A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS – Review

Okay, have you added your jack-o-latern to the compost heap and packed away all the cardboard witches, black cats, and ghosts? Good, cause it’s time to grab the decoration box for the next big holiday (sorry Thanksgiving, aside from the fold-out table top turkey, you’re mainly a big lavish meal followed by hours of football). December will be here before you know it, and this new release tries to add some laughs along with the wreaths. Plus it’s that rare two-for-one flick in that it’s a seasonal celebration and a sequel, just as with THE BEST MAN HOLIDAY from four years ago. And while the holiday is one for families to get together, this new movie is really aimed at the older revelers. It’s rated “R” for raw and rowdy, with jokes and gags much raunchier than the Parkers (from the classic A CHRISTMAS STORY) or the Griswolds would serve up with the egg nog (these folks would whip it up with a strong kick). Just a year ago this past July, film goers were stunned at the “un-PC” hi-jinks of a trio of matriarchs known as the BAD MOMS. Now they’re back to wreck havoc under the fancy tree in A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS. And their own wild and wacky mothers are joining in the naughty nonsense.

 

So it’s over a year later, but Amy (Mila Kunis) is still in a funk as she looks over the debris of her Christmas Eve decorations. As we flash back to several days prior, we find her in a much better mood. Her two kids are doing well and her romance with hunky widowed dad Jessie (Jay Hernandez) is really going strong. However holiday prep is stressing her out, especially since her folks will soon arrive. Things are always hectic at Kiki (Kristen Bell) and Kent’s house with their three (or is it four) rambunctious kids. Then things get truly chaotic with the unexpected early arrival of her widowed mother Sandy (Cheryl Hines) who takes clingy to a whole new level (she even has her hair styled and colored to match her daughter). Meanwhile Carla (Kathryn Hahn) is putting in long, tiring hours at the spa tending to the ..ahem…grooming needs of the local ladies. Going home, she’s surprised to see a big semi-truck pull up to the front lawn. The passenger door opens and out hops her free-spirited mother Isis (Susan Sarandon), decked out in a cowboy hat, tight sequined slacks, and sans bra. As she talks and tokes, Carla wonders when mom will hit her up for a loan.

 

Meanwhile back at Amy’s place, her mother Ruth (Christine Baranski) arrives with the force of a fierce blizzard, with her hubby Hank (Peter Gallagher) in tow, wrestling with the massive luggage. Ruth tosses expensive gifts at the kids while sneering at Amy’s attempts at festive decorations. Luckily Amy is able to blow off some steam with Carla and Kiki down at the mall the next day. The woman decide that they will not let their moms ruin the holiday. In the days before the 25th, Kiki drags Sandy to a family therapist Dr. Karl (Wanda Sykes) in order to set up “boundaries”. Carla has a most delightful spa client, an exotic dancer (okay, male stripper) named Ty (Justin Hartley) who needs a slight “touch up” before competing in a “sexy Santa” contest. Could he be her “mistletoe match”? Amy’s not having so much fun as Ruth brings in her own workers to redo Amy’s house before she hosts a fancy event on the 24th (live birds are part of the front lawn display). Is there any way the two can reach a compromise before Christmas becomes a family destroying battle of wills?

 


