Movies

The current cinema

By June 20, 2012No Comments

05

One could pick nits, and from what I gath­er many have already done so, but I found that Woody Allen’s new To Rome With Love, fea­tur­ing, among oth­ers, Ms. Penelope Cruz as pic­tured above, went down pretty easy and was reas­on­ably clev­er in terms of mix­ing up the stand­ard Allen tropes. Also the jokes were pretty funny, I felt. For more, my review at MSN Movies

02

I was also pretty taken with Brave, the most Disney-like of all Pixar movies so far, but one that takes the feisty-princess tale into a realm that could best be called eccent­ric. As an exper­i­ment in crit­ic­al and social engin­eer­ing, my review does not dis­cuss the odd turn its story takes in detail. I’m sure we’ll be hear­ing all about it over the week­end though. 

No Comments

  • Petey says:

    You see this kind of unstuck-in-time tech­nique a lot in late Buñuel, and while Allen is deft, he’s not that deft, and some obtuse view­ers might take his free­dom for license. I was­n’t bothered by it myself, and found “To Rome With Love” a refresh­ing sum­mer enter­tain­ment, not too sweet but not ter­ribly bit­ter, and very pic­tur­esque besides.”
    Sounds like Melinda and Melinda.
    (Which was very good, but some obtuse view­ers took his free­dom as license.)

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    I was fond of “Melinda and Melinda” too, as it happens.

  • Shawn Stone says:

    I very much enjoyed not know­ing where BRAVE was going. And after that unex­pec­ted plot turn, and the ensu­ing shock, the pleas­ure of real­iz­ing how well it all fit togeth­er. “Eccentric” is a great descrip­tion of the mother-daughter bonding-over-fishing sequence. Audacious works, too.