‘Ghosts of Girlfriends Past’ Download and Reviews

December 11, 2009 by Paul Wall  
Filed under Comedy, Fantasy, Romance

“Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” Movie Details

Ghosts of Girlfriends Past tagline: You can’t always run from your past
Ghosts of Girlfriends Past - DVD Cover

Ghosts of Girlfriends Past DVD Cover

Actors:
Emma Stone The Ghost of Girlfriends Past
Tina Casciani Vargas Girl 3
Paul Cassell Wedding Guest #1
Kortney Adams Jenny’s Colleague
Leigh Belair 80’s Singles Bar Patron
Patrick Canty Architecht
Albert M. Chan Sam
Jeffrey Corazzini Salesman
Sean Paul Cormier Prom attendant
Roger Dillingham Jr. Cab Driver
Michael Douglas Uncle Wayne
Alexander Fagan Teenager #1
Brian Fernandes Passerby
Robert Forster
David J. Garfield Photographers Assistant
Directors: Mark Waters
IMDB Rating: 5.8/10 out of 11,614 votes

“Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” Movie Review

“Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” Plot Summary

A bachelor is haunted by the ghosts of his past girlfriends at his younger brother’s wedding.

Not a bad movie.

Not a bad movie, but I have to watch it another time. I thinks a second viewing will give me a better opinion. The story is a bit weak but Mat is a good actor and makes the film better. Mike D as uncle Wayne adds much comic relief. We see that Uncle Wayne should have never brought up kids, and this is the thesis which drives the story. I would wait and rent the movie or Video on demand it. The movie is not for kids. I would give Ghosts of girlfriends past a six out of ten. Maybe, I would like the movie on a second viewing. I found the characters a little to sleazy for my liking. There was not very likable character in this film.

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‘The Soloist’ Download and Reviews

October 5, 2009 by Paul Wall  
Filed under Biography, Drama, Music

“The Soloist” Movie Details

The Soloist tagline: Life has a mind of its own
The Soloist - DVD Cover

The Soloist DVD Cover

Actors:
Emma Stone The Ghost of Girlfriends Past
Tina Casciani Vargas Girl 3
Paul Cassell Wedding Guest #1
Kortney Adams Jenny’s Colleague
Leigh Belair 80’s Singles Bar Patron
Patrick Canty Architecht
Albert M. Chan Sam
Jeffrey Corazzini Salesman
Sean Paul Cormier Prom attendant
Roger Dillingham Jr. Cab Driver
Michael Douglas Uncle Wayne
Alexander Fagan Teenager #1
Brian Fernandes Passerby
Robert Forster
David J. Garfield Photographers Assistant
Directors: Joe Wright
IMDB Rating: 6.8/10 out of 11,159 votes

“The Soloist” Movie Review

“The Soloist” Plot Summary

A Los Angeles journalist befriends a homeless Julliard-trained musician, while looking for a new article for the paper.

Interesting to know

I am a musician and live in France, where the release date of this movie is scheduled for Sept. 2 2009. I obviously cannot write a review at the present time but have nevertheless read the book

What no one mentions in all of the above comments is that Nathaniel Ayers was originally a Double Bass student at Julliard and NOT a cellist. That instrument– along with the violin, trumpet, and piano, all came about later on. Put any instrument into his hands and he’ll do his best to master it. Having attended Yale university, I did not know him personally, even though we studied with one of the greatest bass teachers in the New York area at that time: Homer Mensch. Recently our paths did finally cross thanks to one of our mutual acquaintances, bassist and composer Joe Russo. Nathan likes to write down the names of his long lost good friends on walls, or any writing surface, and Joe’s name is always there, scribbled amongst his favorites. This was where Steve noticed Joe’s name and Googled him to look up his website. A new and close friendship resulted between them, and the many anecdotes that Joe pulled out of Nathan’s past were worth their weight in gold to Steve, enough to devote the entire chapter 8 of the book to Joe!To me, reading this book made me come to the conclusion that every man has his hour in life, and Nathan’s time had come now. The chances of 2 men, one homeless and one not, being pulled together through the sound of a violin in a rush hour tunnel, were undoubtedly written in the stars. Through articles, a book and now a film on Nathan, Steve helped uplift a poor and abandoned part of society to a rank that it never imagined nor asked for, but morally deserved. We all know that the Internet is indeed capable of connecting and reconnecting people in the present, but only music can magically, throughout time, open the doors that connect all of us to one another.