Just as with the original outing, the film’s strength is the easy-going chemistry and expert comic teaming of the star trio, but here we get to double the talent. Having achieved her independence, Kunis as Amy exudes more confidence, but her history with mom starts to slowly chip away at her. While more of the straight man (or woman) last year, Kunis shows more of her comic and dramatic skills while indulging in inspired bits of slapstick. Like Amy, Bell’s Kiki is a much stronger role, with little of timidity of her introduction. This time, her mom inspires hilarious expressions of frustration and exasperation from her (we almost expect to see an animated thought balloon with “?!!” to pop up from her noggin). There’s even a playful, sexy side to Kiki as she is more at ease with her hubby. Speaking of the “s-word”, Hahn as Carla is still the neighborhood bad girl bombshell, emerging from her spa smock and transforming into a rock vixen, just as Diana Prince changes to our fave Amazon. Hahn still delivers her lurid lines of dialogue with delight, but we get a bit of her vulnerable side as she melts for her new beau. As for the grandmas’, Hines is a scene stealer with her terrific rapport with Bell and her happy, too-sweet passive aggressive attitude, not to mention her too long hugs which give her a chance to inhale Bell’s hair (that look of ecstasy is priceless). Sarandon reprises her mature “man-eater”, this time mixed with the “wild child” who’s never truly grown up, thinking the party will never end. Baranski may be one of the best cinema snobs since Margaret Dumont. When she enters Amy’s home her nose twitches as if she’s just walked into a neglected outhouse. Her suburb diction propel all of her dismissive comments to maximum destructive effect. Her Ruth has no clue to her cruelty. Sykes absolutely kills as the “no B.S.” counselor. As for the guys, Gallagher is effective as the brow-beaten pop who knows just the right advice to give to his kid. And Hartley not only is eye candy, but proves to have some sharp comedy chops.

 

Writer/directors Jon Lucas and Scott Moore return also. And they keep the film rolling at pretty much the same pace, though they aren’t concerned with Amy’s job, nor the kids’ schools (we do a cameo from a former foe from there). They indulge once more in too many montages with wacky slow motion (and slooooow sound) and they go for too many easy laughs in the script (really, a lil’ girl dropping the “F-bomb” nearly three times straight, c’mon). Plus the plot doesn’t veer past the usual Christmas movie clichés. Understanding will be shared along with warm, teary hugs, of course. Still, the film’s worth seeing just for the supreme comedic talents and timing of these, not three, six gifted actresses. They’re the delightful gift wrapped inside A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS.

 

3.5 Out of 5

 

Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell, Kathryn Hahn And Christine Baranski Star In Hilarious A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS Trailer

KATHRYN HAHN, MILA KUNIS, and KRISTEN BELL in A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS

In his review of the 2016 comedy BAD MOMS, Jim Batts wrote:

“With their second feature film as directors (21 & OVER was the first), screenwriter Jon Lucas and Scott Moore (they did pen the THE HANGOVER) have proven that they can deliver a film that tackles more adult concerns and situations without sacrificing the laughs. The laughs are big and the cast is most engaging (hooray for Hahn), so expect to have a good, raucous time with some BAD MOMS.”

Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell and Kathryn Hahn are back for more hilarious shenanigans in the brand new trailer for A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS.

A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS follows our three under-appreciated and over-burdened women as they rebel against the challenges and expectations of the Super Bowl for moms: Christmas.  And if creating a more perfect holiday for their families wasn’t hard enough, they have to do all of that while hosting and entertaining their own mothers.  By the end of the journey, our moms will redefine how to make the holidays special for all and discover a closer relationship with their mothers.

Starring Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell, Kathryn Hahn, Christine Baranski, Cheryl Hines, Jay Hernandez, Wanda Sykes, Peter Gallagher and Susan Sarandon, A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS opens in theaters November 3, 2017.

A Bad Moms Christmas
MILA KUNIS, KRISTEN BELL, and KATHRYN HAHN in A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS.

