Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Sunday, May 25, 2014

The Hutsons Watch Frozen for the First Time

Lila: I wonder what's going to happen to Frozen.
Rachel: I don't think the princess's name is actually "Frozen."

Rachel: Wait, I missed it. How did the parents die?
Johnny: They froze to death.
Rachel: Really?
Johnny: Yeah, it's called Frozen.

Rachel: Are you going to dream about snow tonight?
Lila: Uh huh and talking snowmen.

Rachel: I wonder when they're going to make it into a musical.
Johnny: They will probably let it go for a little while.
Pause
Rachel: Ba ha ha.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

I Dreamed A Show In Time Gone By

I wouldn't call myself one of those "extreme" fans of the musical Les Miserables.  I might be sitting here in my Les Miserables sweatshirt, and I may have thrown a going away party in high school when Les Mis went off Broadway.  I may own three different soundtracks, have seen the performance done professionally over ten times, and performed in it as Young Eponine at my high school when I was a sophomore.  I may already be grooming Lila to play Young Cosette...but extreme?  I don't think so.


Ok, so I like it a little bit.  I was super psyched when I heard that they were finally doing a movie, and Johnny and I traced the movie's progress over the last year.  I wasn't really planning to write up a review of it, but after a lengthy email chain back and forth between two of my good high school friends, I decided that the internet world could use a good one sided discussion of the movie, sorted by character.  So here we go!

Jean Valjean: I was very pleased when I heard that Hugh Jackman was going to play Jean Valjean.  Though my brother thought this was an odd prequel to X-Men, I have heard recordings of Hugh's performances in various Broadway shows, so I was excited to see what he would do with the role.  I loved everything that he did.  I cried crocodile tears throughout "Valjean's Soliloquoy," and even though "Bring Him Home" was a bit too high, he acted his little Australian heart out.  Great work, Hugh.

Javert: I always like a villain, but Russell Crowe just didn't do it for me.  I don't know if it was the tightrope walking across buildings and bridges or the lack of vocal chops (ok it was the lack of vocal chops), but he was way down on my list of favorite Javerts.  Johnny, on the other hand, thought he did great.  He liked his rustic-y-ness.

Fantine: Hands down, the best Fantine ever.  She was the perfect age, had the perfect look, and played the part with such feeling and truth.  Interesting fact: I went to high school with her cousin, Mike Hathaway, and we all thought he was going to be Jean Valjean in our performance of Les Mis, but then he didn't try out for some reason that I can't remember, and John Kultgen got the part and was spectacular.  Small world.

Young Cosette: So sweet, so precious, and no fake accent...or if it was, it sounded real.  

Monsieur and Madame Thenardier: These were the ones I was most worried about going into the movie.  Lately, I have felt that Helena Bonham Carter has just been crazy over the top (seen HP lately? yeah...crazy), and Sacha Baron Cohen doesn't really have a Les Mis-y background besides Sweeney Todd.  But I thought they were fabulous!  They were anything but over the top, and they were able to bring humor to the roles without doing the way overdone jokes that the stage Thenardiers resort to. (Ah I stole something and dropped it on the floor, so I'll look at the ceiling and make it look like it fell out of the sky. So funny...ehhh.)

Regular Cosette: No one cares about you, Old Cosette.

Marius: Sigh...he's so dreamy.  I usually am not a huge Marius fan, but Eddie Redmayne played the part so honestly and sincerely, AND he didn't wear eyeliner.  I hate when guys in movies wear eyeliner.  No actual revolutionary students wore eyeliner.  Oh, he was also not a Jonas Brother.  Major props to him for that.

Eponine: Poor Eponine.  She was my only real disappointment.  Not only was she WAY too skinny (let's loosen that belt a little bit, my dear), but I didn't connect with her at all.  She is usually my absolute favorite character, but I almost didn't even notice her in the movie.  A few of her things were cut, but not extremely.  I think they made everyone else bigger and left her alone.  Poor, poor Eponine.  Great singing, though.

Gavroche, Enjolras, and the Students: Spectacular, perfect, stunning, wonderful.  I don't know what other words to use.  They didn't need big name actors for those parts, so they were able to find people who had the vocal ability and the acting ability.  I want to take Gavroche home with me, fix his teeth, and raise him as my own.  He can put his elephant in the backyard.

