ALL NEW (mostly) Movies To See

 

Joseph Gordon Levitt and Leonardo DiCaprio in Inception

 

I recommend the summer’s one high quality blockbuster, Inception.  If you have followed The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, you will want to continue the trilogy with The Girl Who Played With Fire.  The indie dramedy The Kids Are All Right is enjoyable, too.  One of the year’s best, Toy Story 3,  is still playing, but the equally great Winter’s Bone has become difficult to find. For trailers and other choices, see Movies to See Right Now.

My DVDs of the week are the gnarly Step into Liquid and the way awesome Riding Giants.   For the trailers and other DVD choices, see DVDs of the Week.

Movies on TV include The Searchers and Bad Day at Black Rock, coming up on TCM.   Before Sunrise is still playing on IFC.

DVD of the Week: Hang ten this summer

Let’s go surfin’ now

Everybody’s learning how

Come on and safari with me

It’s a great time for the two coolest surfing movies, the documentaries Step Into Liquid and Riding Giants.

Step Into Liquid (2003):  We see the world’s best pro surfers in the most extreme locations.  We also see devoted amateurs in the tiny ripples of Lake Michigan and surfing evangelists teaching Irish school children.  The cinematography is remarkable – critic Elvis Mitchell called the film “insanely gorgeous”.  The filmmaker is Dana Brown, son of Bruce Brown, who made The Endless Summer (1966) and The Endless Summer II (1994).

Riding Giants (2004):  This film focuses on the obsessive search for the best wave by some of the greatest surfers in history. We see “the biggest wave ever ridden” and then a monster that could be bigger.  The movie traces the discovery of the Half Moon Bay surf spot Mavericks.  And more and more, all wonderfully shot.

The filmmaker is Stacy Peralta, a surfer and one the pioneers of modern skateboading, (and a founder of the Powell Peralta skateboard product company).  Peralta also made Dogtown and Z-boys (2001), the great documentary about the roots of skateboarding, and wrote the 2005 Lords of Dogtown.

Check out my other recent DVD recommendations at DVDs of the Week.

Both of these films make my lists of Best Sports Movies.

Movies to See This Week

I can’t speak to the three most promising new films, because I haven’t seen them yet: The Kids Are All Right, Inception and The Girl Who Played With Fire.  But that should be remedied by next week’s recommendations.  In the mean time, I can say that the “must see” films in theaters remain Winter’s Bone and Toy Story 3.  Winter’s Bone has been out for a while, so, if you haven’t seen it in a theater,  you’d better see it soon.  For trailers and other choices, see Movies to See Right Now.

My DVD of the week is Tortilla Soup.  It’s the closest thing to a chick flick that I’ll be recommending for at least a month.   For the trailer and other DVD choices, see DVDs of the Week.

      

John Ford's The Searchers

 

Movies on TV include The Searchers and Bad Day at Black Rock, coming up on TCM.   The Crying Game and Before Sunrise are still playing on IFC.

DVD of the Week: Tortilla Soup

In Tortilla Soup (2001), Hector Elizondo plays the retired chef who cooks a gourmet feast every Sunday for his three adult daughters.  The daughters are all seeking relationships and independence from their dad in their own ways.  There are lots of romance and lots of laughs and lots of amazing-looking food.  It’s a remake of Ang Lee’s 1994 Eat Drink Man Woman.  Elizabeth Pena and Paul Rodriguez give noteworthy performances.  The yummy-looking food was prepared by celebrity chefs Mary Sue Milliken and Susan Feniger (Too Hot Tamales).

The movie also has a fun soundtrack with Lila Downs, Eliades Ochoa, Pink Martini and Les Nubians.

Check out my other recent DVD recommendations at DVDs of the Week.

And this film makes my list of 10 Food Porn Movies.

Movies To See Right Now

The “must see” films in theaters remain Winter’s Bone and Toy Story 3.  Winter’s Bone has been out for a while, so, if you haven’t seen it in a theater,  you’d better see it soon.  For trailers and other choices, see Movies to See Right Now.

It’s summer vacation, so I am letting people catch up with my most recent DVD recommendations:  Eight Men Out, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl on the Train, John Adams and The Deep End.   For the trailers and other DVD choices, see DVDs of the Week.