WILSON – Review

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This week sees another comic book adaptation arrive at movie theatres, while the Lego Batman and Logan are still pulling audiences in at the multiplex. Ah, but this film is not another superhero slugfest (we’ll have three more of those from Marvel Studios, and two from Warner/DC by the year’s end). No this comes from the “upper classes” of illustrated narratives, those “serious and somber” graphic novels (kind of a “highfalutin'” moniker). Several prestige flicks have been based on such books, like THE HISTORY OF VIOLENCE and THE ROAD TO PERDITION (both earned Oscar noms). The “graphic artist” (hey, I’ll bet he’d prefer cartoonist) behind this new film is no stranger to cinema. Matter of fact, this is his third feature-length movie adaptation. The first was my personal favorite flick of 2001, the quirky GHOST WORLD (no ectoplasmic apparitions, but a teenage Scarlett Johansson). Five years later ART SCHOOL CONFIDENTIAL was released, a very authentic take on art college derailed by an odd out of place murder mystery. Now, more than ten years later, another Daniel Clowes film is finally here. And hey smart guy, it’s not another big screen bio of our 28th prez. This springs from the acclaimed 2010 book WILSON.
We meet the title character (Woody Harrelson) at the start of a typical day. He wakes up in his run-down, filled with dusty books apartment and sees that his beloved terrier has made a mess in the kitchen. He then takes his pooch for a walk though his urban neighborhood (Wilson seems to have to no discernible employment). Along the way he taunts a woman who speaks to his dog and a young man writing on his laptop outside a coffee shop. Then the bad news phone call occurs. His aged father is dying, so Wilson hops on a train (and annoys a passenger trying to sleep), and visits his comatose papa in the hospital. Oh, before the trip he leaves his pup with a sweet, bright-eyed “pet sitter” friend named Shelly (Judy Greer). When dad passes, Wilson is distraught and wonders if he will die alone. This is hammered home when his best (and maybe only) pal Robert (Brett Gelman) inform him that he’s moving his family to a distant town (Wilson’s rant about the place is really stinging, but funny). After trying to reconnect with an old school buddy, Wilson, after a disastrous pet store incident, decides to re-enter the dating scene. Sharing stories with Alta (Margo Martindale) over ice cream, Wilson talks about his ex-wife who dove into substance abuse (and possible prostitution) after leaving him and aborting their baby. Surprisingly, Alta tracks her down with a few clicks on her cell phone. It’s road trip time again as Wilson invades the life of his ex, Pippi (Laura Dern), who has cleaned up her act and started over as a waitress at an upscale restaurant. She’s not too happy to see him, but as the ice thaws she casually mentions that she did not abort their child, and instead gave the daughter up for adoption. Wilson dashes off to a low rent private eye and tracks down the child, now a 17 year-old named Claire (Isabella Amara). His goal is now clear, so he drags Pippi off to the posh suburbs to meet and hopefully bond with their long-lost daughter. What could possibly go wrong?

 

 

 

Of course this lil’ indie’ is a true showcase for the endearingly eccentric Harrelson. Wilson is the role he’s been building toward since his days behind that Boston bar. He’s following a long line of movie and TV grumps and grouches, going back to Wallace Beery and W.C. Fields to Walter Matthau and Larry David (even the Seymour character played by Steve Buscemi in Clowes’s GHOST WORLD). And many will compare Mr. H with that other Woody (not the woodpecker, but Mr. Allen). Sure Harrelson’s doing the surly intellectual, but there’s an aggressive unpredictable, occasionally violent nature to this title character. Seeming to lack any social skills, he has no boundaries, no filter. Without warning he’s in your face, or rather the unfortunate faces who incur his disdain. Harrelson demands our focus in every scene, as we wait for any off-kilter, unbridled bit that can happen at any moment, in the most pedestrian of settings. He’s amusing and a bit endearing, although Wilson would be exhausting to deal with in real life (and he actually calls someone else “toxic” at one point).

