Friday, November 10, 2017

Suburbicon


Well, Mrs. Cohen’s boys are at it again. Joel and Ethan Cohen have teamed up with George Clooney as director, and a cast starring Matt Damon and Julianne Moore, for a strangely dark comedy as only the Cohen brothers can do. I sat down to watch Suburbicon knowing nothing about it. That can be a good thing. Halfway through, I thought, “Hmmm, not liking this. Don’t know if I’ll last.” Three fourths through I thought, “I’m getting into this. Gotta see this through.” By the last frame, I was loving it. The Cohen team managed to make a powerful statement about today’s stupid racism while wrapping it in a 1950’s murder plot ala Fargo. It's getting some pretty brutal reviews, not everyone's cup o' tea, but oh, well. This is a bizarre, deliciously grisly tale that has a bigger message. You’ll try not to smile or even laugh at times, then you will do some thinking. Welcome back, Joel and Ethan; we’ve missed ya!  

Monday, August 14, 2017

The Glass Castle

I intended to write a post about Atomic Blonde, which, by the way, I really liked! More on that later. Instead, I must tell you about an exceptional film I saw this weekend, knowing nothing about it than the cast and synopsis. Hadn't even seen a trailer. Maybe that's a better way, a more pure way. This movie has already passed my personal litmus test - will I be thinking about it for days to come. Yep!
Directed by Destin Daniel Cretton (who?), and based on auto-biographical best-seller by New York Magazine's Jeannette Walls, it is an exquisitely painful, poignant, stirring story of a young, sophisticated woman who must come to terms with her profoundly dysfunctional, yet enchanting childhood. Powerful themes. Powerful cast. Brie Larson is fast becoming one of my favorite actresses, and Woody Harrelson gives his greatest performance. But keep your eyes on little Ella Anderson who steals every scene she is in. Go see it! And then try to forget it!                    

Saturday, July 1, 2017

Baby Driver


Hi again, movie fans!

Today's review is one of my more challenging jobs: I need to convince you to see one of the most original bad guys movies of all time...and do so without giving away anything of substance!  Harder task: How do I really describe the offbeat, one-of-a-kind film?

First, the title:  Baby Driver:  Huh?   Baby is the young star in the sunglasses in the picture above.  He's always wired into rock music.  He's quiet.  He's mysterious.  He's kind...and lives in a very violent world.  We get to know him through flashbacks.  And through his silence.

Baby drives a car like no one can!  You see, he's the getaway driver for the bad dudes who pull bank heists.  When the heists take place, Baby is in the car dialing up his heavy rock, usually a song by Queen, getting ready to do amazing feats with the car.

Enticing?  Hardly!

OK, I'm not a great fan of spinning car movies.  Sure, I was glued to the screen when Gene Hackman chased the druggies in The French Connection, and I will never forget Steve McQueen driving the streets of San Francisco in Bullitt.  But no movie can be based on great chase scenes alone.

The beauty of this film is that it does so much:  It presents bad guys like you've never seen.  Baddest of all: Keven Spacey.  Second and third baddest: Jamie Foxx and Jon Hamm.  Poor Jon...will he ever stop being Don Draper in Mad Men?  YES!  He's finally out of that role with this film!  He is downright wicked!

More: The movie presents a very touching and memorable love story.  In the midsts of all the action, the young male protagonist, Baby, falls in love with the beautiful waitress played by Lily James.  The love motif has a true Romeo and Juliet feel.  Absolutely captivating.

Before long, it's the lovers on the run.  Now the film is like Bonnie and Clyde!  What?

Yeah, confusing.  As I noted, this film does so much:  It  does love, crime, action, and even some witty comedy.  It grabs you with plot, characters, music, dialog.

It grabs you and does not let go

Who plays the young dude who lives for his rock music?  Ansel Engort.  Who?  He was apparently the lead in The Fault in our Stars, the film for teens about young folks dealing with serious illnesses.  He's GREAT!

One reason you'll feel sympathy for the young man is that he's actually forced into the role of getaway driver.  And he's so caring toward his elderly, mute foster father.  He's just plain likable!

This film has been getting rave reviews.  Online, it has a 97% approval rating.  Viewers are abuzz about this unique work of art.

RUN out and see it....and watch folks on the RUN!

My rating:  A+    A film that is unlike anything you've seen.  Enjoy!




Saturday, June 10, 2017

Wonder Woman


Hi Movie Fans!

