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28 Days Later *****-----
Ray Hunley   Some flavor of HBO   20 July 2005

Better than average film of its type. The baddies weren't "undead", just "infected", so technically I didn't break my word.

8 1/2 ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   25 September 2005

I was really looking forward to giving this film 0 stars and writing a review slamming dorks who fawn over Fellini because they were told to in film class. It wasn't that bad though - a few interesting scenes, well-filmed, well-acted - particularly Marcello Mastroianni as the charmingly buffoonish Guido,. Yeah, I get it, it's a film about Fellini's frustration at not being able to complete a film; it's a brutally honest self-portrait; it's got SELF-REFERENCE and DREAM SEQUENCES; Fellini loved women, blah freakin' blah. I get it, I just don't care. The insights are as shallow as the characters, and the story is just this side of wearisome, so what's the freakin' point?

About Schmidt ****------
Ray Hunley   DVD   15 June 2003

Didn't Sally Struthers star in the original?

The best part of the film was the first minute and a half: Schmidt dutifully waits out the final seconds of his last day before retirement, looking stoicly up at the clock among the remnants of his career, boxed up and carefully labeled. After that it was "Warren R. Everyman has some mildly interesting experiences and finds a piddling redemption from an utterly expected source". The characters were somehow spot-on realistic and hackneyed at the same time. I found it hard to care about any of them. Good acting, nice looking film, BFD.

Adaptation ******----
Ray Hunley   DVD   02 September 2003

We open on Hunley logging on to Gadd's movie page...

Nice performances from Nicolas Cage, Chris Cooper and Brian Cox, a couple good one-liners, and self-referential gimmickry, and that's about it. Try Mamet's "Things Change" or read some Hofstadter instead.

Alien Vs. Predator. ****------
Ray Hunley   Comcast On Demand   13 November 2005

Thought I'd get all the crap movies out of the way this weekend. Wasn't as bad as I expected, though it was still pretty bad.

Amélie ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   26 November 2006

This movie was a huge steaming pile. -1 for using a narrator, -1 for stupid, cutesy effects (Amélie melting into a puddle in shame/disappointment, using a "telestrator" to highlight, e.g., a key dropped in Amélie's pocket, etc.) -1 for breaking the 4th wall, -1 for glorifying meddling in other peoples' lives, -1 for the ridiculous, cliched device of using the girl in the painting as a conversational surrogate for Amélie, -1 for Amélie falling instantly for some dork scrounging around under a photo machine, -1 for the sophomoric "X likes/X doesn't like" character introduction device, -1 for being French, -1 for being smarmy crap, +3 for Audrey Tautou.

Anatomy of a Murder *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   29 March 2005

Jimmy Stewart, Lee Remick and George C. Scott make this an essential entry in the courtroom drama canon. All the achetypical elements are here: the wisecracking judge; the poor but noble defense attorney; his drunken, elderly assistant; the slick big-city prosecutor; the defendant's hot, hot wife.

Black Cloud ******----
Ray Hunley   DVD   15 August 2005

While not breaking any new ground, this film nevertheless was an engaging portrait of an amateur boxer from the Navajo nation.

Blood Simple ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   24 March 2005

M. Emmet Walsh is, as always, brilliant, but the Coens' best work was ahead of them.

Cape Fear (1962) *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   25 June 2005

Continuing the original/remake comparison series. For the first time, I think I have to give the barest of nods to the remake version. Bob Mitchum and Gregory Peck give nothing up to Deniro and Nolte, but Scorsese's direction makes the difference in the 1991 version. The original, the story of ex-con Mitchum seeking revenge on the man who put him away, remains a chilling bit of genius nevertheless.

Coffee and Cigarettes ***-------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   27 June 2005

Stupid people having insipid conversations while acting like idiots. The best thing director Jim Jarmusch ever did remains playing the Frostee Cream Boy in Sling Blade. Or maybe Ghost Dog. Maybe. One bonus point for putting Tom Waits in the cast.

Coogan's Bluff ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   12 November 2005

Clint Eastwood is a lawman from Arizona assigned to bring back a fugitive from New York City. That most of the humor in the film comes from people mistaking his origin as Texas tells you pretty much all you need to know. Lee J. Cobb, at least, should have known to stay away from this stinker.