 

But the movie’s not entirely the “cranky Luddite show” (Wilson can’t stand tech). Harrelson shares the screen with two superb actresses who navigate very complex roles. As Pippi, Dern shows us a woman who thought she had escaped from her past. When Wilson suddenly appears, she’s like a cat trapped in a corner with every escape route blocked. Then Dern slowly starts to warm up, with the look of love slowly returning to her eyes. It’s as though Pippi finally recalls the reason she fell for this misfit. She tries to stop the ambush on her daughter, but Dern subtlety shows us that Pippi, despite her protests, wants to see how her child has grown. Speaking of the daughter (and misfits), the gifted Ms. Amara portrays a high-schooler that’s closer to reality than most that spring from those “young adult” book-based models. She’s tough and snarky like her pop, but we see her vulnerable side. Though Claire seems to brush off the “haters”, she’s still hurt and feels alone. Her adoptive parents have given her every material need, but she truly feels an emotional connection with Wilson and Pippi. The rest of the cast is populated by terrific comic actors from the big and small screen. Martindale shines as Wilson’s impromptu date and investigator (her Alta is worth her own film). Geer is an endearing ray of light in Wilson’s clouded life, she’s a buoyant new-age pixie. Lauren Weedman is hysterical as Wilson’s “pick-up” paramour at the pet store (her exasperated grimace is priceless). She’s not as aggravated at him as much as Mary Lynn Rajskub as Robert’s “had it up to here” wife (talk about reading somebody “the riot act”). Also memorable is David Warshofsky’s unhinged hysteria as Wilson’s grade school chum Olsen (“So, that’s why we never kept in touch”). Oh, and the movie’s got a great villain in Cheryl Hines as the passive aggressive witch queen that is Pippi’s sister Polly. Though she lives in the lap of luxury, Polly truly enjoys slithering through the mud and striking back at her sis.

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Director Craig Johnson (THE SKELETON TWINS) keeps the film coasting along at a relaxed pace, never distracting us with quick cuts or flashy technique , although showing the passage of time via icicles is pretty great. He knows just when to go from close-up to long-shot in order to capture the awkward vibe of any uncomfortable scene. Clowes’s screenplay from his graphic novel takes several unexpected detours from most standard comedies. But like those flicks, it does lapse into a bit of a lull at the midway point right before a most abrupt change of locale, one most needed to bring about a much needed change in the title character. Finally the man with no real sense of “personal space” must learn consideration and respect for the boundaries of others. Seems that experience more than longevity can be the basis of maturity. Like another graphic novel-based flick, AMERICAN SPLENDOR, love and hope can come to the unlikeliest of folks, even a sour pessimist like WILSON.

3.5 Out of 5

 

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Woody Harrelson And Laura Dern Star In WILSON Trailer

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Fox Searchlight has unveiled a new poster and trailer for WILSON. The studio will release WILSON in theaters March 24, 2017.

WILSON will have its World Premiere at the 2017 The Sundance Film Festival on Sunday, January 22 in the Premieres section.

Woody Harrelson stars as Wilson, a lonely, neurotic and hilariously honest middle-aged misanthrope who reunites with his estranged wife (Laura Dern) and gets a shot at happiness when he learns he has a teenage daughter (Isabella Amara) he has never met.  In his uniquely outrageous and slightly twisted way, he sets out to connect with her.

Rated R

Watch the Official Red Band Trailer:

https://youtu.be/jjPxlzjuLww

For more info visit the Official Site.

Woody Harrelson as "Wilson" in WILSON. Photo by Wilson Webb. © 2017 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation All Rights Reserved
Woody Harrelson as “Wilson” in WILSON. Photo by Wilson Webb. © 2017 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation All Rights Reserved

Woody Harrelson Stars In Red Band Trailer For WILSON

Woody Harrelson as "Wilson" in WILSON. Photo by Wilson Webb. © 2017 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation All Rights Reserved
Woody Harrelson as “Wilson” in WILSON. Photo by Wilson Webb. © 2017 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation All Rights Reserved

Check out the official red band trailer for WILSON.

Woody Harrelson stars as Wilson, a lonely, neurotic and hilariously honest middle-aged misanthrope who reunites with his estranged wife (Laura Dern) and gets a shot at happiness when he learns he has a teenage daughter (Isabella Amara) he has never met. In his uniquely outrageous and slightly twisted way, he sets out to connect with her. Also stars Laura Dern, Judy Greer, Cheryl Hines and Isabella Amara,

Fox Searchlight will release WILSON in theaters March 24, 2017.

http://www.foxsearchlight.com/wilson/

GIVEAWAY – Win A NINE LIVES Prizepack

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Coming to theaters on August 5th is the family movie NINE LIVES!