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‘The Maiden Heist’ Download and Reviews

September 26, 2009 by Paul Wall  
Filed under Comedy, Crime

“The Maiden Heist” Movie Details

The Maiden Heist tagline:
The Maiden Heist - DVD Cover

The Maiden Heist DVD Cover

Actors:
Beau C. Bedugnis Adam Roffman
Douglass Bowen Flynn The Danish Guard
Burke Bryant Brian
Anthony Cascio Tony Bargello
Vic Clay Janitor
Michael Anthony Coppola Security Guard
David J. Curtis Security Guard
Peter Darrigo Phil
Roger Dillingham Jr.
Vincent J. Earnshaw Museum Patron
Vincent J. Earnshaw Public Garden Pedistrian
Scott C England Museum Executive
Shawn Fogarty Art Shipping Co. Personnel
Morgan Freeman Charles
David J. Garfield Shipping Manager
Directors: Peter Hewitt
IMDB Rating: 6.0/10 out of 2,117 votes

“The Maiden Heist” Movie Review

“The Maiden Heist” Plot Summary

A comedy centered on three museum security guards who devise a plan to steal back the artworks to which they have become attached after they are transferred to another museum. add synopsis

An unusual comedy platter

Art shouldn’t just be for highbrow types. A painting can have special meaning. Even for an ordinary blue-collar Joe. At least that’s the message from director Pete Hewitt. This is knockabout comedy that might make Woody Allen fans affectionately recall Small Time Crooks, even though this film is very different to Allen’s caper and wears its point on its sleeve. ‘Great art is not solely the domain of the connoisseur,’ says Hewitt. ‘Anyone can be emotionally transported by a few paint smudges on a canvas.’ Hewitt (Bill and Ted’s Bogus Journey, Thunderpants) has here come up with a grand robbery that is for love rather than money. Three misfit security guards at the museum embark on a dangerous journey to save the things they hold dear

Decorated with a galaxy of stars, the Maiden Heist has been avidly awaited by fans worrying if it will see the light of day. In December 2008, the distribution arm of the Yari Film Group responsible filed for bankruptcy. Yari’s Emily Lambert e-mailed the Globe saying, ‘I don’t anticipate any screenings of The Maiden Heist in the near future,’ and producer Rob Paris went scrambling to find a new distributor. With a comparatively modest budget of $20 million, Paris feels he has got great value. ‘Our movie needed the scope the size of the Worcester Art Museum,’ he says. ‘It gave the film a look, a richness, that we otherwise wouldn’t have gotten.’ The WAM is used to establish the interior of the fictional Boston Art Museum (BAM) in which our story takes place. Scriptwriter Michael LeSieur had a top comedy actor in his previous hit (You, Me & Dupree) in the form of Owen Wilson. In The Maiden Heist, the chameleon-like talents of William H Macy first spring to mind as being suited to comedy, due to his Fargo fame, when he played the police story with subtle humour. Christopher Walken and Morgan Freeman are better known for their serious roles, but we should remember that Walken has also starred in comedy (Wedding Crashers, Hairspray), even if it is to play the straight man against the likes of Owen Wilson. Freeman has had brushes with his funny side in Bruce Almighty. Heading up the supporting cast is Marcia Gay Harden, who won an Oscar playing an artist (Lee Krasner) in the art biopic, Pollock. But it is probably fair to say that all these great stars are known primarily for their power to bring great depth to serious dramatic roles. There were moments in The Maiden Heist where I felt they were bumbling through the comedy rather than playing bumbling heisters. I found this a bit worrying as I have deep respect for their work. But maybe other viewers could find the apparent mismatch of seemingly inappropriate casting oddly rewarding