Criminal ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   10 October 2005

I might have rated it higher if I hadn't already seen the original. John C. Reilly and Diego Luna try to con each other - one of them succeeds.

Dark Blue ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   29 March 2005

About what you'd expect. Forgettable

Dark Days *****-----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   09 October 2005

An interesting, if amateurish, documentary about a group of homeless people living in an abandoned subway tunnel in New York City. Some residents had been there for 15 years or more; it was amazing and touching how they had made the surroundings liveable, if not exactly homey.

Dawn of the Dead (2004) **--------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   04 April 2005

Oy vey. A tragic misstep for the sake of the original/remake comparison series. No more zombie films; I really mean it this time.

Diggstown ********--
Ray Hunley   Comcast On Demand   12 November 2005

A lovely little con flick that I never get tired of. Boxing hustlers James Woods, Louis Gossett Jr., and Oliver Platt go after the ill-gotten wealth of a small-town scumbag. Bruce Dern is creepy and weaselly as the foil.

Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story *****-----
Ray Hunley   Some HBO or another   08 October 2005

As a movie, of course, it sucked, but as a meta-movie it was pretty entertaining: Managed to to fondly mock every last sports film cliche without being overly farcical; made brilliant use of cameos; had Alan Tudyk, of Firefly/Serenity in a supporting role; Ben Stiller was only severely annoying, instead of his usual unwatchability.

Elf ***-------
Ray Hunley   Comcast On Demand   13 November 2005

Oh, it was pitiful. Will Ferrell's mock-wide-eyed-innocence act was old long ago. I do hope to see more of Zooey Deschanel, though.

Fat Girl ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   06 April 2005

Disturbing, somewhat graphic French film about two young sisters' quite divergent introductions to sexuality.

Fierce Creatures ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   23 March 2005

Younger, dumber sibling of "A Fish Called Wanda". Not worth it.

Gangs of New York *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   17 April 2005

Was going to rate it 6, taking off a full point for the abominable accents, but realized that would mean that I rated Van Helsing higher. Aaarhgh, but those accents, though. Daniel Day-Lewis and John C. Reilly are forgiven, the rest - especially DiCaprio and Diaz - can go hang.

Garden State ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   25 March 2005

Disappointing, but not bad. Banal story, but reasonably interesting script.

Get Carter (1971) ********--
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   28 March 2005

Second in the remake/original comparison series. Michael Caine plays Jack Carter with far more scoundrelly panache than does Sly Stallone in the remake. Carter's search for his brother's killer casts him alternately in the role of hero and villain, and the end winds up being bleak yet reasonably satisfying. Originals - 2, Remakes - 0

Hotel Rwanda *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   05 May 2005

Uplifting and chilling portrait of a man protecting refugees during the Rwandan genocide.

House of 1,000 Corpses ***-------
Ray Hunley   HBO On Demand   13 November 2005

I don't even like horror movies.

This one was derivative (although I admit there's a fine line between derivative and homage), witless, unimaginatively directed, and just generally lame. One point each for casting Karen Black and Walton Goggins, even though the latter went out like a punk.

I, Robot ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   23 September 2005

Not nearly as bad as I expected. Will Smith does a workmanlike job, and the story, while cliched and silly, held my interest pretty well.

Invincible ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   25 July 2005

Real-life strongman Jouko Ahola plays real-life strongman Zishe Breitbart, a Jewish blacksmith who gets recruited to work as a side attraction in Tim Roth's "Palace of the Occult" in Berlin. A modest offering from Werner Herzog.

Jeder für sich und Gott gegen alle *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   10 April 2005

English title: The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser. Why they changed it from the far cooler Every Man for Himself and God against All, I'll never know. Based on the true story of Kaspar Hauser, a man who one day appeared in the middle of a German village, apparently having been kept locked in a cellar his entire life up to that point.

Kung Fu Hustle ********--
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   14 September 2005

I was going to give it a 7 until I went back and re-listened to what Donut said just before he died. That bit of crazy-random homage was thrown in with the flair and glee of a virtuoso, and elevates the film beyond anything I expected from it. Kung Fu Hustle is a fond, occasionally farcical tribute to the Hong Kong kung fu film industry, and a sweet little story in its own right.