 

 

The Crying Game

 

 

Movies on TV include The Crying Game and Before Sunrise on IFC this month.  Freaks, Soylent Green and 12 Angry Men are coming up on TCM.

Tod Browning and his cast for Freaks

 

This week's Movies To See

 

Toy Story 3

 

The “must see” films in theaters remain Winter’s Bone and Toy Story 3.  Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work is good, too.  For trailers and other choices, see Movies to See Right Now.

My DVDs of the week are Eight Men Out (for the MLB All-Star Game) and The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (because its sequel The Girl Who Played With Fire has been released.   For the trailers and other DVD choices, see DVDs of the Week.

 

 

Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke in Before Sunrise

 

Movies on TV include The Firemen’s Ball, The Crying Game and Before Sunrise and on IFC this month.  Freaks, Soylent Green and 12 Angry Men are coming up on TCM.

Freaks (1932)

DVDs of the Week: Eight Men Out and The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo

This week, I have two recommended DVDs.

At the All-Star break, it’s time for a baseball movie, so I recommend John Sayles’ 1988 Eight Men Out, which tells the true story of the Black Sox Scandal – the Chicago White Sox players who fixed the 1919 World Series.  Sayles used actors, not baseball players, but the baseball scenes are totally authentic.  The characters of star players Eddie Cicotte, Buck Weaver and Shoeless Joe Jackson and owner Charles Comiskey vividly come alive.

Also, because its sequel, The Girl Who Played With Fire is opening in theaters, there’s The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, one of my Best Films of 2010.  It’s a rock-em, sock-em feminist suspense thriller built around the very original character of damaged, angry, master hacker Lisbeth Salander (Noomi Rapace).  Lisbeth makes Dirty Harry look like Bishop Tutu.  The Swedish title was Men Who Hate Woman, and there’s lots of violence against women in this film, satisfyingly avenged.  This is a whodunit with layers of romance, suspense, and sex, with even some Nazis thrown in.

Updated Movie Recommendations

 

Jennifer Lawrence in Winter's Bone

 

The “must see” films in theaters remain Winter’s Bone and Toy Story 3.  Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work is good, too.  For trailers and other choices, see Movies to See Right Now.

My DVD of the week is John Adams.  For the trailer and other DVD choices, see DVDs of the Week.

  

Milos Forman's The Firemen's Ball

 

Movies on TV include The Firemen’s Ball, The Crying Game and Before Sunrise.

DVD of the Week: John Adams

John Adams:  The most overlooked giant of our Founding Fathers is the subject of this brilliant mini-series.  Adams was a major player in forming the political consensus to seek independence from England, an important (if unevenly successful) diplomat during the war, a key political ally of George Washington’s and our nation’s first Vice-President and second President.  Unique among the Founding Fathers, his day to day activities were frankly chronicled in hundreds of letters to and from his wife of fifty-four years, Abigail.  These surviving letters comprise one of the most essential first-hand accounts of the founding of America, and, of course, also reveal much about the talented but prickly Adams and the Adams’ relationship.

To seal the quality of this miniseries, the Adams are played by the generally brilliant Paul Giamatti and Laura Linney.  Giamatti captures the short-tempered, brilliant political strategist who understands the limits of his own personal popularity.  Linney is perfect as the perceptive Abigail, who often helps John by pointing out that he needs to get out of his own way.

The series also, seemingly alone amid contemporary filmmaking, captures the era.  It was a time when travel and communication took weeks on horseback or months by sailing ship and when smallpox inoculation was by blade instead of by needle.  Day-to-day life is portrayed without romanticism or iconography.  In particular, no one who watches the tar-and-feathering scene will again view this practice as quaintly comical.

This Week's Movie Recommendations

The “must see” films in theaters are Winter’s Bone and Toy Story 3.  For trailers and other choices, see Movies to See Right Now.

My DVD of the week is The Girl on the Train.  For the trailer and other DVD choices, see DVDs of the Week.

Orson Welles in The Third Man

 

Movies on TV include The Third Man, Blue Velvet and Cool Hand Luke.