It's been a while since I've reviewed a film, so what better time than now?  OK, truth to tell, I've been watching lots of movies at home, particularly past series, including Fargo, which is great and must be discussed at another time.

Wonder Woman!  

Who would've guessed this comics-to-film story would be such a hit?  I have not seen the various iterations of Batman or Batgirl since, well, Michael Keaton knocked the role out of the park many years ago with Kim Basinger at this side.

So what got me to see the supposedly mindless action film?  Just the HYPE!  How often do we go online and see rave reviews, nearly all in the 90 percent approval range, for a comic books caper that is half animation, half acting, and probably all forgettable?  

Forgettable?  Wrong!!!

There is nothing forgettable about Wonder Woman. 

It's a huge, ambitious film, with extraordinary action scenes, beautiful people on screen, and a story that sort of grabs, in a sci-fi way.  A must if you go:  Put aside any prejudice you have about the Batman or Superman or Wonder Woman genre, suspend your disbelief, and enjoy!

What's not to enjoy?  First, the most beautiful actors you might have seen on screen.  Chris Pine seems to be a knockout for the ladies.  Curiously, his only really big roles have been in the Star Trek franchise. He played Captain Kirk in the 2016 version.  He is center screen, finally, in Wonder Woman.  So ladies, enjoy his good looks.

Then there's Gal Gadot,  Oh my, what a knockout!  She reminds me of a young Elizabeth Taylor, or Ava Gardner, or Laren Bacall.  She won Miss Israel in 2004, and she has been on the cover of Cosmo and other major glamor magazines for years.  She dazzles!   Talk about a "wonder"!  Yes, she's wondrously pretty!

OK, so much for the eye candy.  Is there anything else noteworthy about the film?  

Well, sort of.  The plot is bold and daring:  the writers combine the Wonder Woman prequel with a WWI story.  Crazy?  Yes.  But somehow, the story works.  We learn about how Wonder Woman grew up being trained as a warrior, left her idyllic island, joined a world war, and kept her ethics pure in spite of some seriously negative experiences! 

The special effects will blow your mind.  You'll see folks flying, ropes glowing, planes crashing, bullets flying in slo-mo, and so much more!  My prediction: The film will win the Oscar for special effects.  

Is it a masterpiece?  Hard to say.  It offers some deep philosophy to accompany the out-of-the-box story:  What is the true nature of mankind?  Are there gods in charge?  Can  anyone change the violence that is inherent in man?  Can a few brave souls change history?  Are women warriors equal to men?  Hmmmm....

True to my purported movie reviewing form, I have given away little of the plot.  It's for you to discover!  

Should you go?  

YES!  

It's fun, and you'll never think the same way again about "mindless" comic book stories that appear on the big screen. 

AND: You'll find that the movie is so entertaining that it "flies" by!  (Pun intended)

Monday, May 8, 2017

Appaloosa




Are you a fan of the WESTERN genre?  I am!  I was raised on it!  

Of course I'm referring mostly to TV.  As a kid, I watched Hopalong Cassidy, Roy Rogers, The Lone Ranger, and more!  Then in the 50s, I sat glued with my family to the TV, enjoying such classics as Have Gun Will Travel, The Rifleman, Bonanza, Cheyenne, Wyatt Earp, and so many others.

What did the early westerns have in common?  They were "sanitized"! 

By that I mean, the cowboys were mythic, aggrandized, idealized folk heroes. There was no blood on the screen when folks got shot.  Everyone dressed well and looked as if they'd just arrived from a fancy clothing shop!  The cowboys seemed mannerly, kind, good natured, cultured, and sophisticated. 

Moreover, most of the westerns were morality plays.  Do you remember how Papa Cartwright would lecture his three sons?  Or how about the dad on The Rifleman who used his weekly adventures to "raise" his young son?  Yes indeed, the good were good, and the bad were bad.

Truth to tell, the good guys were not all good, and the bad guys were not all bad.  No one rode off into the sunset after a good gunfight.  There was dirt and grit in the streets, and drinkers, prostitutes, and scoundrels abounded.  And when folks got shot, they bled! 

Most of all, the "cowboy" was hardly a hero at all!  The word was used to describe the uncouth, unmannerly, often drunk ranch hands who came to town to burn off steam.