To celebrate the opening this summer’s Purrfect comedy, WAMG is giving away a prizepack from EuropaCorp.

One winner will receive the fun items listed below, as well as a $25 FANDANGO gift card!!

  • NINE LIVES Cat ears
  • NINE LIVES Cat ties
  • NINE LIVES Cat t-shirts
  • NINE LIVES Cat beach towels
  • NINE LIVES Cat sunglasses
  • NINE LIVES Cat paw tattoos
  • NINE LIVES Cat coloring sheets
  • NINE LIVES Cat pencils
  • NINE LIVES mini poster

For a chance to win:

ENTER YOUR NAME AND E-MAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW. WE WILL CONTACT YOU IF YOU ARE A WINNER.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.  NO P.O. BOXES.  NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.

No purchase necessary.

Tom Brand (Kevin Spacey) is a daredevil billionaire at the top of his game. His eponymous company FireBrand is nearing completion on its greatest achievement to date – the tallest skyscraper in the northern hemisphere. But Tom’s workaholic lifestyle has disconnected him from his family, particularly his beautiful wife Lara (Jennifer Garner) and his adoring daughter Rebecca (Malina Weissman).

Rebecca’s 11th birthday is here, and she wants the gift she wants every year, a cat. Tom hates cats, but he is without a gift and time is running out. His GPS directs him to a mystical pet store brimming with odd and exotic cats- where the store’s eccentric owner- Felix Perkins (Christopher Walken), presents him with a majestic tomcat, named Mr. Fuzzypants.

En route to present his daughter with her dream pet, a bizarre turn of events finds Tom trapped inside the body of Mr. Fuzzpants. Adopted by his own family, he begins to experience what life is truly like for the family pet, and as a cat, Tom begins to see his family and his life through a new and unexpected perspective. Meanwhile, his family adjusts to life with an odd and stubborn cat, and his son David (Robbie Amell), steps up in ways Tom never expected.

If any hope exists of returning to his family as the husband and father they deserve, Tom will have to learn why he has been placed in this peculiar situation and the great lengths he must go to earn back his human existence.

Visit the official site: ninelivesmovie.com

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mrfuzzypants
Join on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ninelivesfilm
Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ninelives

Photo Credit: Takashi Seida © 2016 EuropaCorp
Photo Credit: Takashi Seida © 2016 EuropaCorp

Kevin Spacey, Jennifer Garner Star In New Trailer For NINE LIVES

© 2015 EuropaCorp
© 2015 EuropaCorp

EuropaCorp has debuted the teaser trailer, poster and first photos for the upcoming film, NINE LIVES. The movie stars Kevin Spacey, Jennifer Garner, Malina Weissman, Cheryl Hines, Christopher Walken and Robbie Amell,

Tom Brand (Kevin Spacey) is a daredevil billionaire at the top of his game. His eponymous company FireBrand is nearing completion on its greatest achievement to date – the tallest skyscraper in the northern hemisphere. But Tom’s workaholic lifestyle has disconnected him from his family, particularly his beautiful wife Lara (Jennifer Garner) and his adoring daughter Rebecca (Malina Weissman).

Rebecca’s 11th birthday is here, and she wants the gift she wants every year, a cat. Tom hates cats, but he is without a gift and time is running out. His GPS directs him to a mystical pet store brimming with odd and exotic cats- where the store’s eccentric owner- Felix Perkins (Christopher Walken), presents him with a majestic tomcat, named Mr. Fuzzypants.

