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Showing posts from December, 2012

REVIEW: THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY

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As much as people acclaim the "Lord of the Rings" series, there are those who find fault in the nearly nine and half hour saga that's had fan-boys craving more Middle Earth since the end credits of "Return of the King" rolled.  You don't hear much about them, as only six or seven inhabit the world at a time.  I revisited the series this year after seeing them for the very first time in mid 2010.  I have a goal to see all of the Oscar-winning Best Pictures, and because "ROTK" fell into that category, I was obliged to watch the gargantuan trilogy.  I feel foolish now for thinking it was a chore, as "The Lord of the Rings" is a truly moving, ambitious and genius driven trilogy that refreshed how we all looked at science fiction and fantasy, and how it could be crafted as this dead-serious work of art.  Jackson had Hobbit-feet sized shoes to fill with this first of three installments, "An Unexpected Journey." I've always adm

REVIEW: LES MISERABLES

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Before I go into detail about the powerhouse musical that is "Les Miserables" (referred to as "Les Mis" in this review, though throughout awards season I've heard it referred to as at least 5 other titles.), let me exclaim my bias for musicals, as I have worked on several of my high school's musicals along the way.  At first guys never want to profess their interest for the movie musical, but after a "Grease" or "Sound of Music," their interests are usually turned for the best.  The truth is, despite the macho stereotype, there are decent, non-Disney musicals out there on the market for an audience, and "Les Mis" happens to be one of them. Well, I suppose you could go into a "Grease" or a "Seussical" with no prior musical background and still be pleasantly surprised.  "Les Mis" is strictly for musical lovers, as it's not so much a musical as it is an opera (think "Jesus Christ Superstar,&

REVIEW: LIFE OF PI

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The age-old question concerning movies and books arose as I was about to enter the cinema to see "Life of Pi 3D..." should I have read the book after the movie (books are 99% of the time better)?  By pure chance I had picked up "Life of Pi," a thick, small novel in my school's library based on the cover alone, of a small foreign child with a tiger in a tiny boat, both looking down at the sea.  Of course with "Pi" you're expecting some math genius, "A Beautiful Mind" type-deal, but then I read the first few chapters that night.  The novel was written in the form of a series of flashbacks, presented as one big story Piscine (Pi) Patel tells a couple of Chinese investigators.  While it was a mammoth of  a thing to get through, it was enchantingly rewarding, and was one of the most interesting books I've read in a long time. "Life of Pi" opens up quietly in a zoo, where Pi and his family make a living.  Pi is so thoroughly in