Enter Clint Eastwood.  In 1995, he decided to portray the west as it really was.  In The Unforgiven, a ruthless past killer seeks a bounty issued by a group of prostitutes out for revenge.  He joins up with other rogues, meets a sadistic sheriff, and in a climatic ending, hits the bottle in a bone-soaking rain on his way to killing six men!  Step aside, John Wayne.  Time for a dose of reality!

Appaloosa is like The Unforgiven.  It shows us the west as it probably was.  It strives to “unsanitize” life on the American frontier

Never a spoiler, I'll only give the overall gist of the film.  Two men, who just happen to make a living by killing people, ride into town, seeking their favorite job:  sheriff!  Killers?  Sheriff? 

By all means. If we look at the real Wyatt Earp, his morals were dubious.  He and his brothers were even put on trail for murder after the famous OK Corral shootout.

Enter our current anti-heroes:  They admit to having only one area of expertise: taking lives.  They also admit it's a darn good thing they get to do so with the law on their side! 

What makes this pair unique is that, in spite of their basic vicious nature, they are honest, just, and even have a certain likability about them.  They enforce the law with fairness, even if it means shooting a few ruffians.

Watch Ed Harris and Viggo Mortensen dazzle you with dry, cowboy-style conversation.  See Renee Zellweger deftly play the floozy who creates havoc with the men.  And watch Jeremy Irons be a very, very bad dude!  Count on seeing dusty streets, amoral villains, and lots of gunplay. 

But most of all, see the wild west once more as it truly was.  This film shows you the dust, grime, and roughness of the cowboy days.  No singing cowboys here!

Appaloosa is a great film that will stay with you.


Monday, May 1, 2017

The Circle

In keeping with a world that seems upside down these days, here's another anomaly. For me, this movie of Dave Eggers' The Circle is EXACTLY as I pictured in the book. Every single scene was as I had imagined it. Naturally, not everything in the book is included, but what is is quite faithful. Probably because Dave Eggers wrote the screenplay with director James Ponsoldt.

I am a big Eggers fan, but The Circle left me weary and unsatisfied. It's a fairly unredeemable conclusion with a fairly boring protagonist.

However, both book and movie raise vitally important themes and questions for today's technological social media invasions. Eggers' points will probably haunt you, as they did me.

I'll see Hanks in anything. It's a solid enough film, but not great. However, go see it to get yourself to THINK!

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Get Out!


Hi Movie Fans!

It's been a while since Valerie or I last opined on a flick, but I saw a FANTASTIC one, so I would like to make a few comments.

The film is GET OUT!   Strange title, I know.  Get out of what?  Who?  Where?  

Here's the challenge:  I want to sell this flick but not give away any of it!  How can I do that?  

I came up with a brainstorm!  I can best describe the film as having elements of THREE other films.  It will be up to you, the viewer, to try to figure out how the three themes apply to GET OUT!  

Please go straight to Netflix or some other film outlet and watch these films...they're all fun and provide a background for GET OUT!

Film #1:  Guess Who's Coming to Dinner.  OK, this one is dated, I admit.  Remember the basic plot?  White woman brings black man to the house to meet her parents.  Guess what?  They want to get married!  Uh oh...parents are bigots...so now what?  Watch Katharine Hepburn , Sidney Poitier, and Spencer Tracy wow you!  

HINT#1:  GET OUT involves a white woman inviting her black boyfriend to dinner to meet her parents.  But the parents are not all that accepting, in spite of their “sweet” comments that are racial clichés. Trouble is brewing!

Film #2:  The Stepford Wives.  Be sure to watch the original 1975 version with Paula Prentiss and Katherine Ross.  The basic plot?  Couple moves to a new town and finds out that all the folks there are like zombies!  Is it brainwashing?  Why is everyone so machine-like?  Who has put these folks in the trance?

HINT #2:  GET OUT involves a similar situation.  Not exactly the same, but pretty darn close.  Our bi-racial couple must now deal with parent issues AND people who, well, just don't seem themselves!

Film #3:  Surviving the Game.  This little-known cult classic is MUST viewing to really get the full flavor of GET OUT.  Made in '94, and starring Rutger Hauer, Gary Busy, Charles S Dutton, F Murray Abraham, and Ice-T, the film is about whites pursing a black man.  NO details, sorry, because I would give away the GET OUT plot line.

HINT #3:  The kind and intelligent black man who is meeting the parents had better watch out!  It just could be that people, that is, white people, are after him!

