Brothers should please Will Ferrell fans.
Story

Will Ferrell is back on-target in the dumb movie sweepstakes as Brennan Huff, an over-grown, overly sensitive son who has never bothered to move out of single mom's (Mary Steenburgen) house even though he's 40. When she meets, falls in love with and marries an older doctor (Richard Jenkins) all before the opening credits are over, Brennan must move into his new stepfather's home where--you guessed it--39 year-old loser and would-be musician Dale Doback (John C. Reilly) has been living with Dad all these years as well. The new siblings, who give stunted growth a whole new definition, bunk together like 10-year olds with an instant rivalry that causes havoc in the household. Soon they find themselves birds of the same feather when fed-up dad announces he is selling the house and going on an around-the-world cruise with his new bride. The hapless pair are ordered to find decent jobs and a new place to live--a prospect neither relishes.
Acting

After an earlier misstep this year with the inane Semi-Pro, Ferrell is back in his comfort zone and finding new sparks opposite Reilly, who despite the failure of his recent starring comedy Walk Hard, continues to show natural comedic abilities. The two are fun to watch as they mine a lot of laughs playing imbecilic but lovable adolescent middle-aged men--Peter Pans who just never grew up. Still, it's the supporting cast that really shines. Jenkins--enjoying the best year of his career especially with his stellar turn in The Visitor is now complementing it with his riotous portrait of a put-upon dad, dealing with a couple of morons who have overstayed their welcome by about 20 years. Steenburgen manages to invest the rather colorless mother role with dignity, even earning a couple of laughs on her own. Adam Scott as Ferrell's real-estate mogul brother is consistently fun, particularly in leading a family sing-a-long while driving to bro's house. Also of note, Kathryn Hahn as his mousy but extremely kinky wife who tries to get down and dirty with Reilly.
Direction

Ferrell's writing partner Adam McKay is not only co-scripting again but back behind the camera, guiding Ferrell's and Reilly's on-screen nuttiness. Adam McKay, an SNL veteran who was responsible for two of Ferrell's biggest hits , Anchorman and Talladega Nights knows from experience exactly how to take these over-the-top situations and wring every last laugh out of them. Movies like this are hit and miss, so give McKay credit for hitting more than he misses. Each actor, even the lesser-billed ones, have their moments to shine, and it's a nice tribute to McKay's laid back direction that none of them bellyflop. The premise of Step Brothers clearly presented some potentially rich comic possibilities and McKay and company uncover most of them. Certainly the film should strike a responsive chord with those faced with grown kids either coming back home to live or never leaving in the first place--if not quite to THESE extremes.

Bottom Line

Hollywood.com rated this film 2 1/2 stars.

Copyright © CinemaSource 2008.
CinemaSource

 

 Vicky Cristina Barcelona film poster

 

 

 

 3.5 stars

Provider
CinemaSource
Review

Perhaps it was something in the Spanish water, but Woody Allen has produced his funniest movie in years in the seductively engaging Vicky Cristina Barcelona.
Story

Writer/director Woody Allen travels to Spain for the first time, movie-wise, for a sophisticated bedroom romp about two American girls, Vicky (Rebecca Hall) and Cristina (Scarlett Johansson), who hit Barcelona for a summer vacation and end up in an unusual encounter with a local painter (Javier Bardem). He seduces them into joining him on a white-knuckle plane trip to his place. There, he tries to bed both separately and together--until his unstable ex-wife Maria Elena (Penelope Cruz) shows up and throws his game plan off. Cristina seems like the more willing of the two, eager to give anything a try, while Vicky, who is engaged to be married, completely resists--that is, until she doesn't. The unexpected choices made by this group of disparate people suddenly brought together is what keeps Allen's story edgy and surprising.
Acting

Allen leaves the acting to others this time and gets sterling results with a splendid cast perfectly suited to the sophisticated and very funny rhythms of Woody's hilarious script. Johansson--clearly Allen's latest muse after Match Point and Scoop--is slyly amusing as a true free spirit, willing to get in the European swing of things. Hall, daughter of director Peter Hall and quite British in real life, affects a perfect American accent to expertly play a young woman whose inner yearnings keep trying to trump her ordered life. The actress is wonderful in a complex portrait of romantic confusion. Patricia Clarkson, so good in Elegy, also is reliably fine here as a woman caught in an unsatisfying marriage. Reigning Supporting Actor winner, Bardem shows natural comedic abilities as a Spanish Lothario who turns on his considerable charm to conquer two women at once. What he doesn't see coming is the wrath of his ex-wife Maria Elena and the hold this near psychotically emotional woman still has on him. Cruz is just great in the role, choosing to play her like any number of straight dramatic parts we've seen her do and letting the comedy emerge like fine wine. Her lapse into Spanish whenever she is upset (which is pretty much all the time) is vintage Woody. Cruz and Bardem are screen gold together.
Direction

