With the
combination of great acting in Jamie Foxx and Christopher Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio, including Kerry Washington and Samuel L. Jackson, with
writer/director Quentin Tarantino how could anything go wrong with Django Unchained?
Thoughts on books and movies (maybe even video games), some new to us, some not, from a group of friends.
Sunday, June 16, 2013
Saturday, June 15, 2013
House of Cards
"The
exploits of this compelling anti-hero held my interest"
But
wait, let's backup and start with the basics.
Synopsis
House of Cards, a Netflix-produced
political drama series, is based on the novel by Michael Dobbs. The show stars
Kevin Spacey and boasts five prominent directors rotating on direction duties. Netflix
released the entire first season, (13) episodes, in February 2013, a move some
see as a nod to recent binge-viewing trends.
Labels:
binge,
David Fincher,
episodes,
house of cards,
idealism,
kevin Spacey,
michael dobbs,
Netflix,
politics,
power,
show,
TV
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
After Earth - K
Tell me when Will Smith isn't a – okay, not sure thing – but
at least a good bet in a movie? And then
with After Earth, a movie basically made to showcase his kid? Well, in this case we went in knowing it was
a crap shoot. We were too late for the
movie we wanted to see, the latest Fast and Furious installment, and too early
for another interesting looking movie, Now You See Me. I wouldn't say so we were “stuck” with After
Earth, since we chose not to wait, but that’s what we went with, for better,
for worse. And it was….well, you’ll see.
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Oblivion - K
I wouldn't call myself a Tom Cruise “fan” because I don’t go
see just any of his movies. I would
say that when I see his name involved with a movie, I make a pretty safe bet
it’s going to be solid, Minority Report, Mission Impossibles, Top Gun, A Few Good Men to name a few. So when I
went to see Oblivion I was going to see a movie that had a fun sci-fi premise
and at least one talented actor. What I
didn't expect or count on was less than mediocre acting from the rest of the
cast (not quite including Morgan Freeman) and the plot to, not...fall apart, but become
ludicrous and cliché at the same time.
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