Here's why the film is a MUST SEE:  

Over the years, so many films have dealt with race relations.  This one is unique!  It does way more than any other film in its treatment of common feelings concerning African Americans and Whites.  It takes feelings of uncertainty about race, particularly, fear and hatred, to a whole new level!

Be sure to listen for the clichés, with expressions that sound like:  Some of my best friends are black…or similar lines you’ve heard.

Watch Daniel Kaluuya portray the innocent black man who rises to the challenge of managing bigotry with dignity and grace.  

Watch Allison Williams brilliantly play the white girlfriend, who is WAY more than we expect!

Got your interest?  Hope so!  Please...GET OUT and see GET OUT!

It's simply in a class of its own.

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Love Field (1992)



It's sometimes fun to begin a review with odd facts.  Here are two to grab your attention:

1. Love Field was supposed to have Denzel Washington as the main protagonist.  He backed out at the last minute for unknown reasons.

2. Michelle Pfeiffer was nominated for Best Actress for her role in the film, but lost out to Emma Thompson who won for Howard's End.

Do those factoids entice you?  Hope so!

Back in '92, a little known film came out that dazzled reviewers.  The New York Times used the words "remarkable grace" to describe the acting.  The Washington Post called the film a "marvel."  Rolling Stone said that Michelle Pfeiffer "weaves magic."

I have to agree.  I happened on this film late one night.  I had not heard of it.  Since I have long been a true movie buff, and wondered how this film slipped between my fingers, I began to watch.  I was wowed within minutes!

Here are the basics, and again, I am careful not to provide any details that could spoil the film for viewers.

Michelle Pfeiffer plays Lurene, a 60s housewife, who is verbally abused by her husband, yet has a heart of gold.  Lurene feels a special bond for Jackie Kennedy: Both have lost a child.  She is a true Pollyanna... to her the world is beautiful, and all the more so because of the Kennedys.

The date is the third week of November, 1963, and Lurene learns that JFK and Jackie will be visiting Dallas, a long bus ride away.  She is crazy about the new president and his beautiful wife, and she wants to see them when they ride a motorcade in Dallas.  She leaves on her trip on a whim, because, well, that's how Lurene is!  She is sweet and loving, and lovable to us.

On the bus, she meets an African-American man and his daughter, who are on a mysterious journey of some kind. Being curious, affable, and a bit nosy, she gets to know them.  In doing so, she becomes suspicious: Is there some kind of foul play at hand?  Why does the little girl not seem to know her "father?"

That's all I can say!  Remember that we are in the 1960s.  Johnston has not yet signed the much-needed Civil Rights Act.  African-Americans are second class citizens in this country, and they are supposed to sit in the back of the bus.

Remember too that Kennedy is about to be assassinated.  It's a strong emotional potpourri:  Well-meaning white woman, troubled black man, grieving country, racists everywhere, and possible interracial friendship in the making.

Oh my!

The stars are fantastic.  For those of you who don't know Dennis Haysbert, who replaced Denzel Washington as the lead role, he deftly played President David Palmer for six years on 24.  He was also masterful as the young, dignified Nelson Mandela in The Color of Freedom.  And he was a real tough guy in the TV series The Unit.

Michelle Pfeiffer has a long list of credits.  She has played opposite the greats:  Al Pacino in Scarface, Harrison Ford in What Lies Beneath, Matthew Broderick in Ladyhawke, Sean Connery in The Russia House, and Robert Redford in Up Close and Personal.  She's a fantastic actress.

I have seen every one of Michelle's films, and I have always been impressed.  But truth to tell, I think I like her best as Lurene in Love Field.

So, if you want to uncover a sleeper that many consider a gem, try to find Love Field.  Brace yourself for a strong emotional experience:  Racism, History, and Love form a potent mix.







Monday, January 30, 2017

WHAT IF? Three Intriguing FilmS




In this review, I look at a fascinating theme that runs through many movies.  What if I, or you, had taken a different path at a major crossroad in life?

Don’t you love thinking about that? 

We’ve all had fantasies about how differently our lives might have turned out had we taken another job, chosen another career, met another significant other, had children, not had children, dated someone else, said something, not said something…. Oh my, the list is endless!  And think of the strange timing of events too:  what if you had been somewhere else at the very moment something momentous happened?

If you’re fascinated by what COULD have happened in your life, you might enjoy three of the best films out there on the subject.