M266 (Left to right.) Melina Weissman, Kevin Spacey and Christopher Walken star in EuropaCorp's "NINE LIVESÓ. Photo Credit: Takashi Seida © 2015 EuropaCorp.
(Left to right.) Melina Weissman, Kevin Spacey and Christopher Walken.
Photo Credit: Takashi Seida © 2015 EuropaCorp.

En route to his daughter’s party, Tom has a terrible accident. When he regains consciousness he discovers that somehow, he has become trapped inside the body of the cat. Adopted by his own family, he begins to experience what life is truly like for the family pet, and as a cat, Tom begins to see his family and his life through a new and unexpected perspective. Meanwhile, his family adjusts to life with an odd and stubborn cat, and his son David (Robbie Amell), steps up in ways Tom never expected.

If any hope exists of returning to his family as the husband and father they deserve, Tom will have to learn why he has been placed in this peculiar situation and the great lengths he must go to earn back his human existence.

M201 (Left to right.) Jennifer Garner and Melina Weissman star in EuropaCorp's "NINE LIVESÓ. Photo Credit: Takashi Seida © 2016 EuropaCorp. All rights reserved.
Takashi Seida © 2016 EuropaCorp. All rights reserved.

Directed by Barry Sonnenfeld, NINE LIVES hits theaters this summer on August 5th.

Learn more about NINE LIVES on:
Instagram (Mr. Fuzzypants): https://www.instagram.com/mrfuzzypants
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ninelivesfilm
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ninelives
Hashtag: #NineLives

nine lives poster

Aubrey Plaza & Dane DeHaan Star In LIFE AFTER BETH Trailer

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“Zombies Eat Guys!”

Check out A24’s new trailer and posters from their zombie rom-com hit from Sundance this year, LIFE AFTER BETH releasing on directTV exclusively July 17th and in limited theaters August 15th.

From writer/director Jeff Baena in his feature debut, the film stars Aubrey Plaza, Dane DeHaan, and Anna Kendrick.

Aubrey Plaza continues to be an utter delight! If you aren’t familiar with her other films, search out and find SAFETY NOT GUARANTEED, DAMSELS IN DISTRESS, SCOTT PILGRIM VS THE WORLD and THE TO DO LIST, as well as her upcoming film ABOUT ALEX (Aug 8,) before you watch LIFE AFTER BETH.

Zach (Dane DeHaan) is devastated by the unexpected death of his girlfriend, Beth (Aubrey Plaza). But when she miraculously comes back to life, Zach takes full advantage of the opportunity to share and experience all the things he regretted not doing with her before.

However, the newly returned Beth isn’t quite how he remembered her and, before long, Zach’s whole world takes a turn for the worse.

As a not so typical zombie-horror film, LIFE AFTER BETH excels with its impressive cast performances and hilarious view on the woes of teenage love.

Also starring John C. Reilly, Molly Shannon, Cheryl Hines, Matthew Gray Gubler, and Paul Reiser, the film is rated R for language, some horror violence, sexual content, nudity and brief drug use.

https://www.facebook.com/LifeAfterBeth

https://twitter.com/lifeaftrbeth

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In Case You Missed It Monday… ‘Waitress’

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I love quirky dramedies and yes, I also love baking. So what? Laugh if you want, but home-baked goodies are like heroine to me. Anyway, how do these two seemingly irrelevant things have anything to do with one another? They have everything to do with each other when speaking about the 2007 movie ‘Waitress’.

‘Waitress’ was written and directed by Adrienne Shelly, who also co-stars as Dawn in the film, which stars Kerri Russell as Jenna Hunterson. Jenna is a waitress and “pie genius” working at Old Joe’s Pie Shop. Jenna loves making pies and that’s all she wants in life. Well, that and… to get rid of her mentally and verbally abusive a**hole of a husband Earl (Jeremy Sisto) once and for all. No, she doesn’t want him killed, just gone out of her life.

