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The Libertine (2004)
7/10
Depp Delivers Again!!
27 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
The Libertine is definitely not a feel good story, but it is interesting, funny at times and delightful in its wickedness. However, if there is anything brilliant about it, it's Johnny Depp's performance. He is my favourite actor; I've seen almost everything he has ever done and he has NEVER been better and should be nominated for an Academy Award for this role. I couldn't take my eyes off him; he totally blew me away! This is a very decadent story, set in 1675 during Charles II's reign, of a man's moral, emotional and psychological slide into oblivion who manages to redeem himself somewhat in the end. Johnny plays a drunken, debaucherous court poet of noble birth, John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, who falls in love with an actress played by Samantha Morton who doesn't love him back although she acknowledges that he is responsible for turning her into a great actress. Wilmot is a cynical man who no longer takes pleasure from life and ends up dying a slow, horrifying death from syphilis.

Depp was stunningly beautiful to look at for the first half of the film but as Wilmot deteriorated from syphilis his face became hideous while his character's emotional conflict was never more evident.

John Malkovich starred as Charles II and he was excellent as always, as was the exceptional Samantha Morton who stole many of her scenes with Depp. Rosamund Pike was very good as Wilmot's devoted but tortured wife although why she stayed with him is a bit of a mystery. The fantastic Richard Coyle of the BBC sitcom Coupling, played Wilmot's servant Alcock and he was wonderful, offering several moments of comic relief. Jack Davenport, who also starred in Coupling and with Johnny Depp in Pirates of the Caribbean was underused but did well with what he had to work with.

I was a little distracted by the way the film was lit and the fact that the focus wasn't always sharp but I would watch it again for the sheer enjoyment of Depp's sensational performance.
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6/10
Scenery Stunning; Script Somewhat Sucking
27 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I had been so looking forward to seeing Beowulf & Grendel because I'm a huge fan of Gerard Butler and in fact a friend of mine (who is even more of a freak for him) and I drove almost two and a half hours yesterday to a city where the film was being shown so we could see it. Unfortunately, we were both fairly disappointed. Beowulf & Grendel's script fell flat in my opinion and didn't quite convey the emotions or moral of the story as it should have, but the scenery was so spectacular (filmed in Iceland) that it was like a character in the movie. The story is based on the epic medieval poem called Beowulf (who was a Norse warrior who helped the Danes end the wrath of Grendel) that to be honest I haven't read but I heard that it was changed significantly for the movie.

Gerard Butler was delicious and is a very talented actor and I enjoyed every scene he was in but overall I would only give the movie a 6/10. We were a little disappointed that he didn't even take his shirt off although in those freezing temperatures I can understand why.

There were a few humorous moments and Stellan Skarsgard was decent, but there was no chemistry between Butler and Sarah Polley who played Selma the witch and their one "love" scene made no sense at all and was kind of creepy.

The actor who played Grendel, a tortured troll who seeks revenge on King Hrothgar for the death of his father, named Ingvar Sigurosson was excellent and made you feel his pain. Beowulf and I both felt sorry for him in the end so I guess that the movie succeeded on some level. It's a shame that this movie won't be the star-making vehicle for Butler that he deserved it to be.
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Crash (I) (2004)
Possibly The Best Movie I've Ever Seen!
21 June 2005
I was just completely BLOWN AWAY by this film…in fact, it very well may be the best movie I have EVER seen! "Crash" written and directed by Canadian Paul Haggis (who certainly deserves an Oscar for his screenplay!) stars a brilliant ensemble cast of superb performances by Don Cheadle, Matt Dillon, Sandra Bullock, Brendan Fraser, Thandie Newton, Ryan Phillippe, Terrence Howard and Larenz Tate among others. I read somewhere that Oprah said if you only see one movie this year, make sure it's this one so I went tonight with a friend and we both agreed that it was absolutely and stunningly close to perfection. It's a movie about how the lives of a several different strangers intersect through a series of events over a couple of days in Los Angeles. It's about how we are all racists (or at the very least strongly judgmental of others) in some way or another and yet what makes us all the same is our humanity and how a split second can change your life forever. The tag line for it is "live your life at the point of impact" and I'm telling you when you watch this movie you'll feel like you've been severely impacted afterward. It drove me through every emotion imaginable and those emotions manifested themselves physically in my body while I was watching it. As we were leaving the theater, awestruck, I had tingles on the top of my head. I can't remember the last time, if ever, I've seen a movie that moved me in such a profound way. This movie will stay with me for days, I'm sure. It's a must have for any serious movie collector and if you haven't already seen it, I can't recommend a better movie at this time.
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