Frozen
is a movie more for little girls. I thought the snowman would be in the
movie a lot more and he was not. That was the best part for a lot of
people. I did not know that they would be singing in this movie. This
movie was too like Tangled that I saw after this movie. Saving
Mr Banks is about how the story Mary Poppins came. I thought this movie
was great and had no bad things about it. It is not for younger kids
because it hard for there attention because of all the things they say. Anchorman
was a weird movie for me. I laugh so hard at some parts and other parts
I was wondering if this was suppose to be funny. The beginning of the
movie is funny and gets back to funny write at the end. Delivery Man was a funny movie and I liked a lot of the movie. You wanted to know what happened at the end of the movie. Grudge
Match is the second worst movie I saw this year. It is so boring and is
weird. They use a lot of sex words in it and is not appropriate. Kevin
Hart is the best part of this movie. DO NOT WATCH THIS MOVIE. Even
though the actors had made good movies before, this one is not good.
Out of the movies, this is the order of the best.
Saving Mr Banks.
Delivery Man.
Anchorman.
Frozen.
Grudge Match.
From The Global and Mail... I do not own this picture/poster. This is the End and/or Collider owns it all.
Who knew that public transit would come to have
so much in common. These days, the apocalypse is to the big screen what
the bus is to an urban commuter – just as regular in appearance, just
as forgettable an experience. Sure, sometimes the ride is a real horror
show, occasionally even a comic fest, but mainly it’s a tedious,
over-priced, stare-ahead-blankly trip from start to finish. Turns out
that hellfire is just one more thing to be bored by – best to wear
headphones and crank up your iPod.
On to the latest in last-days hilarity, This Is the End,
which apparently enjoyed a beginning as a short sketch that got posted
online to considerable attention. Then again, cats-that-look-like-Hitler
are posted online to considerable attention, and they don’t get
stretched into a feature flick. (Okay, not yet anyway.) But this sketch
did, because some famous folks made it, and now more famous folks have
gathered to huff and puff and inflate the little notion to nearly two
hours – a long commute by any measure.
Which famous folks, you
might eagerly ask? Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, James Franco, Jonah Hill,
Craig Robinson and Danny McBride, who, having all worked together in the
past, reconvene to portray Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, James Franco ...
well, you get the idea. This time, the comic actors are playing
themselves, or at least heightened versions of themselves, a shortcut
that has the immediate merit of dispensing with all that time-consuming
business of creating actual characters. Better yet, since comedy is the
ostensible metier of comic actors, one might think the dudes would be,
you know, funny. Sorry, not really.