I hardly saw any movies
last year – there just wasn’t much that grabbed me, and I think
television has well and truly surpassed movies for quality viewing these
days. I’m sick of sassy
Disney princesses and fed up to the back teeth with superheroes, and I
couldn’t care less about Sandra Bullock floating around in space. There
were a couple I really enjoyed and highly recommend, though.
The Kings of Summer has
a very misleading trailer. You think you’re getting some whacky comedy
about a group of kids with overbearing parents played by (among others)
by Nick Offerman
and Megan Mullally. While it’s true that it’s about a group of kids, and
it is funny, and the kids do have overbearing parents, Nick Offerman and Megan Mullally
are in the movie for maybe 5 minutes each.
The story itself is a
pretty standard coming of age one – these are the best years of your
life, chicks are awesome but then they ruin everything, your family
isn’t really as bad as
you think they are, yada, yada. What sets it a cut above is the charm
of the three boys. Gabriel Basso in particular has been one of
my favourite young actors since that scene in the first season of The
Big C where he finds the storage locker with
all of Cathy’s future presents for him. The Kings of Summer is lovely,
funny and touching and worth watching - especially with a teenage girl because they
just get so into those kind of movies and it’s rather sweet.
The Way Way Back is
another coming of age film, written by Jim Rash and Nat Faxon, and very
loosely based on some of Jim Rash’s experiences growing up. A teenage
boy spends the summer
at the beach house of his mother’s new boyfriend – Steve Carell playing
very much against type. The boy stumbles into a job at a water park run
by Sam Rockwell and staffed by a group of easygoing weirdos. Again,
this is a standard storyline about finding somewhere
to belong, finding your way through the stumbling blocks, choosing your
own path and so on. It’s more overtly funny than The Kings of Summer –
Jim Rash and Nat Faxon are both pretty hilarious people. But there’s
still enough gooey heartwarming stuff going
on to make you feel all ‘Awwwwww’ by the end. I really loved this movie
– it’s the best I’ve seen for a really long time.
I love sassy Disney princess. And superheroes. I can't help it.
ReplyDeleteMy favourite movie of last year was The Trouble With the Curve. Absolutely loved it, which was quite unexpected - I know or care sweet FA about baseball. Clint Eastwood is a baseball scout and Amy Adams is his daughter, plus Justin Timberlake is in it and actually very good.
Pain and Gain absolutely the worst.
I've never even heard of that movie - I'm so out of the loop.
DeletePain and Gain just looks terrible - I don't think I'll be bothering with that one at all.
The Lifeguard must be worse than BAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAD!
ReplyDeleteI think the only things I saw at the cinema were superhero related - pretty sure I saw Iron Man 3 last year; and I saw the Doctor Who thing. I don't think I saw anything else at all.
I think it's been several years since I was last in a cinema. I can't even remember the last time!
DeleteWell, now I NEED to know what happens with Martin Starr in the Lifeguard! Tried to google the plotline to save myself from having to watch the movie but can't find it haha.
ReplyDelete