Apart from Stone, Easy A is supported by other great cast. Amanda Bynes manages to change her ‘good looking’ image into a very annoying fanatical yet back stabber bitch, Thomas Haden Church is very convincing and charismatic as the Olive favourite teacher, while Stanley Tucci and Patricia Clarkson teams up as Olive’s parents. I really enjoy the parents characters, since they are so funny and hilarious, the jokes are on the spots, while they still show good parenting, especially Tucci, he’s never being funnier. Church and Tucci steal some scenes with their array of comic genius. Penn Badgley (from Gossip Girl) as Todd, Olive’s love interest, is a good additional character to provide at least one positive decent guy in the movie. Another inspiring performance is delivered by Malcom McDowell as principal Gibbons, while Lisa Kudrow did some small role but important one (but she still can’t escape her ‘Phoebe’ tag).
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
"Easy" to love, "A" for Awesome...
Monday, November 22, 2010
What do you know about the Deathly Hallows?
HPDH part 1 story continues with the miserable life of the good guys after Dumbledore’s tragic death, while Voldermort and the Death Eaters have been gaining power and influence dramatically. Harry, Ron, and Hermione have been escaping any attention from the radar, whereas the moogle (non witch blood) are living under the new regime of terror, since the Ministry has been infiltrated by the dark side. Together, Harry must find the remaining horcruxes (7 parts of Voldermort soul for the purposes of gaining immortality), whilst in the process of finding them, he has to confront the internal problem of breaking up, and putting his loved ones life in peril.
All the three main cast shows their optimal acting performances, while the supporting casts have been outstanding also (most of them are brilliant A-list British stars). Daniel, Emma, and Rupert deserve the praises and acclaim for keeping the continuity of the roles intact for the past decade. Unexpectedly, the character which has the most development is Dobby the house-elf. Frankly, I hated him in the beginning, where he’s just like Jar Jar Binks from Star Wars. But in the end, I was impressed by his transformation into a memorable character. By the end of the movie, my loath for him has changed into a bit of tears, I’m sure you’ll end up loving that poor elf.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
We are talking about a missile the size of the Chrysler building!
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
You call THIS predictable?
Monday, November 1, 2010
Drop the "the". Just "Facebook". It's cleaner.
Monday, October 25, 2010
I'll see you again. This side or the other...
The movie starts with a bang, and from the first 15 minutes opening, you'll know this is hard R-rated and serious flick, not cheesy like A-Team or whatsoever. The story is nothing fresh but what keeps it feeling fresh is the brilliant performances that go along with it. All the cast got their own moment to shine, with Affleck is easily the best one, while Lively managed to throw away her stereotype cast from 'Gossip Girl', and Joe Hamm...what can I say, he's the man.
Memorable scene (spoiler alert): the phone conversation between Doug and Claire where she stands at the window with all police waiting and she gives him the 'sign' that she's under surveillance and he should split. (But i felt this is ripped off from 'Heat', where Val Kilmer's character showed up and try to meet up with Ashley Judd, and she swept her hand to tell him to move away).