Woody Allen seems to have had his fading career reinvigorated by venturing out of the safe confines of his beloved New York City first to London with Match Point, his brilliant 2004 crime drama and now to Barcelona with Vicky Cristina Barcelona, his funniest film in years. All the themes and style of past efforts are here but in terms of pure laughter, this is his best since the heyday of Annie Hall, Hannah and Her Sisters and Manhattan. One quirky choice he probably could have dropped is the incessant voice of a narrator carrying the story along like a fairy tale. The dialogue and acting are of such quality, we could have done without the constant explanations of what is going on. As usual, Allen works simply and quickly getting the most out of his rich and wry screenplay, a witty dissertation of the left turns our love lives can so easily take.
Bottom Line

Hollywood.com rated this film 3 1/2 stars.

Copyright © CinemaSource 2008.

 Traitor film poster

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.5 stars

 

Provider
CinemaSource
Review

Traitor is a relentless suspense thriller with a jaw-dropping twist that will have you on the edge of your seat.
Story

Although politically charged Middle Eastern terrorist themes have generally been box office poison of late, Traitor is worth a look as it ratchets up the suspense to levels that make it this year's successor to The Bourne Ultimatum. Don Cheadle stars as U.S. Special Opps officer Samir Horn, a renegade military operative who walks the fine line between good and evil to the point where even HE isn't sure which side he is working for. FBI agent Roy Clayton (Guy Pearce) is hot on his tail in one of those enormously complicated undercover jobs. Horn conveniently stays two steps ahead of authorities, who have reason to believe he may be working as a double agent with deep and dangerous connections to key terrorist organizations. A task force links him to various illegal operations in Yemen, Nice and London, and soon he becomes one of FBI's Most Wanted--a man of contradictions and covert strategies that are perhaps not in the best interests of the United States. Muddying the waters is his secretive relationship with a veteran CIA contractor, Carter (Jeff Daniels), who may have an unofficial agenda at odds with the agency. As Clayton tracks Horn around the world, a high stakes game of cat and mouse leads to some surprising twists and turns.
Acting

With Hotel Rwanda's Don Cheadle in the lead and a ripped-from-the-headlines plotline you might be inclined to think Traitor is going to be one of those overly serious, not-so-fun dramatic pieces. Think again. Cheadle comes off more like Matt Damon in the Bourne movies and nails this heavy action role, focusing as much on the chase as on the complicated dialogue he has to deliver (including some very convincing Arabic). Key to the role is keeping the audience on edge and constantly questioning Horn's motives as he does his high wire act on the gray line between black and white. Cheadle plays him as a man trying to do good, but one who isn't quite sure what that means anymore. Although the actor dominates the landscape, Pearce as the agent in pursuit is also very effective in his dogged determination to come to the truth. Their relationship is reminiscent of the one between Harrison Ford and Tommy Lee Jones in The Fugitive. Also impressive in his few scenes are Jeff Daniels, as the morally ambiguous independent CIA contractor, and Neal McDonough as Clayton's partner. In what could have been stereotypical terrorist roles, casting real Arabic actors paid off with nicely authentic performances from a group of fine international performers including Aly Khan (A Mighty Heart) and Said Taghmaoui (The Kite Runner).
Direction

Writer/director Jeffrey Nachmanoff successfully makes the transition from full-time screenwriter (The Day After Tomorrow) to a talent with a clear set of skills behind the camera. For a directing novice, Nachmanoff has done his homework and has created a pulse-pounding action thriller that doesn't miss a beat but still remains a complex drama to its core. Expertly blending some fine cinematography and superb editing, the director makes this Middle-Eastern epic work as pure entertainment first, and political polemic second. Interestingly, it wasn't Nachmanoff who came up with the intriguing concept, but comedian Steve Martin, who wrote the initial treatment thinking it would be a nifty premise for a movie. He was absolutely right.
Bottom Line

Hollywood.com rated this film 3 1/2 stars.

Copyright © CinemaSource 2008.

 

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