Movie Reviews and Clip: The Invention of Lying

The Invention of Lying

Ricky Gervais (BBC's The Office) directs and stars in THE INVENTION OF LYING alongside Rob Lowe and Jennifer Garner.

The comedy is an alternate reality, lying -- even the concept of a lie -- does not even exist. Everyone -- from politicians to advertisers to the man and woman on the street -- speaks the truth and nothing but the truth with no thought of the consequences. But when a down-on-his-luck loser named Mark suddenly develops the ability to lie, he finds that dishonesty has its rewards. In a world where every word is assumed to be the absolute truth, Mark easily lies his way to fame and fortune. But lies have a way of spreading, and Mark begins to realize that things are getting a little out of control when some of his tallest tales are being taken as, well, gospel. With the entire world now hanging on his every word, there is only one thing Mark has not been able to lie his way into: the heart of the woman he loves.

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Movie Reviews and Clip: Surrogates

Surrogates

Die Hard's action man Bruce Willis is back in this futuristic action thriller.  

In SURROGATES, people are living their lives remotely from the safety of their own homes via robotic surrogates -- sexy, physically perfect mechanical representations of themselves. It's an ideal world where crime, pain, fear and consequences don't exist. When the first murder in years jolts this utopia, FBI agent Greer discovers a vast conspiracy behind the surrogate phenomenon and must abandon his own surrogate, risking his life to unravel the mystery.

In this scene (video above) from SURROGATES, Radha Mitchell's plays an agent who pulls a fast one over Bruce Willis.

Release: 09/25/2009 (Walt Disney Pictures)

 

Genres:

Action/Adventure, Science Fiction/Fantasy,Thriller And Adaptation

Rating: PG-13
Starring: Bruce Willis, Radha Mitchell, Rosamund Pike, Boris Kodjoe,
Directed By: Jonathan Mostow
Produced By: Elizabeth Banks, David Nicksay

Surrogates Movie Review

We live in a time of fear. We fear terrorism, we fear violence, we fear disease, we even fear our own image. We fear that we aren’t attractive enough, or strong enough, or that we are not as perfect as commercials tell us we should be. In today’s age of fear we also have technology. A technology that allows us to communicate with the world in an instant. We have computers, where for entertainment, we can create alter egos and participate in video games with other people anywhere on the planet. Our avatars play out our fantasies, while we sit snugly at home in our anonymity. This is the premiss that is being explored in Surrogates.


Bruce Willis plays a cop in the future where 90% of the population is living in surrogate form. While the operators are safely at home plugged in, their alter-egos, their Surrogates, go to work, run errands, go to parties, while they sit by and observe. When a murder takes place that kills a Surrogate and its operator, Bruce Willis’ character must abandon his surrogate form and enter the world as a man experiencing life first-hand.


I found this movie very intriguing. Bruce Willis, no stranger to Science Fiction (The Fifth Element), is effective as a robot, as well as in his human form. His face, which can be quite stoic naturally, is put to good use, when the only real emotion you can see, comes from his eyes. All the lead actors had to play two versions of themselves, the polished, plastic beautiful one, as well as the sun deprived, blemished one. It was really an interesting comparison. Rosamund Pike, who plays Willis’ wife, Radha Mitchell, who plays his partner, and Boris Kodjoe who plays his boss, are all attractive in their own right, but when seen in their robot form, you can understand the appeal of having a perfect, idealized, you.


The other side of this equation is the resistance. A small group of people who find these robots an abomination. Bound together by their common values this group of stand-outs are lead by Ving Rhames. They have chosen to exist in a machine free zone and experience life in its natural form. They preach contact, interaction, and they have claimed a part of the city where they may exist without the aid of machines. In these isolated compounds, surrogates are not allowed. In fact they are seen as the enemy.


James Cromwell, who invented the technology, now regrets his creation when its use has been expanded beyond his intent. Like any technology, his original purpose was noble, but commercial and military applications took the technology to a whole new place.  This film explores the moral implications while taking us through a mysterious who-dunit in Science-Fiction form.


Surrogates is an entertaining film, but what keeps it from being great, is that I’m still not deterred. As a cautionary tale, this film failed. I still think it would be kind of cool to have a robot me. If this film was completely effective, I should be put off. I should have seen the errors of my ways, and rejoiced in being just me. Instead I’m still find the idea kind of titillating and I will continue to spend a lot of time thinking about how to have the best of both worlds. I’m mean really, a young, skinny, perfect me, running around doing all my work while I get to stay home in my pajamas, not a bad idea. At least this film got me to think, and that, in itself, is worth the price of admission.
 

