For some reason, neither woman minds that Graham forgets who they are about an hour after each steamy session, rather they appreciate the fresh passion he exhibits repeatedly as he experiences each encounter as if the first time. After sowing his wild oats for most of the movie, he finds out he has a wife (Paz Vega) and a young son, and the question becomes whether he will clean up his act or continue with his hedonistic, sex without consequences lifestyle. Impressionistic, with plenty of nudity and simulated oral sex, but otherwise it fails to make much of a social statement.
Article: Entertainment
Entertainment
Flightplan
So, instead of having its heroine trapped inside of her house, this flick features action entirely unfolding inside of the equally-claustrophobic confines of a commercial jet airliner cruising at 37,000 feet. Still, despite an abundance of such superficial similarities, Flightplan simply fails to measure up to Panic Room in terms of offering a worthwhile cinematic experience.
Movies That Shook World
This fall, the AMC Network is debuting Movies That Shook the World, a weekly series which explores the cultural contributions of some of the most influential flicks of all time. Narrated by actor Jeff Goldblum, each half-hour installment will be devoted entirely to one picture. Among the seminal cinema classics to be spotlighted are Fatal Attraction, The Birth of a Nation, American Graffiti, The China Syndrome, The Exorcist, 2001: A Space Odyssey, The Graduate, The Last Temptation of Christ, and Do the Right Thing
Just Like Heaven
Just Like Heaven revisits most of these same elements, only flipping the script in terms of certain characters’ genders. Here, Reese Witherspoon stars as Dr. Elizabeth Masterson, a workaholic M.D. who ends up in a coma after a head on car crash. Mark Ruffalo co-stars as David Abbott, the lonely stranger who rents her San Francisco penthouse after it is put on the market three months later when it looks like she won’t make it. This go-round, it is Elizabeth’s ghost which haunts an apartment, for she needs help to prevent Dr. Rushton (Ben Shenkman), the colleague who covets her position, from pulling the plug on her prematurely, after he unilaterally declares her brain-dead.
Home Of The Brave
Finally, 40 years later, thanks to Home of the Brave, the record has been set straight. This heartbreaking documentary was directed by Paola di Florio who, with the assistance of some of Liuzzo’s still-traumatized children, took advantage of the Freedom of Information Act to unearth evidence which establishes U.S. Government complicity not only in the woman’s defamation but in her death, itself. Relying on a file thicker than the one kept on the entire Klan, the film provides incontrovertible proof that Liuzzo had been specifically targeted by the Bureau.
Joshua Redman
I never considered being a professional musician, and I still haven’t considered it. For me, that’s a by-product, that’s an accident of my pursuit and love of music that I happen to be able to make a living at it. When I was in high school, I had no visions of being a professional musician, and I really didn’t think I had the discipline or the talent to be a good musician. I mean I loved to play, but for me it was always fun time, never work time. It was kind of an antidote, a relief from the rigors of academia.
Waldemar Bastos – The Renaissance Man
Worldwide music aficionados will certainly want to add this CD to their collection. Bastos intones the exotic Portuguese language with a strikingly steady voice that will certainly evoke sensations in you.
Melody Swink: Today is Someday
My family never fostered my musical potential but I sang anyway. I used to put on shows and act like the Supremes. Of course, I was always Diana. I always saw myself as the star. I used to work during the summers picking strawberries and apples so I could buy clothes to blend in with the smart kids in my classroom who lived in the better neighborhoods.�
Mr. Wrong Finds Ms. Right in Droll Romantic Comedy
The Baxter: Movie Review by Kam Williams