Showing posts with label Alexis Bledel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alexis Bledel. Show all posts

Movie Review Post Grad

Post-Grad (2009) 

Directed by Vicky Jenson

Written by Kelly Fremon

Starring Alexis Bledel, Zach Gilford, Rodrigo Santoro, Jane Lynch, Carol Burnett, Michael Keaton

Release Date August 21st, 2009

Published August 20th, 2009

The late great Gene Siskel is quoted as having asked this question about a movie: "Is this movie as interesting as watching a documentary of this same group of actors having lunch?".  It was a pass/fail standard that Mr. Siskel established for good and bad movies and applied to the new comedy Post Grad, we have a definite failure.

With a cast that includes Carol Burnett, Michael Keaton, Jane Lynch and Alexis Bledel, I would have rather watched them read reviews of their other movies than watch them play out this brutal mess of a comedy.

Post Grad ostensibly stars Alexis Bledel as a disastrously put upon college grad. As Ryden Malby, Bledel is a bright. sweet and utterly clueless gal who fails to secure a job before she graduates college. Hanging her hopes on one interview at the only company she wants to work for, Ryden not surprisingly finds herself jobless when the company hires someone more qualified than she.

Her troubles send her back to mom and dad's house. Mom and dad are played by Michael Keaton and Jane Lynch as the wacky approximations of sitcom characters. Keaton is an endlessly tinkering oddball who, in classic sitcom fashion, loves a good get rich quick scheme. They have another child, much younger than Ryden, who is even weirder and more off-putting than his bizarre parents.

And then there is grandma played by Carol Burnett. Her main character trait is waiting to die. She has an oxygen tank and at one point calls her family, including her young grandson, to a funeral parlor where she is looking to purchase a high end casket. This idea plays out in such a broad and bizarre way that sympathetic gang members and a casket on the lawn are somehow the result.

Of course, a film this mindless and idiotic has romantic complications. Ryden has a best friend played by Friday Night Lights QB Zach Gilford. Of course they are meant to be, he's in love with her for reasons only he knows, she's written as a dummy who can't see he's in love with her. Meanwhile, Ryden has a dalliance with a doofy neighbor, ten years her senior, that only exists to delay the inevitable. The neighbor has a cat and.. well... the less said about the cat the better.

Really, the less said about this movie the better. A week after audiences so foolishly passed on the terrific teen comedy Bandslam we get Post Grad, a movie with more power behind it and thus more likely to be seen. What a shame. Bandslam will likely be out of theaters by the end of this weekend while Post Grad stinks up far too many screens.

Post Grad is an idiot movie, filled with idiot characters trapped in an idiot approximation of a plot. I am begging you, if you can find Bandslam, see that movie and forget you have ever heard of Post Grad. Bandslam doesn't have long before it leaves theaters all together.

Movie Review Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2

The Sisterhood od the Traveling Pants 2 (2008) 

Directed by Sanaa Hamri 

Written by Elizabeth Chander

Starring America Ferrara, Blake Lively, Amber Tamblyn, Alexis Bledel 

Release Date August 6th, 2008 

Published August 5th, 2008 

Society dictates that a 32 year old man is not supposed to enjoy a movie called The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants. And yet, there I was in 2005 watching four exceptional young actresses navigate the adolescent angst that only a teenage girl can truly understand and I was moved. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants was sweet and funny with a great big heart and I loved that about it.

For all of its melodramatic faults, it was a film of great understanding and warmth. The sequel, unimaginatively titled Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2, directed by Sanaa Hamri, is like the original filled with warmth, heart and humor and once again I was moved.

Picking up three years after where the original left off, the sisterhood is now split up at different colleges, in different cities. This hasn't stopped them from frequently returning home to visit and bond over the magic pair of jeans that fits all four of them and brings them good luck just when they need it. Leading the pants parade is Carmen (America Ferrara) who clings to the pants and the sisterhood as her chaotic family moves into a new home with her mom expecting a new baby with her new husband.

Pulling away ever so slightly from her sisters is Tibby (Amber Tamblyn). Off to New York for film school, Tibby is growing tired of the rituals of the pants, though has no less love for her sisters. Also adrift in her own angst is Bridget (Blake Lively) who passes on summer at home with her friends and single dad, for a trip to Turkey and an archaeological dig. There she meets a professor (Shohreh Aghdashloo) who reminds her of the mother she never had.

As for Lena, freshly returned from another trip to Greece, she has broken up with her long distance boyfriend Kostos (Michael Rady) and moved on to a fellow art student named Leo (Jesse Williams). Their meet cute provides Bledel with her funniest scenes. Of course if you think Kostos goes away quietly, clearly you haven't seen the trailer which shows all four girls in Greece.

Though divided, the sisterhood is strong and you are never under the impression that they will be apart for long. Director Sanaa Hamri, taking over for Ken Kwapis who directed the charming first film, does a tremendous job of balancing a number of new characters, like Tibby's boyfriend Brian played by Leonardo Nam, and still finds plenty of time to tell each girl's individual stories.

Sometimes it is the simplest pleasures that are the greatest of pleasures. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants is very simple. This is formula melodrama at its most obvious yet entertaining and engaging. Sure, there is nothing here you haven't seen before but it's done better here, with more care and skill and with a great deal more heart than similar formula movies.

Arguably the most engaging and moving scenes involve Blake Lively the young star of the new TV hit Gossip Girl. Lively was less of a presence in the original where her character was defined by being whiny and sexually precocious. A few years on and Lively has flowered into a strong beautiful, talented young woman and the character of Bridget reflects that.


As the closed minded dismiss The Sisterhood of the Traveling pants 2, I appeal to you to see the movie for the scenes between Lively and the formidable Blythe Danner alone. These scenes are some of the most moving moments in any movie this year. I kid you not, the circumstances involved combined with the skills of these two wonderful actresses will move many audiences to unexpected degrees.

The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 will not be mistaken for great cinema but as fun, entertaining, even moving, melodrama it's pretty terrific. Four exceptional young actresses, the future of Hollywood, and a rising star director craft a movie that hits its marks perfectly and nails every formulaic scene necessary to propel the audience where it wants to go.

Nakedly manipulative? Maybe, but what modest melodrama isn't. If the manipulation is this pleasant and heart warming, who cares? 

Movie Review Megalopolis

 Megalopolis  Directed by Francis Ford Coppola  Written by Francis Ford Coppola  Starring Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel, Giancarlo Esposito...