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The following DVDs
starring actor Ben Affleck are available through
Amazon.com.
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Armageddon
Amazon.com
essential video - The latest testosterone-saturated
blow-'em-up from producer Jerry Bruckheimer and
director Michael Bay (The Rock, Bad Boys) continues
Hollywood's millennium-fueled fascination with the
destruction of our planet. There's no arguing that
the successful duo understands what mainstream
American audiences want in their blockbuster
movies--loads of loud, eye-popping special effects,
rapid- fire pacing, and patriotic flag waving. Bay's
protagonists--the eight crude, lewd, oversexed (but
lovable, of course) oil drillers summoned to save
the world from a Texas-sized meteor hurling toward
the earth--are not flawless heroes, but common men
with whom all can relate. In this huge
Western-in-space soap opera, they're American
cowboys turned astronauts. Sci-fi buffs will
appreciate Bay's fetishizing of technology, even
though it's apparent he doesn't understand it as
anything more than flashing lights and shiny
gadgets. Smartly, the duo also tries to lure the
art-house crowd, raiding the local indie acting
stable and populating the film with guys like Steve
Buscemi, Billy Bob Thornton, Owen Wilson, and
Michael Duncan, all adding needed touches of humor
and charisma. When Bay applies his sledgehammer
aesthetics to the action portions of the film, it's
mindless fun; it's only when Armageddon tackles
humanity that it becomes truly offensive. Not since
Mississippi Burning have racial and cultural
stereotypes been substituted for characters so
blatantly--African Americans, Japanese, Chinese,
Scottish, Samoans, Muslims, French ... if it's not
white and American, Bay simplifies it. Or, make that
white male America; the film features only three
notable females--four if you count the meteor, who's
constantly referred to as a "bitch that needs
drillin'," but she's a hell of a lot more developed
and unpredictable than the other women characters
combined. Sure, Bay's film creates some tension and
contains some visceral moments, but if he can't
create any redeemable characters outside of those in
space, what's the point of saving the planet? --Dave
McCoy |
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Monster's Ball
Amazon.com - The unflinching realism and searing
performances of Monster's Ball are stunning
in all the connotations of the word. Hank (Billy Bob
Thornton) and Leticia (Halle Berry) inhabit stark,
queasy realities of the contemporary South, he as a
death row corrections officer and she as the
soon-to-be widow of an inmate (Sean Combs) whose
execution Hank helps conduct. In the aftermath of
the execution, both lose their children to tragic
deaths and they form an unlikely bond. In the hands
of lesser participants, the fateful plot might
strain credibility and seem tailored to allow for
liberal sermonizing about the obvious wrongs of our
legal justice system, but director Marc Forster and
cinematographer Roberto Schaefer balance the
contentious nature of the film's issues--the death
penalty, racism both overt and subtle, interracial
couples--with a flawless attention to character and
visual detail that completely convinces. The moral
ambiguity of both central characters is given full
voice as our sympathy is drawn out reluctantly at
first but all the more resolutely in the end.
Thornton draws from seemingly limitless resources to
deliver yet another outstanding performance, but it
is Halle Berry who is a revelation as she sustains
throughout the complex tenor of brutality witnessed
and raw courage defined. --Fionn Meade |
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Pushing Tin
Amazon.com - Blessed by a fantastic cast and
slick direction by Mike Newell, Pushing Tin
is one of those invigorating movies (like Wall
Street or All the President's Men) that
takes you behind the scenes of a dramatic
profession--in this case, the high-stress world of
air-traffic controllers--and throws in a source of
conflict to ramp up the tension. For ace
"tin-pusher" Nick Falzone (John Cusack), that
conflict arrives in the form of Russell Bell (Billy
Bob Thornton), an Irish/Choctaw half-breed whose
Zen-like control of air traffic immediately puts
Nick on the defensive. Add an incident of infidelity
and Nick's subsequent self-loathing and guilt, and
Pushing Tin turns into a macho pissing match,
with Nick's and Russell's spouses (Cate Blanchett
and Angelina Jolie, respectively) stuck in the
middle.
At that
point, this otherwise splendid comedy-drama turns
almost fatally silly, and it hits additional
turbulence by lapsing into a predictable series of
pat resolutions. Fortunately, the jazzy cast avoids
a nosedive into the tarmac, and if you recall
Blanchett's Oscar-nominated performance in
Elizabeth, you'll be amazed by her flawless
transformation into a smart and sweetly devoted New
Jersey housewife. Dialogue is a major asset here,
and the script (by TV veterans Glen and Les Charles)
gives Cusack & Co. plenty to chew on. That makes
Pushing Tin a breezy good time, and its flaws
are easily forgiven. --Jeff Shannon |
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A Simple Plan
Amazon.com - An endless white landscape of
rolling hills and snow-blanketed forests. A lonely
acoustic
score (by Danny Elfman) playing in the
background. A vision of rural simplicity portrayed
in hushed tones. The stillness is about to shatter.
Brothers Hank (Bill Paxton), an accountant at a
small-town feed store, and Jacob (Billy Bob
Thornton), an unemployed, hygienically challenged
dim bulb, accompanied by Jacob's oafish pal Lou
(Brent Briscoe), stumble across a downed plane in
the brush containing a corpse and a sack containing
millions of dollars--surely the aftermath of a drug
deal, they conclude. Greed overcomes good sense, and
the three agree to hide the money for a year and
keep the secret to themselves. A simple plan indeed,
and it doesn't take long for it to go all to hell as
the lure of wealth tears at kinship and friendship,
and the ruthless machinations of impetuous partners
leave a body count in its wake. Bridget Fonda
costars as Hank's wife, whose initial hesitation
gives way to cold-blooded plotting. Sam Raimi, best
known for wowing audiences with stylistic gymnastics
and manic mayhem, directs this quietly desperate
thriller with chilly restraint, finding its cold,
tragic heart in the estranged relationship between
Hank and Jacob: the college boy blind to the truth
of his own family and the town loser whose tortured
soul reveals a humanity lost on his brother (a
brilliant performance by Thornton). Adapted by Scott
B. Smith from his acclaimed
novel. --Sean Axmaker |
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Sling Blade
Billy Bob
Thornton wrote, directed, and starred in this
mesmerizing drama with haunting overtones of To
Kill a Mockingbird. Thornton plays a mentally
retarded man who has spent 20 years in a psychiatric
hospital for killing his mother and her lover.
Released into the community from which he came, he
befriends and protects a lonely boy regularly
harassed and abused by his mom's boyfriend (a
terrific performance by Dwight Yoakam). The story is
ultimately about sacrifice, but Thornton certainly
doesn't get twinkly about it. Some of the best
material concerns the hero's no-big-deal efforts to
integrate into a "normal" life: working, eating fast
food, earning admiration for his handyman skills,
and attaining a semblance of community among other
damaged souls. John Ritter has a great part as a gay
shopkeeper who tries to assuage his own loneliness
by spilling his guts out to Thornton's
uncomprehending character. --Tom Keogh |
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Bad Santa |
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Return to the top of the list of Investigation Books
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