L'Homme du Train *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   04 December 2006

It has come to my attention that various readers of this site have accused me, based on my review of the despicable Amélie, of being a France-bashing, freedom-fry eating neanderthal. As a refutation, I present a French film I greatly enjoyed: Patrice Leconte's The Man on the Train. Although I must admit I have some doubts as to whether it really is French - I mean, nobody surrenders, there's very little cheese eating, and one scene hints as to a character actually using soap. Hah! I kid because I love. Well, love Audrey Tautou at the end of a trail of blue arrows, I mean. But this film was decent as well: a slow-paced, fascinating character study which totally drew me in until the last five minutes or so ruined everything.

Lost in Translation *****-----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   07 January 2005

I was, bizarrely, inspired to write an extensive review of this film - too extensive to post here. Gave it five because I had no clue how to rate it; see extended review for details.

M *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   03 July 2005

Fritz Lang's portrait of a serial killer. Interesting to see how little the portrayal of forensic investigation techniques in film has evolved since 1931. We've gotten much better at scripting endings, though.

Mask of Death **--------
Ray Hunley   One of the minor HBOs   02 August 2005

Good grief. Writing a review would mean I'd have to relive the experience. Here's what the IMDB has to say.

Mean Creek *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   24 September 2005

Punks plot prank on porker, problems pop up, punks pule plaintively.

Metropolis (2001) ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   08 August 2005

This anime "re-imagining" of Fritz Lang's boring classic involves a young boy and a huge-eyed android girl.

Miller's Crossing ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   01 April 2005

The Coen Brothers' gangland noir. Better than The Ladykillers and The Hudsucker Proxy, worse than Raising Arizona and The Big Lebowski.

Monster ********--
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   23 April 2005

Charlize Theron is as good as advertised. Her Wuornos is made a little more sympathetic, I think, than the reality, but what a life to have had to live.

National Treasure ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   27 July 2005

Cage chases clues, chick, cache. Cliched and corny, but not dull.

Nine Queens (Nueve Reinas) *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   06 June 2005

Slick con film from Argentina. Gastón Pauls and Ricardo Darín are excellent and I wasn't completely sure until the very end which one was the mark. Remade in English as "Criminal", with John C. Reilly.

North by Northwest *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   04 April 2005

The crop duster; Mt. Rushmore; Eva Marie Saint.

Nowhere to Hide *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   21 September 2005

A buddy cop film from South Korea. Kind of formulaic, but well-made and interesting.

Ocean's Eleven (1960) *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   28 March 2005

First in a series of "How does the original compare?" films. O11, the original, is less focused on the details of the heist, and more on the characters and their relationships, than its successor. It won't be mistaken for a masterpiece of characterization, however. The Rat Pack, as usual, basically play themselves (smooth Sammy, goofy Dean, charismatic Frank, etc.). In this version Billy O. does not make off with as big a haul, but he's not saddled with Julia Roberts in the end either, so it's basically a wash.

One Way Out ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   30 March 2005

A cop flick with James Belushi. What in the world was I thinking?

Paths of Glory ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   13 September 2005

Three French soldiers are scapegoated and court-martialed after an ill-advised raid on a German position fails during WWI. Kirk Douglas Plays the colonel trying to save his men from their fate in this Stanley Kubrick effort.

Patton ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   06 June 2005

GCS shows us a passionate and complex GSP as he wreaks havoc on the Axis at the end of WWII.

Primer ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   23 August 2005

Huh?

Run Lola Run ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   26 June 2005

The original German title was Lola Rennt, but it should have been Lola Saugt. A silly, modernish story of Lola trying to get 100,000 Marks to save her puling boyfriend from a ruthless drug dealer. The same story is presented three different ways in three successive segments, all of which are annoying.

Say Anything ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   05 July 2005

Extremely lame ending, but the dialog was full of gems. This tale of the loser who bags the valedictorian has become iconic in the culture.

Seabiscuit *******---
Ray Hunley   HBO   03 July 2005

This is the second movie I've seen which features Chris Cooper's character shouting "Turn him loose!" It always chokes me up.

