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day_zmitchell
Reviews
Everybody Wants to Be Italian (2007)
Light Dish of Pasta
Not too much pasta and sauce on this plate but plenty of fun inside the shell's. I wouldn't call this the best romantic comedy I have seen over the last 2-3 years but what it had for me was a refreshing blend of ingredients that didn't upset my stomach. A good blend of old and new from a cast that worked well on screen together. Once I got past the notion that this guy Jake, was held up on the same girl for 8 years, I was fine. The scene when Jake was with all the educated Harvard types and he broke down his business model was a fun twist, we got to learn that this guy was more than a good looking frame. I have seen critical reviews the last three days and I for one just don't see where they are coming from, I'd suggest you get out and see the film for yourself. I don't know how much the title hurts the film, but I certainly don't think people should take it so literal, it would seem that the writer wanted to express that everyone wants to be passionate, needed, and in search of a sole mate?
Skinwalkers (2006)
Werewolf Thrills
A modest werewolf "epic" that never feels formulaic in the hands of director James Issac. The film is one of horrors most accomplished and deals with the subject of lycanthrope with some imagination. Jason Behr, the consequence of being born with what appears to be a dormant werewolf gene that is awakened when he tastes the warm, "sweet" blood of a red moon. Unable to resist his true nature, he starts killing people in a small rural community. Clearly, the skinwalkers turn in love to hate, because, there is the boy, who can end the curse. All in all this is an action horror what makes for a very fun and entertaining experience.
The film is an action horror in werewolf clothing, and, though it references genre classics such as "The Wolfman", "The Werewolf of London", and even "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" in its climax, it is still very much its own animal. There is a welcome depth to the performances and Issac's acceptance of his condition and desire to be destroyed gives the piece a fine sense of tragedy.
Unlke the genre films of today, which make this feel like something made on another planet, "Skinwalkers" really takes its time to establish a solid foundation for its horror and is a refreshing product of far less cynical times in which human warmth was seen as essential, not "uncool".
A fine achievement.