Showing posts with label Woody Allen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woody Allen. Show all posts

Sunday, October 2, 2016

MOVIE - Cafe Society

PG-13 (1:25)
Limited Release 7/15/16
Viewed Sunday 10/2/16 at Century Gateway (by myself)
RT Critic:  71  Audience:  63
Critic's Consensus:   Café Society's lovely visuals and charming performances round out a lightweight late-period Allen comedy whose genuine pleasures offset its amiable predictability.
Cag:  4/Liked it a lot
Directed & written by Woody Allen
Perdido Productions
Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen Stewart, Steve Carrell, Blake Lively, Parker Posey

My comments:  I don't think I realize how much I love Woody Allen's work.  For the most part I love this film, and I adore the way he ended it.  The settings - 1930s Hollywood and New York City - as well as the costuming - were terrific.  I love the way that real personalities (like in many of his other films) were examined.  Casting was terrific.  The juxtaposition of the three siblings was my second favorite part, but I think a little bit more story about Bobby's brother and sister was needed to round out the story a bit and would have definitely enhanced the movie.  My favorite part?  The Jewish influences and humor.

RT Summary:  Set in the 1930s, Woody Allen's bittersweet romance CAFÉ SOCIETY follows Bronx-born Bobby Dorfman (Jesse Eisenberg) to Hollywood, where he falls in love (with his uncle's mistress), and back to New York, where he is swept up in the vibrant world of high society nightclub life. Centering on events in the lives of Bobby's colorful Bronx family, the film is a glittering valentine to the movie stars, socialites, playboys, debutantes, politicians, and gangsters who epitomized the excitement and glamour of the age.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

MOVIE - Fading Gigolo

R (1:38)
Limited release 4/182014 - but this was Opening Day in Tucson
Viewed at ElCon Friday, 5/9/2014
RT Critic: 57 Audience: 50
Cag: 3.5 - Liked it, a fun movie
Directed by John Turturro (he wrote it, too)
Millennium Entertainment

Actors:  Woody Allen, John Turturro, Liev Shreiber, Sofia Vergara, Sharon Stone

My comments:  This was a perfect Friday-after-a-long-day movie.  It was quite fun, nothing earth-shattering, but enjoyable.  I had no idea what it was about, and I always enjoy it when there's a Judaic element - part of the movie was about a very devout Orthodox woman in Brooklyn.... (I'll go to any movie as soon as I see the name "Woody Allen" in it.

Reviews:  Fioravante decides to become a professional Don Juan as a way of making money to help his cash-strapped friend, Murray. With Murray acting as his "manager", the duo quickly finds themselves caught up in the crosscurrents of love and money.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

MOVIE - Blue Jasmine

PG-13 (1:38)
Limited release 7/26/13
El Con, after school on Friday, 8-16-13
RT Critic:  89 Audience: 86
Cag:  4.5 Liked it a lot-especially the incredible acting of Cate Blanchette
Directed by Woody Allen
Sony Pictures Classic

Cate Blanchette, Alec Baldwin, Sally Hawkins

Fandango summary:  After her marriage to a wealthy businessman (Alec Baldwin) collapses, New York socialite Jasmine (Cate Blanchett) flees to San Francisco and the modest apartment of her sister, Ginger (Sally Hawkins). Although she's in a fragile emotional state and lacks job skills, Jasmine still manages to voice her disapproval of Ginger's boyfriend, Chili (Bobby Cannavale). Jasmine begrudgingly takes a job in a dentist's office, while Ginger begins dating a man (Louis C.K.) who's a step up from Chili.

My comments:  Blue Jasmine was quite a movie.  It wasn't what I would typically expect from Woody Allen.  The first thought that I'll always have about this movie is that Kate Blanchette is an incredible actress.  The next is that it's incredibly sad.  The thrid is that I love the setting, at least half of it takes place in San Francisco.  The flashbacks take place in New York.  I actually like the way it jumps back and forth in time - it takes no time to figure out when and where you are.  The movie is crafted beautifully, the story is told beautifully, but, for me, it's a really sad movie.  It makes any kind of sorry I feel for myself to away instantly.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

MOVIE - To Rome With Love

R (1:51)
Limited Release 6/22/12
Saw it Thursday, 8/10 at El Con with Sheila
RT Critics 44 Audience 49
cag: Liked much of it a lot (3.5)
Directed by Woody Allen
Sony Classics Pictures

Alec Baldwin, Jesse Eisenberg, Ellen Page, Woody Allen,

Four stories of different happenings in Rome.  Three worked, one didn't.

Best:  A young newly married Italian couple move from a small Italian town to Rome, where, through a series of mishaps, the husband must pass of a hooker (Penepole Cruz) as his wife and his wife meets up with a movie star in a comedy of errors.

Next best: Woody Allen and are the parents of a young woman whose father-in-law-to-be is a phenomenal opera singer - when he's in the shower.

OK:  A know-it-all schmuck wakes up one day incredibly famous and admired.  Shortly he discovers he wants his old life back.  Then he gets his wish and isn't so sure.

Just didn't do it for me:  Alec Baldwin, a famous architect/developer, returns to the Rome he lived in for a year when he as young.  He "sits in" on the scenario of a young him (Jesse Eisenberg) giving advise and popping in and out.


Monday, June 20, 2011

MOVIE - Midnight in Paris

Charming and delightful!
Released 6-10-11
PG-13 (1:34)
6/18/11 at El Con by myself (Saturday afternoon, packed theater)
RT:  92  cag:  98 (my highest rating in recent memory)
Director & Writer:  Woody Allen

Owen Wilson, Rachel McAdams, Kathy Bates & a series of great actors doing quick spots as famous writers and artists that lived in Paris in the 1920s and 1890s.

Owen Wilson was PERFECT in the role of Gil, a Hollywood screenwriter who wants to finish his first novel and be considered a serious writer.  His fiancee, Inez (McAdams), is not enamored of the idea.  She feels he should stick with the known.  They are vacationing in Paris with Inez's parents, who are there on business.  Neither Inez or her parents really care for Paris.  Gil loves it. 

When I went in to the movie I really didn't have a clue what it was going to be about.  I loved that I didn't have a clue...it was so delightful finding out what was going to happen.  I usually loved previews, but I'm SO glad I didn't see one for this!  So if you haven't seen the movie, perhaps you might choose to not read on. 

When the young couple meet up with another couple, one that Inez knows and likes and Gil doesn't care for,Gil's idyllic Paris vacation takes a nosedive.  The pretentious, "pedantic" Paul drives Gil crazy. So he wanders off alone...and at the strike of midnight is claimed by a group of people driving a 1920's car.  He is soon meeting Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Picasso, Dali,  Cole Porter, and Gertrude Stein, played wonderfully by Kathy Bates.  I just loved it!

There are many references to writers, artists, and playwrights of the 20's.  I was happy to know who almost all of them were, but there was one guy I still need to look into.

Yearning for another time.  Nostalgia.  Learning to live  your own life in your own time.  Finally understanding your time, your life, you goals, what will bring you happiness.  Good story.