Shanghai Knights **--------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   06 June 2005

Good grief. Fann Wong is inconceivably hot, but hot only goes so far.

Shanghai Noon ***-------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   01 May 2005

Puerile script and weak plot involving Jackie Chan and Owen wilson rescuing "princess" Lucy Liu in the late 19th century American West. Wilson and Chan are great at what they do, so I'll probably watch the sequel, but I'm not expecting much.

Shaun of the Dead ****------
Ray Hunley   HBO On Demand   11 November 2005

Not worth breaking my word for. Slackers Shaun and Ed try to save the day in this semi-send-up of the genre. Just weak.

Shiri ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   09 May 2005

Predictable yet watchable South Korean film. Plot involves a North Korean terror group attempting to precipitate a war in hopes that it will further reunification efforts.

Sin City *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   02 September 2005

Darker and more cartoonish than I expected, but I'm not complaining. The experience really was like reading a Frank Miller graphic novel. I hope he has as much influence in the upcoming V for Vendetta.

Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   06 September 2005

Indiana Jones he ain't. Nor even Nevada Smith.

Sunset Boulevard ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   05 April 2005

This film is a perfect illustration of my long-standing contention that no degree of production value can overcome a mediocre story. Gloria Swanson has a few good lines ("I *am* big; it's the *pictures* that got small."), but overall she ridiculously overplays the part of the washed-up silents star. We learn in the first scene that William Holden's character is dead, and everyone else is a self-absorbed nutjob, so who freakin' cares?

Suspicion *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   05 April 2005

Joan Fontaine tries to decide whether Cary Grant is a murderer, or just a scampish rake in this Hitchcock classic. Nigel Bruce steals the show as "Beaky" Thwaite, Grant's bumbling friend / possible victim.

Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song **--------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   24 March 2005

One point for historical value as the beginning of the "blaxploitation" genre, and one point out of simple pity. "Rated X by an all-white jury!"

The Cooler ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   01 August 2005

Offensively ridiculous story starring William H. Macy as a loser whose luck takes a turn for the better, unfortunately. Also has that dude from Office Space.

The Good Thief ********--
Ray Hunley   DVD   30 August 2003

Nolte at his rumpled best

The first third of the movie seems to be one extended murky mumble, but once Bob Montagne (Nick Nolte) gets himself cleaned up, things snap into crisp focus. There's only nodding (but fond) concession to heist flick cliche, and the ending manages to be satisfying while thwarting expectations. Oh, and Montagne demonstrates his non-innumeracy without flaunting it - that's worth a full rating point right there.

The relationship between Bob and Roger, the cop trying to head off his robbery, recalls that of Rick and Capt. Renault in Casablanca. Synchronicitously enough, the other film we watched this weekend, Adaption, made an explicit point of drawing comparisons between Casablanca and itself.

The Hole ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   22 September 2005

Prep school kids are stuck underground; there is some question as to why; Thora Birch is annoying.

The Intruder ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   08 August 2005

A young William Shatner stars as a racist rabble-rouser stirring up opposition to desegregation in this Roger Corman production. Seems kind of trite and moralistic by today's standards.

The Italian Job (1969) *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   31 March 2005

Third in the "originals" series. This film lacks the revenge angle of its successor, which I haven't decided yet is a feature or a bug. However, it gets at least one full point for casting Benny Hill as a concupiscent computer expert with an eye for the rubenesque. The cliff-hanger ending gives the nod to this movie over the 2003 version.

The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou *****-----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   16 May 2005

I've liked each successive Wes Anderson film less than the previous one. This effort, a disjointed tale about Bill Murray's Zissou seeking a "jaguar shark" which killed his partner, clearly suffers from the loss of Owen Wilson from the writing team. I recommend skipping this one and watching Bottle Rocket again.

The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance ********--
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   25 March 2005

Jimmy Stewart can do no wrong. This John Ford classic is eminently watchable, as Stewart teams up with John Wayne and Lee Marvin for a slight twist on the timeless good vs. evil storyline. Strangely enough, a search for "valance" on imdb turns up two films: this one, and that well-beloved film of our host, Koyaanisqatsi

The Manchurian Candidate (1962) ********--
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   01 April 2005

Fourth in the "originals" series. A classic, of course, but it failed to grab me as I'd hoped. Angela Lansbury is eerie and creepy as the power-mad wife of a doltish senator, Henry Silva is just ridiculous as a Korean who betrays American troops to the Chicoms, and Frank Sinatra does his smooth thing.

