Friday, March 23, 2007

"Before there was Romeo and Juliet..."

Looking for that perfect date movie? Something that she's sure to love but still enough battle scenes to make you still feel like a man? Here a movie that's garunteed to leave her teary eyed and you begging for more. Don't believe me? Watch the trailer.



Tristan and Isolde is quoted as being, "...a sweeping tale of love and loss, myth and fate, based on the timeless Celtic myth of star crossed passion." In the midst of a war Tristan (James Franco) and Isolde (Sophie Myles) find love with in one another but unable to be with each other. Even in peace, these two lovers are bound to be within the same walls but decicated to another. It truly is a tale of the forbiden love, one which treatens to bring down a nation.

"Crash" in review


"Look around! You couldn't find a whiter, safer or better lit part of this city. But this white woman sees two black guys, who look like UCLA students, strolling down the sidewalk and her reaction is blind fear. I mean, look at us! Are we dressed like gangbangers? Do we look threatening? No. Fact, if anybody should be scared, it's us: the only two black faces surrounded by a sea of over-caffeinated white people, patrolled by the triggerhappy LAPD. So, why aren't we scared?" Anthony (Played by Ludacris)

The movie "Crash", written and dirceted by Paul Haggins, is a mixture of irony and stereotypes. It takes the viewer through the lives of several different main characters, each having differnent backrounds and upbringings, that just so happen to be involoved one way or another with the other main characters lives.

Throughout "Crash" we find one major, and obvious, theme, being racism. Haggins uses characters and irony to show that each person, be it subtle or obvious, has some bit of prejudice or racist thoughts. Lippman would say that we have preconcieved pictures in our heads of they ways in which people of a certain race or gender are to act. We, finding out the opposite is also true, tend to be shocked and awed. Although Haggins does show racism in a few scenes subtly, most of the time his tactics are a bit over the top. This, among other things, makes the movie most unblievable.
That is probably the biggest downfall of the movie. Something like this should be able to send a message, really make the viewer feel it and want to act, or atleast think, differently after having watched it. It should be powerful, not poking fun or over the top.
I'm not saying I've wasted part of my life by viewing the movie, but I wouldn't take the time to watch it again.





Think I've crashed and burned? Read this...