Wish I Was Here

First Hit:  An interestingly good and not new or great view of family and how they heal and grow.

Zach Braff funded this film through crowd funding. In other words no one in Hollywood believed in this film so he decided to find another way to fund it. There isn’t much new here.

The film is about forgiveness, family love, and seeing the best in people. Zach playing an out of work actor named Aidan Bloom can’t seem to land a job. His wife Sarah (Kate Hudson) supports him by working at the water company. His kids Tucker and Grace (Pierce Gagnon and Joey King respectively) are being schooled at an expensive Jewish school because their grandfather pays for the schooling.

But grandfather is dying, cannot afford to pay for school and now the kids have to be homeschooled by Aidan. He’s unorthodox and the kids begin to learn something about life in many different ways. Adding to the situation is Aidan’s brother Noah (Josh Gad), who won’t speak to his dad and is caught up in his own world.

I didn’t particularly think the story about how he and his brother use to play that they would save the world in their fantasies was very well thought out. The symbolism wasn’t that strong.

Braff was good and the story line, for the most part was good – not great. Hudson was, at times, very good like when she was at the hospital speaking with Aidan’s father. However, at other times she just seemed to be to easily joyful while being in a stressful situation. Gagnon was superb, he was perfect. King was the star of the film. Her range was amazing and she embodied a young woman learning to trust and love life. Gad was strong as the affected brother. Braff did a good job of directing his and brother Adam’s script. It just didn’t ring true at times while at other times it was wonderful.

Overall:  Entertaining and at times very thoughtful.

Boyhood

First Hit:  An amazing film that boarders on being a documentary type film and yet it isn’t.

I was swept up into the story from the very beginning. Richard Linklater has written and directed some of the best films in the past decade.

The three Before and After series with Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy, are outstandingly written as is this film. The writing is precise, yet loose and modern. The way this story falls together is sublime.

Linklater follows a young boy Mason (Ellar Coltrane) from ages 6 through 18, shooting him with his acting family of Mom (Patricia Arquette), Dad (Ethan Hawke), and sister Samantha (Lorelei Linklater) over this period of time. This means everyone ages correctly, what they bring to the part has real life wisdom and experience while the storyline evolves in small jumps through these 12 years. How these actors interacted with each other was amazing, but more importantly, if felt so real because in many ways it was.

Coltrane was an amazing choice for Linklater and fulfilled his gamble amazingly well. The likelihood that that Coltrane would be so amazing when selected at age 6 was small. To have these results is sublime. Arquette was absolutely wonderful in all ways. Strong, vulnerable and really embodied the woman who does her best to fend for her family. Hawke is fantastic as the dad who learns how to become a dad over this time period. Lorelei Linklater was wonderful as Coltrane’s sister. She embodied a young girl that struggles and flourishes through puberty and added so much to the dynamic of this family. Richard Linklater has created yet another masterpiece.

Overall:  This is a must see, as it is truly different and groundbreaking.

Lucy

First Hit:  Although highly unlikely and unbelievable, it was philosophically interesting and fun to watch.

Luc Besson (director and writer) has a particular philosophical view of life, our interconnectedness, and that time is the sole component that sets our reality as something we can see, touch or feel.

The premise that we only use 10% of our brain and that if we used 100% or a partial percentage between 20% & 100% we could read others’ thoughts and alter physical reality. How Besson shows us his view is to have a young woman, Lucy (Scarlett Johansson) who starts off as not being too smart, being forced to take a drug that increases her brain usage.

Unfortunately she is given a lot of the drug and ends up having amazing skills to fend off the drug lord Mr. Jang (Min-sik Choi) and his gang who wants their drugs back. Lucy gets in-touch with Professor Norman (Morgan Freeman) who can help her understand what is going on with her, and more importantly, receive the information she is learning about humans, life and the universe.

So what we have is a philosophical story based in an action adventure film. Did it work? Yes, and at times I found myself wanting more of the philosophical part and other times I wanted more action and fun special effects.

Johansson has such an amazing voice and sometimes I lose my concentration on her acting when I hear her, however in this film they integrate well. She’s really good at giving looks of indifference and strength, while using her voice to denote intelligence. Choi’s character is a bit overdone but requires his relentlessness to make this film work. Freeman is believable and really good as the professor that knows most about brain use. Besson wrote an interesting script and it is clear he has strong views about how life works. His direction of this story is strong, making it fun to watch.

Overall:  This is an enjoyable action film with a philosophical twist.

Sex Tape

First Hit:  At times very funny and the laughs were easy to come by and at other times it pushed too hard for the laughs.

The concept was very good. The points made by the film including; being careful what you video, asking oneself why there was the need to create the video, and how quickly today’s technology can turn a fun idea into a nightmare are solid and well founded.

Here Annie (Cameron Diaz) and Jay (Jason Segel), who as young college lovers spent all their free time having sex. Then she got pregnant and, as what happens to many couples after having kids, the sex started to become infrequent. The film follows them as they conduct their life on a day to day basis:  Kids to school, both to work, and occasional conversations about when they might have sex next.

One evening they’ve got time off and they decide to film themselves in all of the positions in the famous 1972 book, "Joy of Sex". For some reason Jay doesn’t erase the video and – the fun ensues when try to get the video erased (off the cloud). Her sister Tess (Ellie Kemper) and her husband Robby (Rob Corddry) are friends and they are also enlisted to help them find and delete the video. Jack Black has a small part as the owner of a porn site who helps them out.

Additionally Rob Lowe as Hank, the owner of a company that may buy Annie’s motherhood blog, is fun in a role that requires him to play off his past drug use. The overall premise is good, some of the scenes are good while others are trying and seem very pressed. The dog scenes went farther than they needed and were not believable.

Diaz seemed to have a lot of fun in the role and she was good in it. Segel also seemed to have fun in his role. Together they seemed to click and have a similar sense of humor. Corddry was good as the friend who wanted to help but also wanted to watch and keep the video. Kemper was strong as the sister and gave the role supportive credence. Black was really good and I really enjoyed him. Lowe’s parody of his real life was fun and a stroke of genius. Segel, Kate Angelo and Nicholas Stoller wrote a good script. It would have been better to aim with a little more subtlety and they didn’t. Jake Kasdan’s direction was good, over done in some scenes and appropriately touching in others.

Overall:  It was good, but I felt that there was more potential in the subject than what was delivered.

Le Chef (Comme un chef)

First Hit:  A funny and enjoyable film.

This is a simple story about a man Jacky Bonnot (Michael Youn) who dreams of being a famous chef, but because of his own stubbornness, gets thrown out of every kitchen he attempts to cook in. He’s got an encyclopedic memory for recipes and has very specific ideas of how they could be changed for the better.

Bonnot’s got a girlfriend Beatrice (Raphaelle Agogue) with whom he lives with, is engaged to and is pregnant. She’s getting impatient for Jacky to find a permanent employment because she’s afraid they will be without the necessities to support their new baby. Jacky happens to assist Alexandre Lagarde (Jean Reno) who is a famous chef, with a 3 starred restaurant and a television show.

He reminds Alexandre about certain specifics of his previous recipes and they begin to bond. There are scenes that stilted in the film and there are a few wooded performances by actors, but the idea that Jacky saves the day for Alexandre is fun to watch and ultimately unfolds nicely with humor.

Youn is funny; especially when he gets focus on what is right for a particular food. Agogue in her small role is beautiful and divine in the way she delivers her part. Reno is absolutely sublime as the famous chef who doesn’t want to lose one of his stars. Daniel Cohen wrote and directed this little film in a light, amusing and heartfelt way.

Overall:  It was wonderful light hearted film.

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