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Hello! Welcome to my blog. Here is where I review movies I have recently seen. Good and bad. I'll waste my time watching bad movies so you don't have to.

Cyrus


When I first heard about the film Cyrus, I thought it was a comedy.  Starring funny men John C. Reilly (Step Brothers, Cedar Rapids) and Jonah Hill (Superbad, Get Him to the Greek) as Cyrus, I went into it getting ready to chuckle.  John (Reilly) is a divorced man who has a hard time meeting women.  When he is invited to a party held by his ex wife and her new fiance, he meets Molly (Marisa Tomei; The Wrestler, Alfie), and after saving him from an embarrassing drunken, singing act in front of a crowd of people, they hit it off instantly.  After seeing each other several times, John wonders why Molly is always leaving in a hurry.  He decides to play detective by hiding in front of her house all night until she makes an appearance.  At this point in the movie, I still haven't laughed because I was too busy feeling sorry for him and thinking he was creepy.  Upon waking up in his car the next morning, he still sees no sign of Molly.  Again, playing detective he creeps around her bushes only to run into Cyrus.  This is where he finds out that Cyrus is Molly's son.  From here, the awkward first meeting takes place.  And then of course the story goes from here, the weird 22 year old still living with his mother tries to sabotage her relationship with her boyfriend our of spite and jealousy. (10 points to whomever can name the "Grease." song I just quoted!)  
The relationship, however, between Cyrus and Molly is very awkward that its funny.  Nowadays, living with your parents in your 20s isn't weird at all. What makes this relationship different is that Cyrus refers to his mother as Molly, not out of disrespect, but out of love, and he still lives with her because, as he states, they are best friends.  The awkward relationship is what made the movie funny.  In one scene, Cyrus nonchalantly uses the restroom as his mom is in the shower.  When John sleeps over and tries to close the door as him and Molly change, she states that they never close doors.  There's also a scene where Molly is cutting up Cyrus' food for him.  The constant war between the two men for Molly's attention is a little funny too.
What makes this film sad is the extremes Cyrus goes to end his mother's relationship with John.  He doesn't pull any pranks (except steal John's shoes, which was really weird) or go to hilarious extremes.  He simply offers to move out.  This isn't slapstick comedy, like Home Alone or Problem Child (R.I.P. John Ritter ;( )It was just really sad. The fight between John and Cyrus at John's ex wife's wedding wasn't even funny, it was also kind of sad. Cyrus was succeeding at tearing John and Molly apart, and he wasn't even being funny about it.
I'm not trying to say this wasn't a good movie, it just wasn't what I expected.  I guess when you put two comedic actors in a film you expect something completely different.  I do appreciate Reilly and Hill trying something different without completely losing their edge.  If you want to see this, go ahead, just don't expect to laugh throughout the entire movie.  I felt bad for John's character just as I felt bad for his character in "Chicago", and I also didn't like Hill's character in this film, for which I think the directors (Jay and Mark Duplass; The Puffy Chair) were going.  The only thing that was never mentioned was Cyrus' father.  Molly mentions that a guy hasn't slept over since Cyrus was born making viewers think his father hasn't been in the picture from the beginning, and an absent father is a good explanation for his relationship with his mother.  So that's the only thing that bothered me.  So yeah this film is, okay I guess, not great but not bad either.  It doesn't make you laugh, but it doesn't make you cry.  It kinda just makes you say "huh, that's awkward".

127 Hours


So I know I stated that I was going to try to watch most of the Academy Award nominations, and I know the Oscars were on weeks ago, but I finally had the chance the other day to watch 127 Hours.  Nominated for 6 Oscars, including Best Picture, Editing, Best Original Score, Best Original Song, Best Actor in a Leading Role, and Best Adapted Screenplay, 127 Hours didn't win a single award.  Despite this, the film is still worth seeing.

Directed by Danny Boyle (Slumdog Millionaire, Trainspotting), 127 Hours stars hunk James Franco (known for his role as Harry Osborn aka the New Goblin in all 3 Spiderman movies).  Franco does not disappoint. Based on a true story, Franco plays Aron Ralston, an adventurous man who made a not so smart move.  Leaving his cell phone behind, and not telling anyone where he's going, Ralston decides to climb the canyons in Moab, Utah.  One wrong move causes his hand to get stuck under a boulder.  Running out of food and water, Ralston does all that he can to conserve his water and stay alive.  He lives to tell the tale, however, by making a sacrifice.

I was a little skeptical about seeing this film.  How exciting can a film with only one person in it be?  Let's not forget 2000s Cast Away.  I personally thought that the moments when Tom Hanks was alone was pretty boring.  Unlike 127 Hours, there was a lot of time allotted to him getting off the island and communicating with other people.  A majority of 127 Hours was just James Franco struggling by himself and his hallucinations, which I found pretty confusing.  I think they did a great job casting James Franco as the lead role.  Let's face it, who's going to watch a 2 hour movie about a guy stuck in a rock unless the guy is hot?  The closeups definitely let the audience relate to Aron.  Even though I knew he was going to survive in the end, there were still parts where I was scared for him.  The part toward the end is a little gory, and even though I love horror movies, I couldn't handle watching Franco cut his arm off.  I bet its because it actually happened.  There's not too much I can write about a film that only has one actor.  The limited supporting cast did pretty well too.  I feel it got jipped in the fact that it should have at least one something.  James Franco did an amazing job, but he was at an unfair advantage, running up against actors that have been doing amazing jobs for a while.  I think the timing was off for this film.  It definitely had some stiff competition.  It needs a little recognition.
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All in all, I recommend this film.  If you're a little squeamish, look away at certain parts.  This film also taught a great life lesson, and there's nothing I love more than a film that teaches a lesson.  Lesson learned:  Don't go anywhere without telling someone where you're going.  So whether you're scaling the Appalachians, or going to a friend's house, make sure someone knows.  I don't care how old you are, everyone's at risk.

P.S. Seeing Treat Williams was definitely a treat!
 
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