Back in 1998, a very young Gwyneth Paltrow starred in Sliding Doors.  After getting fired from her job, she rushes to catch a train.  In one scenario, she gets there on time.  Then her life evolves rather melodramatically:  she gets home in time to catch her boyfriend in bed with another woman, then falls in love with a “gentleman” who turns out to be married, and finally has a terrible accident.  In the other scenario, she misses the train.  Her amorous life goes in a different direction, she has other job offers, and meets other people.  How daunting!  Which “sliding door” in life is the best?  Watch the film and find out!

Our next film stop is Run Lola Run!  What an unusual piece of filmmaking.  A German production, starring Franka Potente before she teamed up with Matt Damon in The Bourne Identity, the film offers no less than three alternative futures.  Lola’s boyfriend robs a bank in each scenario.  And in each, poor Lola, who dazzles with her bright red hair, meets a series of different fates.  Watch for the little changes that make each “life” so different.  Again, it’s all about timing:  Will young Lola arrive in time to save her boyfriend?  How and why will each outcome change?  Again, the idea of a split second of time in our lives, those moments that are seemingly serendipitous, makes us wonder about the “ifs” that happen every day.

Finallly, don’t miss a really fun one:  The Family Man.  Starring Nicholas Cage and Tea Leoni, the story is charming and profound.  A self-centered Wall Street macho man, a confirmed bachelor who cares for nothing and no one except money, meets a magician of sorts.  The magician changes the playboy’s reality:  he suddenly awakes in bed next to the girlfriend he was supposed to marry sixteen years earlier.  Worse, he’s got two kids!  The story is a hoot, truly entertaining, and often laugh outloud funny.  But there’s a deep message here:  Which of the two lives is the one the protagonist would choose?  How does he cope with an alternative reality?  What happens in the end?  Cage is at his best as the confused and surprised husband, and you’ll be charmed by Tea Leoni as the patient wife. 

If you ever think about the WHAT IFS in life, you will revel in these three films.  I would recommend all three, because each provides a unique view on different paths in life.

Strangely, the three films were made within the same two years, 1998 to 2000.  Were folks looking at the great millennium change and wondering about the direction of their lives?  Who knows? 

Who can explain the weird meeting of chance and opportunity that comprise all of our lives?  Leave it to the movies to explore the mystery.









Monday, January 23, 2017

Hidden Figures


You know how sometimes you say, they don’t make ‘em like that any more?    Hidden Figures ranks up there in that near-perfect category.  

It’s a whopper, a winner, a top-notch story not to be missed. 

OK, now that I’ve exhausted most of the hyperbole, let me come down to earth and say a few words about this most remarkable piece of work.

Never the spoiler, I’ll simply repeat what most folks know:  It’s about three extraordinary African-American women, who, because of their unique skills in math and engineering, are hired by NASA at a time when few women, and fewer women of color, worked at the government establishment.

The film takes us back to the early 60s, the dawn of the Kennedy years, when racism and institutionalized segregation in many states were the norm.  The first part of the film is a painful, bitter reminder of how white America mistreated and abused fellow Americans of color.

You’ll no doubt squirm, then feel like vomiting, when you are reminded of the state of our country for African Americans back then.   But the first part of the film is important:  For it is against this background of oppression that the emergence of three bright, brave women is all the more extraordinary.  Also in the mix: the incredible prejudice back then against women.  

What really grabs our attention, however, is the backdrop against which the race drama plays out:  Will America get a manned spaceship off the ground and catch up with the Russians?  After all, Yuri Gagarin has just circled the earth and returned safely and the Russians are celebrating in the streets!  Can Kennedy's dynamic young America prove its mettle?

Acting:  Wow!   Let’s start with Kevin Costner.  As the leader of the NASA space team, he is fantastic as a man deeply committed to making the program a success.   He wins our hearts when he works to counter the biases against women of color.   In this movie, he reminds me of the Costner I liked so much in Field of Dreams.

Octavia Spencer:  She’s ALL that, as the saying goes.  What a performer!  Remember her in The Help?  She is full of pride, courage, and tenacity, and she speaks with such gentle eloquence that everyone listens.  She’s at her best when she quietly stands up to her bigoted boss.

Taraji P Henson plays a role as strong as Octavia’s, and she does so with equal aplomb.  As the math genius who shows the other mathematicians how to calculate space vectors, she excels for her wit, charm, and strong determination. She has few prior films to her credit, so this role will no doubt catapult her to stardom.