The set was fabulous.  The costumes were nice revamps of the originals.  They brought in some aspects of the book that can't fit in the stage production (like Javert admitting to turning in Monsieur Madeleine, Gavroche's elephant, etc), which I thought made it even better than the original musical.  One of my favorite things, though, was that the bishop at the beginning was played by Colm Wilkinson, the original Jean Valjean.  Sigh, I love him.

If you haven't seen it, I don't think I ruined anything here...except that there are no Jonas Brothers in it...or Taylor Swift.  Praise the Lord.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

What the Hutsons are Watching

Our Netflix queue has been popping lately with some really great choices that Johnny has made.

en.wikipedia.org

Bernie is a black comedy based on a true story about an assistant funeral director in a small Texas town.  The main character, played by one of my favorites-Jack Black, befriends a mean old woman and pretty much ruins his life doing it.  The characters are absolutely fabulous, especially the random townspeople.  I really really enjoyed this movie: A+.

imdb.com

Melancholia is kind of like Tree of Life where there isn't a lot of dialogue and not a lot happens (until the very end), but it's an extremely beautiful movie.  The movie is based around the idea that a planet, Melancholia, is coming very close to earth.  Kirsten Dunst plays a young woman struggling with depression as she faces the possible end of the world.  I usually find her to be kind of annoying, but she was absolutely stunning in this movie and did a great job playing her character: A-.

en.wikipedia.org
The Company Men is a story about three men who work for a company that lays them off at the beginning of the recession.  It's an interesting window into how losing a job affects these three different men.  Ben Affleck usually seems to be second in my mind to guys like Matt Damon, but he did a really good job playing a husband and father trying to figure out how to care for his family when his life is ripped out from beneath him: B.



Thursday, March 15, 2012

The Great Movie Challenge



Well we are still here.  Yes I've been walking and eating spicy food and everything else overdue women are supposed to do.  Baby Hutson just really likes the home that I have made for it, and I can't blame him/her.  It's like living in a hot tub.

Though I haven't been able to do much beyond bouncing on my exercise ball and getting my brother to do our lawn work (it's his spring break after all...gotta keep him busy), Johnny and I have been able to keep up with our latest endeavor -- watching all the Academy Award Winning films for Best Picture.  Here's a little list with my reviews so you can decide if you too would like to see them.

Marty 1955
http://www.amazon.com/Marty-Ernest-Borgnine/dp/images/B00005AUKB

Marty is about a middle-aged guy who's never been able to find love.  He meets a girl that he likes, but his super Italian mother and his friends don't like her.  That's pretty much the whole movie.  It's a great movie if you enjoy well-written characters, but if you want something to happen as far as the plot, it's probably not for you.  I give it a C+.

My Fair Lady 1964
http://www.teachwithmovies.org/guides/my-fair-lady.html 
Now I have seen My Fair Lady numerous times, but I don't think I've actually ever sat down and watched the entire thing in one sitting until this recent time.  It is one long movie, let me tell you.  For those of you who don't know, My Fair Lady is the story of a wealthy linguistics professor who takes a poor flower girl under his wing and teaches her how to speak and act properly.  Audrey Hepburn is superb in this role, and the music is excellent.  Johnny particularly liked the songs "I Shall Never Let A Woman in My Life" and "Why Can't A Woman Be More Like A Man?"  I give it an A-.

Midnight Cowboy 1969
http://criminalmovies.blogspot.com/2011/11/midnight-cowboy.html 
So when this one came in the mail from Netflix, I said, "Johnny, what's this one about?"  He started reading the summary: "Midnight Cowboy is the only X-rated movie to win the Academy Award for Best Picture."  We kind of looked at each other, thinking, "What have we done?"  I will say, however, that the X rating is not necessary.  Midnight Cowboy is the story of a young man from Texas who travels to New York City to become essentially a male prostitute, assuming there are a whole bunch of rich women in New York who would want him.  His plans go awry, and he eventually teams up with a con-artist, played by Dustin Hoffman, to try to make ends meet.  I'm not saying you should go rent this for your elementary schooler, but the X rating seems to come from some homosexuality that probably today wouldn't earn more than a PG-13 rating.  Because I love Dustin Hoffman, I give this one a B-.