If you enjoy Depression era backwoods humor, you will most likely love this movie. If you appreciate good storytelling, I'm sure you will include this among your recent favorites. It is actually a movie about storytelling, sort of.
Robert Duvall and Bill Murray are prefect in their roles; a Tennesee hermit with 40-year-old secrets and a recently relocated Chicago hustler. They each have what the other wants and must bend a little to meet in the middle.
Sissy Spacek is dear as a quiet widow who returns to the old home town. Bill Cobbs knows more about Duvall's flawed character than most but is not about selling redemption. Lucas Black is the one who works to bring them all together.
Somewhere along the lines of Oh Brother Where Art Thou, this is a story of forgiveness. Everyone wants it, and everyone has some to give. No spoilers here, but we have to forgive ourselves somewhere down the line.
Watch this with someone who thinks the know all about that crazy old neighbor down the road.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Get Low (2009)
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BLSCarl
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Labels: Bill Cobbs, Bill Murray, Lucas Black, Robert Duvall, Sissy Spacek
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Blast From The Past
Director Hugh Wilson has not told many stories, but he has some very good ones to his credit. "Blast From The Past" is among them. His first work to receive national attention was on television as the creator, writer, and executive producer of WKRP In Cincinnati. If you have seen it, you will recognize his hand in everything since. Comedy with a very sharp edge, is his tool and his gift to us.
Imagine a Cal Tech physics genius with a tilt towards the doomsday propheteers of the 1950s. So, he builds not just a bomb shelter, but a bomb fortress where he and his family can survive for 50 years if necessary. When the unimaginable happens, he and his family are prepared.
Christopher Walken (Deer Hunter, Milagro Beanfield War, and Catch Me If You Can) is perfect as the over-prepared patriarch, and shows us just what being a father in the 50's was all about.
Sissy Spacek (Carrie, Coal Miner's Daughter, and Raggedy Man) starts out as June Cleaver and ends up as Roseanne Conner. Ouch. But, along the way I totally enjoyed her transformation, and I even found myself empathising with her.
The story however, is really about the son, born to the above couple shortly after sealing themselves inside the bunker. Brendan Fraser (Encino Man, With Honors, and Crash) is allowed to go back to the surface to search for a suitable wife among whatever survivors there might be.
Who does he find among the thriving metropolis of LA, oblvious to the fact that a family is living underneath them, but Alicia Silverstone (this is the only thing she has done that I like aside from the old Aerosmith videos). Somehow these two complete opposites find each other and make it work.
Supporting these four main characters is a wonderful cast Angelenos, all of whom locals should recognize as their friends and neighbors. The night club scene alone is worth the rental. No folling, trust me.
Watch this movie with someone who remembers the 1950's.
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Labels: Brendan Fraser, Christopher Walken, Hugh Wilson, Sissy Spacek