The Million Dollar Hotel ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   31 March 2005

A blatant ripoff of The Dark Backward. Also, I kept thinking that Tom Tom was played by Henry Thomas. Who ever heard of Jeremy Davies? Thirdly, this movie managed to present Milla Jovavich as somewhat less than impossibly hot, perhaps its most unlikely achievement.

The Mind Snatchers *****-----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   12 September 2005

An impossibly young Christopher Walken stars in this dated-looking One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest wannabe. Military scientists threaten individuality by mucking about in people's brains - too bad it's been done to death. I was mildly pleased to recognize Joss Ackland from his role in Lethal Weapon II, though.

The Night of the Hunter ********--
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   26 March 2005

"I know you don't mind the killin', 'cause there's plenty o' thet in your Good Book. But there are things you do hate, Lord. Perfume-smellin' things, lacy things, things with curly hair." Robert Mitchum's opening Deologue as he's driving along in search of his next victim sets the eerie tone for this classic. Unforgettable.

The Passion of the Christ ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   30 March 2005

I enjoyed trying to translate the Latin before reading the subtitles.

The Pianist *****-----
Ray Hunley   DVD   15 June 2003

What?

Szpilman manages to survive the Warsaw Ghetto; we see some Germans Acting Badly; the acting and direction are competent, with Brody's performance maybe edging into memorable. There's not much here we didn't see in "Schindler's List", or even "Life Is Beautiful". The shot of a bombed-out Warsaw as Szpilman exits one of his hiding places in a hospital is stunning, but it doesn't make a movie. Worth seeing, but vastly overrated.

The Punisher ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   12 May 2005

I should not have trusted this recommendation. Will Patton was pretty cool, though.

The Red Violin ********--
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   20 July 2005

Sam Jackson covets violin; we learn about its history.

The Seventh Seal *****-----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   23 March 2005

I liked it much better when I hadn't seen it. However, the final scene is haunting beyond words. If I were to direct a remake I'd have Antonius Block play a game of go, not chess, for his life: "Go narabaya / ko ni mo tatete / iku beki wo / shinuru michi ni wa / te hitotsu mo nashi" [translation]

The Terminal ******----
Ray Hunley   HBOsomething   25 August 2005

My wife was nagging me while I watched it, so I didn't follow everything. Something about some dude in an airport.

The Testament of Dr. Mabuse ********--
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   10 July 2005

Otto Wernicke reprises his role from M as Kriminalkomissar Lohmann in this middle film of Fritz Lang's Dr. Mabuse (that's "mah-boo-zuh", not "may-byoos") trilogy. Watching a Lang picture reminds me of how, when I saw Casablanca for the first time, I had no idea that so many common pop culture sayings had come from the film. Similarly, Lang appears to be the source of many of the techniques and plot devices which now have become cliche.

The Third Man ****------
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   26 March 2005

Overrated; just a total mess. Joseph Cotten's Holly Martins is a complete schlub, and Welles' Harry Lime is a smirking, cardboard villain.

Van Helsing *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   15 April 2005

Of course there were lame plot devices and ridiculous dialog, but it worked great as what it was. Quite entertaining, if you allow it to be.

Whale Rider *******---
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   09 April 2005

A story about the special relationship young girls have with their whales. Keisha Castle-Hughes really is brilliant in this absorbing portrait of Maori life.

Word Wars ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   31 July 2005

This documentary tracks four Scrabble aficianados as they gear up for, and compete in, the U.S. championship tournament. The level of obsession and dedication among the top players is amazing.

Yojimbo ******----
Ray Hunley   Netflix DVD   06 April 2005

A yakisoba western from Akira Kurosawa. Storyline was later stolen for Sergio Leone's Clint Eastwood vehicle, A Fistful of Dollars. A wandering ronin comes into a small town, swaggers around, subdues two gang bosses by playing one against the other.