All posts by Tony Hughes

You Can Count On Me (2000)

From NetFlix:

Small-town single mom Sammy Prescott (Laura Linney) is preoccupied
with raising her son Rudy (Rory Culkin), who’s become sullen — and
curious about his missing dad. Amid romantic and work troubles,
Sammy’s wayward brother Terry (Mark Ruffalo) appears, instantly
bonding with Rudy and instigating a perilous father-son reunion.
Director Kenneth Lonergan’s intimate, Oscar-nominated drama
won the Sundance Film Festival’s Grand Jury Prize.

MarkRuffalo does a great job. Ends with a scene that for me was
very sad. Nevertheless, a real feel-good.

The Accused (1988)

From Net Flix:

Jodie Foster won an Oscar for her portrayal of Sarah Tobias in
this fact-based drama. After being raped by three men in a local
bar, Sarah, enraged at the light sentence her attackers receive,
persuades attorney Kathryn Murphy (Kelly McGillis) to press
charges against the men who cheered on the attack. But it won’t be
easy: Sarah has a shady past that could be used against her in court.

This is a VIOLENT film. Towards the end there is an ugly gang-rape scene. But Jodie Foster’s facial expressions alone are worth the entire film. It’s probably the best Jodie Foster film I have seen.

Marvin’s Room (1996)

From NetFlix:

The tables are turned when straight-laced Bessie (Diane Keaton) —
who devotes her life to caring for her chronically ill father (Hume Cronyn) —
must ask her estranged, bohemian sibling (Meryl Streep) for help after
Bessie suffers a health catastrophe. The film is a first-class adaptation of
Scott McPherson’s play, with a young Leonardo DiCaprio holding his
own among a heavyweight cast that includes Robert De Niro and Gwen Verdon.

The ensemble work is good. I laughed out loud in spots. It’s amazing to see formerly
sexy red-headed Gwen Verdon (Damn Yankees!) as “dotty old Aunt Ruth”. The
character transformations (especially Meryl Streep) are convincing.

And yes, it was one of those “#$%^# Chick Flick Tear Jerkers”.

The Martian Child (2007)

From NetFlix:

In this film based on a David Gerrold novel, John Cusack stars as a
recently widowed science-fiction writer who adopts a 6-year-old boy
to quell his loneliness. The catch? The kid ( Bobby Coleman) claims
to be from Mars. At first, the new dad doesn’t pay much attention to
the boy’s story, but when an odd series of events occurs, he begins
to believe his son may be telling the truth in this film co-starring
Amanda Peet and Joan Cusack.

————————

This is NOT science fiction. My all-time favorite movie about a child is “Dear Frankie”. If you have not yet seen “Dear Frankie”, I urge you to do so. However, “The Martian Child” is probably the most gentle movie about a child that I have ever seen. John Cusack plays a widower who does the most wonderful job trying to bring the boy into a normal interaction with the rest of the world. It is sort of a model about how to raise a sensitive and unusual child.

Sleuth (2007)

From Netflix:

Aging detective writer Andrew Wyke (Michael Caine) squares off
against Milo Tindle (Jude Law), the struggling actor who stole Wyke’s
wife in this twisted — and twisty — plot of deception and double
crosses. Kenneth Branagh directs a gripping screenplay by Nobel
Prize laureate Harold Pinter, who stylishly updates the 1972
original — in which an Oscar-nominated Caine played the Milo
role opposite Laurence Olivier’s Andrew. Double feature anyone?

The movie feels like a play and is essentially talking heads. But what two heads !!!!!!! It is a pleasure to watch real time-honored acting. Michael Caine and Jude Law pair off in the most impressive performance I have seen in a long time.

Beware ! This is Harold Pinter and it doesn’t take long for things to get down and dirty. NOT FOR CHILDREN.

The plot twists are jolting. The ending is perfect. The updated 2007 setting works well.

Don’t miss it!

Blazing Saddles (1974)

Politically incorrect and relentlessly funny, Mel Brooks’s take on Hollywood Westerns follows the tortured trail of freed slave Bart, who’s elected sheriff of the racist town of Rock Ridge. He must foil a land-grabbing governor (Brooks) with help from a washed-up, pot-smoking gunslinger (Gene Wilder).

This might just be the best Mel Brooks satire. It features
a black cowboy teamed up with Gene Wilder. There are Jewish
indians (Mel Brooks himself), and Madeline Kahn as a tired protitute.
Probably not for children.

My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997)

From NetFlix:

Food writer Julianne Potter (Julia Roberts) panics when she gets word that her longtime platonic pal, Michael (Dermot Mulroney), is finally getting hitched, to a debutante named Kimberly (Cameron Diaz). With assistance from her gay companion (Rupert Everett) — and to the accompaniment of Burt Bacharach tunes — she sets out to sabotage the wedding and make a last-minute play for her man. James Newton Howard’s score received an Oscar nomination.

Julia Robert’s classic effort to sabotage her friend’s wedding. Did you
ever see an entire restaurant break out into song ? Definitely a feel-good.

Babe (1995)

From NetFlix:

Director Chris Noonan’s tale of precocious piglet Babe’s (voiced by Christine Cavanaugh) struggle to fit in and become a champion sheepherder won the hearts of audiences and critics. Nominated for seven Academy Awards (including Best Picture), Babe won the Visual Effects Oscar, and everything from farmer Arthur Hoggett (James Cromwell) to the multitude of farm animals to the humble, edgy script is remarkably appealing for kids and adults alike.

One of those feel-good movies that everyone should see before they die.

Butterfly (1999)

From NetFlix:

At the onset of the Spanish Civil War, a sheltered boy (Manuel Lozano) in rural northern Spain forms an indelible bond with his kindly leftist teacher (Fernando Fernán Gómez), who imparts his love for nature to the young student. Director Jose Luis Cuerda gentle and nostalgic drama, based on the short stories of Manuel Rivas, was nominated for 13 Goya Awards (the Spanish Oscar), winning for Best Adapted Screenplay.

Beautiful, sad story of friendship between young boy and devoted teacher at time of Spanish civil war. Inspired by a book called “La Lengua de las Mariposas” (Butterfly’s Tongue). Shows the destructive split in Spanish society during the Spanish Civil War. The ending could be hard to take. But I call this a “feel good” because the interplay between the boy and the teacher is beautiful. Really a masterpiece.

The Man of My Life (2006)

From NetFlix:

When Frédéric (Bernard Campan) and his family meet a gay man named Hugo (Charles Berling) while vacationing in the Provençal countryside, their lives are irrevocably changed, as the two men develop a strong yet unconventional friendship. Although Frédéric is happily married to his wife, Frédérique (Léa Drucker), his bond with Hugo challenges the strength of his marriage and ultimately inspires him to reevaluate his life.

This film is French in many ways: language, culture, beautiful photography,
symbols, ambivalence, ambivalence, and more ambivalence. Don’t expect
a definitive ending. You have to be in the mood for this one. And if you do
last through this dreamy, slow movie, please tell me how you interpreted the
relation between the straight husband (who truly loves his wife and family)
and the gay man when everyone meets on an extended summer holiday.

How did this end ?