Her fellow waitresses and best friends, Becky (Cheryl Hines) and Dawn (Adrienne Shelly), help her to cope with her selfish, emotionally draining loser of a husband, especially once she discovers that she’s pregnant as a result of letting him get her drunk one night. Now, with her well-laid plans to escape Earl for good at risk, Jenna struggles to decide how she’ll restructure her plans while keeping the baby.

‘Waitress’ is filled with quirky characters, but none of them are bizarre to the point of being absurd. The entire story occurs in a subtly strand little universe that seems to exist just outside the normal boundaries of real life. Nearly the entire film takes place in the little pie shop, which is in a small rural town that might as well be on Mars. Nathan Fillion (Slither) plays Dr. Pomatter, Kerri’s replacement gynecologist and short-lived secret love interest.

Kerri Russell (August Rush) does a fantastic job as the talented pie-maker Jenna with the quiet and polite exterior, but whom hides emotions that boil and churn just under the surface like a molten eruption of frustration just waiting to explode. Jenna feels trapped, evenclaustrophobic by her husband Earl, who is played with a creepy unlikable effectiveness by Jeremy Sisto (May). Dawn and Becky are pinned as stereotypical characters with quirks of their own and even Old Joe is given some pleasant life as a horny old multi-divorcee played by Andy Griffith.

‘Waitress’ is a charming tale of a woman who yearns to break free of her failed marriage and start her life over on her own terms. The movie is filled with emotional lows and truly sells Jenna’s determination and justification for wanting out of her marriage, but also plays wonderfully on Jenna’ssensibilities to her own ethical concerns regarding her pregnancy, her marriage and her life.

Jenna uses her odd and unique pie creations as a creative outlet for her varied emotions, giving them strange names like “Bad Baby Pie” or “Pregnant Miserable Self Pitying Loser Pie”. Jenna and her pies are the life-blood of the pie shop and everyone realizes that but Earl, whose whole world revolves around himself and expects Jenna to put him on a pedestal without any reasonable return of sincere affection or gratitude.

‘Waitress’ can be seen as having a negative tone towards marriage, but it’s the extent to which Earl is a lousy and unworthy husband that confirms Jenna’s intentions and places her goals within the realm of acceptability. Jenna does keep the child, whom she names Lulu and the movie does ultimately result in ahappy ending, but not necessarily as one might have planned. The small ensemble cast is great, the story is heart-felt and original with a healthy mix of gentle but quirky comedy and genuine drama. ‘Waitress’ is a great pick-me-up film to watch that leaves a resonating residue of relief after enduring Jenna’s daily plight.

Tribeca Review: ‘Serious Moonlight’

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I was looking forward to this film since Cheryl Hines told me about it at the Adrienne Shelly Foundation Gala I attended back in October. I got a chance to speak briefly with her, and she talked about this passion project that she directed from a script written by Adrienne Shelly before she was killed. The film stars Meg Ryan, as Louise, a crossed lover who goes psycho (actually Misery) and duct tapes her cheating husband, played by Timothy Hutton, to a chair in their home. She refuses to let him go until he agrees to work on their marriage rather than run off with his current girlfriend, played by Kristen Bell.

For me, the star of the film was Justin Long who plays the gardener who decides to Rob the house when he discovers Timothy Hutton duct-taped to a toilet. Yes, I know I said chair before. He is moved to the bathroom after he attempts to escape. Long offers some sympathetic words of wisdom to Hutton while still pulling off the dumb criminal act. Hutton and Ryan are good as the leads, and Kristen Bell is always fun to watch. Louise’s attempts at winning her husband back are often funny and the film has some great moments between the two. The ending is fairly predictable but it is still a pretty fun movie. One thing that is surprising is the coarse language. Aside from a few F-bombs, this could have easily been PG-13 and therefore picked up much quicker and for more money by a studio.

Overall, Cheryl Hines did a pretty good job directing her first feature. The cast is fun to watch and the film is entertaining. It could be a good date night film, especially for older couples.

Jerry Cavallaro – www.AreYouStuckLikeChuck.com