While activities such as reading, writing, fiddling with the servers, and general upkeep of the house and yard have fallen off my list of things I regularly do (thankfully bathing and brushing my teeth are still on it) movie watching has spiked largely due to the fact that putting Gabi to bed involves an hour of two of cuddling before she actual will stay asleep. This week I’ve watched more movies than I have in the past year and even managed to stay awake through all of them. Some were fantastic, others visually tantalizing, and some execrable. Here’s the short list:
- Into the Blue
This picture sums up the first hour of the film which can be mathematically represented as [(Jessica Alba + (Sun*Surf))^Bikini] = [Motivation to sit through an insipid plot]. I honestly think that this was the intention of the producers as that first hour was filled with one beautiful shot after another of Ms. Alba frolicking around the coastal waters of the Bahamas in the tiniest of outfits whilst demonstrating supernatural lung capacity. At the end of the hour, like some peepshow, the shade is drawn and she dons a wet suit and the viewer is faced with the cold hard reality of a limp plot, something about cocaine and lost pirate treasure. I don’t know but I do know that they could have just edited the last hour out and I would have been more than happy with the film. - Domino
Management recorded this one for me, likely not because of Kiera Knightly offering lap dances in her unmentionables to a collection of portly stereotypical Socal thugs, but because it was supposed to be an action packed flick involving guns and explosions. Here’s a tip: if the movie features Mickey Rourke you should turn around and walk quickly in the opposite direction. The movie could be nothing more than Ms. Knightly grinding in her panties but the moment they allow Rourke to emote the entire film collapses. He just has that power, it’s his gift. - Howl’s Moving Castle
Now this one was more family friendly–especially if you are questioning my viewing choices as a parent at this point. It has a great storyline that blends together several fairy tales (Snow White, Cinderella, The Frog and the Prince), giving them a fresh coat of paint and updating them to make the female lead more independent and self-sufficient. The Steam Punk world that characters inhabit is fantastic and I often found myself ignoring the dialog to just marvel at the visuals and the leaps of imagination that were committed to celluloid. See it. - Papillon
Steve McQueen. Dustin Hoffman. Solid acting. Solid plot. All those add up to make a film that is on the top of my list of favorites. I hadn’t seen Papillon since high school and was happy to see it show up on AMC last week as its long running time and high strung drama makes for perfect late night viewing (the added bonus is the condition of their teeth serves to make me feel better about mine–Capt. Cavity here). The movie is an adaptation of what has been argued to be a largely fictionalized autobiography of Henri Charrière but disregarding all that this is one of the best damn prison break films ever made. See it. Now.
Still left on the DVR is some 80 hours of movies including Brick which I am very eager to see as well as The Night of the Hunter–Robert Mitchum gives me the willies.
Any other recommendations? (and if it involves Jessica Alba in a bikini I’ll see it quicker!)

I saw that Papillon was going to be on AMC, but I was watching the movie before it, on that day at least, Cool Hand Luke (for maybe the fifth time, or more). At the end of CLH I thought I’d had enough prison breaks for one day, thank you. I’ll have to look for Papillon again, though.
I watched a little of Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid yesterday, too. Paul Newman is the diametrical opposite of Mickey Rourke. Maybe that has something to do with Newman’s having begun acting when method acting and the Brando Effect were fresh, not when they had festered.
I used to be a big fan of mickey rourke. I still love diner but there is much more than rourke to that film.
Recent movies I thought were really good were stranger than fiction and a guide to recognizing your saints.
“Fantastic Four” has Jessica Alba stripping to her underwear. That’s not the only reason why it’s not as bad as quite a few have claimed – it’s certainly better than some other Marvel adaptations (including “Ghost Rider”).
“Sin City” is the one with Jessica dancing in a bikini top and chaps. It also has Mickey Rourke, but Jessica only appears briefly in his section (she’s much more prominent in the last story).
Ah, Sin City. Love that movie (for more reasons than that cowboy dance) and it utterly destroys my Mikey Rourke as a vast black hole of suck theory. Crap.
Anyway, Fantastic Four? Alba in underwear? Consider it booked!
Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid, frickin’ love that movie and I cannot believe I missed it! Seriously, Newman is awesome and I really ought to create a filter to snag his movies. Well, all but that crappy Color of Money one with Cruise. I hate Cruise.
Management and I saw a trailer for Stranger Than Fiction and thought it looked good. Well have to keep our eyes peeled for that and Saints (confession–Management and I have seen all 66 episodes of Even Stevens during our long binge of children’s TV long before Gabi).
Night of the Hunter is fantastic. Get on that one!
Jessica Alba is definitely a good-looking woman. Kiera Knightly wearing pasties? I’m not sure I’d want to watch that. Recent (to me, at least) movies are A Room with a View (based on the EM Forster novel, includes a young Helena Bonham-Carter and Daniel Day-Lewis), Thank You for Smoking, Borat (hahaha!), Scratch (documentary about hip-hop dj’ing), and Nine Queens (Spanish-language film)….
Children of Men*
The Departed
The Prestige
Pan’s Labyrinth**
Spun
I’ll second Scratch
*most depressing movie i’ve ever seen?
**not quite as depressing
Whew! I have a list of movies to search for now! Thanks everyone!