Melanie Wilson  

Visit her blog at LAMelbox.blogspot.com 

 

   
   
   
   
   

 

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Movie Reviews and Clip: Saw VI

SAW VI

In the sixth installment of the SAW franchise - Special Agent Strahm is dead, and Detective Hoffman has emerged as the unchallenged successor to Jigsaw's legacy.  However, when the FBI draws closer to Hoffman, he is forced to set a game into motion, and Jigsaw's grand scheme is finally understood.                          See Movie Reviews Below

Tobin Bell, Costas Mandylor, and Shawnee Smith return for more thrills as the film's villains.

VIDEO INTERVIEW: Tobin Bell and Costas Mandylor On Playing A Good Movie Villain

Watch a SAW VI TV Spot in the video above.    Post your comments, movie reviews or watch others review SAW VI below.

Saw VI is a Lionsgate Release.  Twistedd Pictures Presents a Burg/Koules/Hoffman Production.  

Visit SAW VI Official Movie Site

 

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Jigsaw's Tips On Playing A Movie Villain

Tobin Bell (The Firm, GoodFellas, In The Line Of Fire) returns in the latest installment of the SAW horror franchise as Jigsaw, the master puppet killer.  Jigsaw's new apprentice Costas Mandylor (The Doors, Mobsters, Sex and the City) also returns to do Jigsaw's bidding in SaAW VI. 

VIDEO INTERVIEW: Mastering The Horror Scream, Tips From The Scream Queen 

Jigsaw can now be counted as one of the memorable movie villains (Freddy Kruger, Michael Myers, Pinhead, Jason) in the horror genre.  CineMovie sat down with Tobin Bell and Costas Mandylor to discuss tips on playing a movie villain. 

Watch User Movie Reviews Of SAW VI

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Movie Reviews and Clip: A Christmas Carol

A Christmas Carol

Jim Carrey (The Grinch, The Mask) is back to ruin another Christmas as Ebenezer Scrooge.                          Cinemovie Review Of A Christmas Carol

Ebenezer Scrooge begins the Christmas holiday with his usual miserly contempt, barking at his faithful clerk and his cheery nephew. But when the ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come take him on an eye-opening journey revealing truths Old Scrooge is reluctant to face, he must open his heart to undo years of ill will before it's too late.

INTERVIEW: Jim Carrey Defends Scrooge

(Walt Disney Pictures)

Release: 11/06/2009

Genres: Drama, Animation, Adaptation And Holiday
Starring: Jim Carrey, Bob Hoskins, Christopher Lloyd, Robin Wright Penn, Colin Firth
Directed By: Robert Zemeckis
Produced By: Robert Zemeckis, Jack Rapke, Steve Starkey

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Movie Reviews and Clip: The Box

The Box

Cameron Diaz and James Marsden play an unhappily married couple who receive a small wooden box on their doorstep. At the push of a button, the box brings its bearer instant wealth but also instantly kills someone the bearer doesn't know.  Donnie Darko director Richard Kelly takes the reigns on this horror flick.

(Warner Bros. Pictures)

Release: 11/06/2009

 

Genres: Suspense/Horror, Thriller And Remake
Rating: PG-13 for thematic elements, some violence and disturbing images.
Starring: Cameron Diaz, Frank Langella, James Marsden, Gillian Jacobs, Michele Durrett
Directed By: Richard Kelly
Produced By: Tedd Hamm, Terry Dougas, Richard Kelly

 

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Movie Reviews and Clip: The Men Who Stare At Goats

The Men Who Stare At Goats

Academy Award® winner George Clooney (Ocean's Eleven, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Up In The Air) and Ewan McGregor (Star Wars Episode I, II, III) stars in this quirky dark comedy inspired by a real life story you will hardly believe is actually true, astonishing revelations about a top-secret wing of the U.S. military come to light when a reporter encounters an enigmatic Special Forces operator on a mind-boggling mission.

Reporter Bob Wilton (Ewan McGregor) is in search of his next big story when he encounters Lyn Cassady (George Clooney), a shadowy figure who claims to be part of an experimental U.S. military unit. According to Cassady, the New Earth Army is changing the way wars are fought.