The big star of The Maiden Heist though is of course the central painting. Roger (Christopher Walken) stares at ‘The Lonely Maiden’ for years. First as a way to pass time, but now as a way to address or replace what is lacking in his life. The painting has become his passion. His obsession. Supplanting the passion he once felt for his wife. This particular artwork in the film was especially created by painter Jeremy Lipking. ‘When I first met with the director he opened up the Gabriel Weisberg book Beyond Impressionism: the Naturalist Impulse, (which is probably the most worn out book on my shelf) and said, ‘We need something like this.’ A painting in the manner of Naturalist painters George Clausen, Emile Friant and Jules Bastien Lepage. I had to finish the painting in 7 days. It normally would have taken me a month or longer to do something this size. I got artist model Toni Czechorosky help me out with the period costume.’ Macy’s character, on the other hand, is obsessed with a statue. Creating it involved photographing a naked Macy from a three-hundred and sixty degree perspective. (The photographs went to a sculptor in Los Angeles, who brought in another model and photographed him in the same fashion before creating a mould for the statue.)The Maiden Heist quickly sold out at its opening at the Edinburgh International Film Festival. It’s a light-hearted caper that makes for undemanding viewing. I don’t see audiences flocking to galleries as a result, but who knows? While Roger might find his wife has been his lonely maiden all along, many viewers may more identify with the bit where he flits to Florida with the missis. Missing out on the art appreciation stuff seems a convenient bypass. If this is the case, the film is somewhat hypocritical in its claim about art and the general masses. It uses the notion to entertain without encouraging us to seriously engage. LeSieur, who wrote the script as a film school thesis project, may well be an art enthusiast. But the idea that ordinary people don’t love art is a bit worrying to those of us that do. Shortly after I visited (during extensive bar-hopping) the beautiful Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, it was victimised by amateur thieves who posed as security guards. If you see me exit the Tate Modern with a naked William H Macy under my arm, please shoot me. Or take him back he is a high-value asset of the acting profession and should not be high-jacked. ‘But it was a maiden heist, officer. . .’

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‘The Pink Panther 2′ Download and Reviews

September 3, 2009 by Paul Wall  
Filed under Adventure, Comedy, Crime

“The Pink Panther 2″ Movie Details

The Pink Panther 2 tagline: Inspect the unexpected.
The Pink Panther 2 - DVD Cover

The Pink Panther 2 DVD Cover

Actors:
Steve Martin Insp. Jacques Clouseau
Jean Reno Ponton
Emily Mortimer Nicole
Andy Garcia Vicenzo
Yuki Matsuzaki Kenji
Alfred Molina Pepperidge
Aishwarya Rai Sonia
John Cleese Chief Inspector Dreyfus
Roger Dillingham Jr. International Dignitary
Harold Chin Curator
Eric Bruno Borgman French Customs Officer
Burke Bryant Black Beret
Federico Castelluccio Italian Guide
Michael Anthony Coppola Waiter
Richard DeAgazio Italian Dignitary
Directors: Harald Zwart
IMDB Rating: 5.2/10 out of 9,270 votes

“The Pink Panther 2″ Movie Review

“The Pink Panther 2″ Plot Summary

Insp. Jacques Clouseau teams up with a squad of International detectives who are just as bumbling as he is. Their mission: Stop a globe-trotting thief who specializes in stealing historical artifacts.

Best Ever Steve Martin Comedy

The movie is very watchable entertaining and VERY funny. I can now officially confirm that this movie proves Dennis Pennis was completely wrong in stating that Steve Martin had lost is Mojo. From the opening scene where Inspector Clouseau is trapped in the window of the moving car to the final scene at the wedding, this movie is a riotous and funny side splitting event. The casting of John Cleese was inspired. The chemistry between Martin and Cleese is superior to that in the first film between Kevin Kline and Martin. The other actors particularly the ever excellent Alfred Molina were very good. As of course was the cameo from Lilly Tomlin. The pacing and comic timing of this movie was very crisp, which added immensely to the enjoyment of the piece. I would rate it as one of the top 10 comedy films of all time. It is easily as good as anything Blake Edwards put together, with Peter Sellers. This film finally lays to rest the silly notion that Peter Sellers was a superior Clouseau than Martin. In a final point to prove Martin’s Genius. I defy you not to fall on the floor with side splitting laughter when Inspector Clouseau is explaining the password to John Cleese’s character after the black berets have come through the windows on the ropes. This is vintage Martin not to be missed.

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