Kirsten Dunst:  What a bitch!  Haha.  Yes, she’s awful.  But as an actress, awful is good.  It’s not easy to play a villainess, but Kirsten does it with style and edginess.  We come to hate her, so she does her job well!  Hats off to the actress who got her start as a kid in Jumanji and later landed so many key roles.

I think you get the idea.  This is a quality film.  I usually temper my compliments with at least one critical observation.  So just one comment:  I think the third woman, played by the singer Janelle Monae, was the weakest portrait of the three.  We never really got to know her.

Overall, I cannot suggest how the film could be better!  It's a gem.

RUN out and see this one!   You will think about it for a long time afterward.


Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Pink Panther (2006)


OK, viewers, I'm returning to 2006.

Why?  Believe it or not, I never saw Steve Martin's version of The Pink Panther.  I must explain why:  I always loved the Peter Sellers films that came out in the 60s, and I did not want to spoil my fun with a potentially lousy updated version.

Caveat:  Truth to tell, comedy is one of my least favorite genres.  Whenever others tell me to run out and see the "funniest film ever," and I do, I usually sit there and wonder where the humor is.  Maybe it's me?  Or them?  Haha.  Hard to say.

Yet the old Pink Panthers had a certain lightness and fun about them that really got me.  The portrait of the bungling Inspector Clouseau, the Brit with the over-the-top French accent, the fool who always won out in the end, made me laugh until tears came to my eyes.  Sure, the humor was simple, often no more than old-time slapstick.  Yet, the whole breeziness of the films, each of them, made me howl.

Just last week, laid up with a bit of flu, I found a replay of the Steve Martin version.  I thought, okay, I'll give it a try.  I needed cheering up!  Being quite the Peter Sellers enthusiast, I thought, no way, Steve Martin, will you come close to the humor of the original.  How wrong I was!

The 2006 version actually improved, in some ways, over the original.

If any of you recall the character Kato in the Sellers' version, the humor was distasteful.  When Sellers made racist comments about his Asian houseboy, the lines were inappropriate, unnecessary, and demeaning. Those were not funny moments.  In the current story, the character of Kato does not exist.  Now that is what I call a fine upgrade!

Also, Clouseau's boss in the originals, played by Herbert Lom, was way too exaggerated at times.  While he added to the humor, he was often just too farcical to maintain any believability.

Steve Martin is every bit the bungler, falling all over himself and creating disaster wherever he goes, and he does so with the same charming smile and disarming innocence of the original character.  I found his portrayal of the inspector at times even funnier than the original.

The story too was improved.  I won't give away details, since I never want to be a spoiler, but somehow the plot hangs together much better in the 2006 version.  Of course, in all the Pink Panther films, we need lots of suspension of disbelief.  Yet the updated story does seem sort of plausible, in an other-world sort of way.

A word about the characters:  Steve Martin is great.  Always.  Such a talent.  Jean Reno is just okay, maybe somewhat miscast.  Beyonce is not bad, considering she's a singer and not an actress.  But the real surprise is the role of Nicole, Inspector Clouseau's assistant.  Played by Emily Mortimer, the character dazzles!  Mortimer actually steals the show more than once.

My grade:  A+!!!

Prepare to laugh, my friends.  Oh wait.  I'd better not say that!  Humor is so individual that you might find the film utterly un-funny!

So I say: Watch it and try to enjoy!


Sunday, January 8, 2017

La La Land


Gawd, I needed a film like this right now. Confession #1: I love musicals. Confession #2: I loved this one. I felt 2 things from director, Damien Chazelle, while watching this film: a love of an era and a love of film history. I particularly appreciated that the first trailer I saw for this movie told me nothing! Too many trailers give away all the good parts. The second trailer I saw made it look like an entirely different film and in a way it is two films. It is a joyful romp of romance and youth and dreams, with a dose of hard reality of love and sacrifice for those dreams. The color palette was dead on in its homage to an anachronistic mid-century feel. And while this is a musical, the numbers are sparse and integral – not an “in your face at every turn” musical. I’ve always liked Emma Stone (local Valley girl!). She is not “pretty” in traditional sense, but so darned appealing, and her signature singing piece here is a show (and heart)-stopper. Ryan Gosling was fearless in song and dance and actually learned how to play jazz for this role. That’s all I’ll say. More in discussion.