A legion of “Warrior Monks” with unparalleled psychic powers can read the enemy’s thoughts, pass through solid walls, and even kill a goat simply by staring at it. Now, the program’s founder, Bill Django (Oscar® nominee Jeff Bridges), has gone missing and Cassady’s mission is to find him. Intrigued by his new acquaintance’s far-fetched stories, Bob impulsively decides to accompany him on the search. When the pair tracks Django to a clandestine training camp run by renegade psychic Larry Hooper (two-time Oscar® winner Kevin Spacey), the reporter is trapped in the middle of a grudge match between the forces of Django’s New Earth Army and Hooper’s personal militia of super soldiers. In order to survive this wild adventure, Bob will have to outwit an enemy he never thought possible. The Men Who Stare at Goats was inspired by Jon Ronson’s non-fiction bestseller of the same name, an eye-opening and often hilarious exploration of the government’s attempts to harness paranormal abilities to combat its enemies.

Release: 11/06/2009

 

Starring: George Clooney, Ewan McGregor, Kevin Spacey, Jeff Bridges, Rebecca Mader
Directed By: Grant Heslov
Produced By:

George Clooney, Paul Lister, Grant Heslov

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Movie Reviews and Clip: The Fourth Kind

The Fourth Kind

In 1972, a scale of measurement was established for alien encounters. When a UFO is sighted, it is called an encounter of the first kind. When evidence is collected, it is known as an encounter of the second kind. When contact is made with extraterrestrials, it is the third kind. The next level, abduction, is the fourth kind. This encounter has been the most difficult to document...until now. Structured unlike any film before it,

THE FOURTH KIND is a provocative thriller set in modern-day Nome, Alaska, where—mysteriously since the 1960s—a disproportionate number of the population has been reported missing every year. Despite multiple FBI investigations of the region, the truth has never been discovered. Here in this remote region, psychologist Dr. Abigail Tyler (Milla Jovovich) began videotaping sessions with traumatized patients and unwittingly discovered some of the most disturbing evidence of alien abduction ever documented. Using never-before-seen archival footage that is integrated into the film, The Fourth Kind exposes the terrified revelations of multiple witnesses. Their accounts of being visited by alien figures all share disturbingly identical details, the validity of which is investigated throughout the film.

Watch The Fourth Kind movie trailer

www.thefourthkind.net

 

Release: 11/06/2009

 

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Movie Clip and Reviews: Fantastic Mr. Fox

FANTASTIC MR. FOX is visionary director Wes Anderson’s first animated film, utilizing classic handmade stop motion techniques to tell the story of the best selling children’s book by Roald Dahl (author of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and James and the Giant Peach).

INTERVIEW: Wes Anderson

In this film clip, George Clooney's Mr. Fox and his lawyer Mr. Badger played by Bill Murray have a disagreement over Mr. Fox buying a new house and cuss each other out--literally.

Watch Fantastic Mr. Fox movie trailer

Mr. and Mrs. Fox (Clooney and Meryl Streep) live an idyllic home life with their son Ash (Schwartzman) and visiting young nephew Kristofferson (Eric Anderson). But after twelve years of quiet domesticity, the bucolic existence proves too much for Mr. Fox’s wild animal instincts. Soon he slips back into his old ways as a sneaky chicken thief and in doing so, endangers not only his beloved family, but the whole animal community. Trapped underground without enough food to go around, the animals band together to fight against the evil Farmers - Boggis, Bunce and Bean - who are determined to capture the audacious, fantastic Mr. Fox at any cost. In the end, he uses his natural instincts to save his family and friends.

 

Directed by: Wes Anderson
Written for the Screen by: Wes Anderson, Noah Baumbach
Based on the book by: Roald Dahl
Produced by: Allison Abbate, Scott Rudin, Wes Anderson, Jeremy Dawson
Executive Producers: Steven Rales, Arnon Milchan
Voice Cast: George Clooney, Meryl Streep, Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Wally Wolodarsky, Eric Anderson, Michael Gambon, Willem Dafoe, Owen Wilson, Jarvis Cocker Add a comment

Movie Clip and Reviews: 2012

Never before has a date in history been so significant to so many cultures, so many religions, scientists, and governments.  2012 is an epic adventure about a global cataclysm that brings an end to the world and tells of the heroic struggle of the survivors.

INTERVIEW: John Cusack Names His Favorite 1970's Disaster Films 

John Cusack (Say Anything, Being John Malkovich) stars in the new disaster flick 2012 opening November 13, 2009. Watch him in action in this scene (Taking the Bentley) from 2012 as his co-stars and John try to escape their plane which is about to crash.

Watch 2012 Trailer

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