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CONTENTS
for DAN'S PAPERS the week of
May 4, 2007
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MINI
– MOVIE REVIEWS

Spiderman 3
The most successful of current superhero franchises returns with a darker
edge. Comic book obsessives will be anxious to see how Tobey Maguire stands
up against new enemies Venom (Topher Grace) and the Sandman (Thomas Haden
Church). Exciting, colourful and gleefully sinister, this is a summer
blockbuster par excellence.
Lucky You
Given the current mania for online poker, Warner Brothers is clearly hoping
to make the most of this thoroughly bland comedy drama. Eric Bana stars
as a professional poker player trying to make it big in the World Series.
Drew Barrymore plays his love interest and looks bored throughout the
movie. To be avoided.
Kickin’ It Old Skool
Never-has-been, Jamie Kennedy, stars as a 32-year-old who wakes up after
20 years in a coma. Still with the mind of a pre-teen, he decides it’s
time to round up his former breakdancer friends. While the concept is
authentic 1980’s, this is truly tedious fare.
The Invisible
First it was all the rage to remake Asian horror movies and now it’s
the return of Scandinavian thrillers in this supernatural whodunit. Justin
Chatwin stars as a teen trying to solve his own murder from beyond the
grave in a film that describes itself as “Ghost meets the OC.”
Next
Nicolas Cage limps closer and closer to career annihilation with this
uninspired thriller. Playing a Las Vegas magician who can see the future,
he-finds himself up against the CIA who wants to use his powers for evil.
Julianne Moore offers meek, but beautiful support.
The Condemned
While the idea of WWE’s Stone Cold Steve Austin being shipped off
to an island in the middle of nowhere is certainly appealing,-there’s
no need to actually watch it. Here he plays a convict being used as a
contestant by a-reality-TV deathmatch show. A deeply subpar Running Man.-
Vacancy
The abysmal Kate Beckinsale continues her campaign of cinematic assault
in this tale of a young couple that finds themselves trapped in a very
sinister motel. This is director Nimrod Antal’s first US feature
film, and it’s an inauspicious start. At best, this is a mildy claustrophobic
B-movie. At worst, this makes The Hills Have Eyes 7 look original.
Hot Fuzz
The British team behind zombie-farce Shaun of the Dead return for this
parody of police drama. Perhaps the genre itself is less ripe for satire,
or perhaps the plot just doesn’t move quite smoothly enough, but
this has none of the brio of their previous outing. Certainly a welcomed
change from drab American romcoms, but nothing special in its own right.
Fracture
After a string of roles playing sedate, older characters, Anthony Hopkins
returns to the psychotic calm-that won him international acclaim for The
Silence of the Lambs. While this tale of a wily and murderous husband
never comes close to that classic, it’s nonetheless a tense and
sinister film. The ever-excellent Ryan Gosling weighs in as assistant
DA seeking justice for the deceased.
Pathfinder
Has director Marcus Nispel been possessed by the spirit of Mel Gibson?
Certainly, this is a far cry from Nispel’s music video work (Cher,
Janet Jackson etc.) and feels much more in the overblown, simplistic ‘historical’
epic vein. Here, the plot concerns a fateful meeting between the Vikings
and the Native Americans. Bloodshed ensues.
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