Ted Faraone Archives | ShowBizCafe.com

Ted Faraone Archives | ShowBizCafe.com

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2011/09/11 at 12:00am

Contagion (Movie Review)

09.11.2011 | By |

There are several things wrong with “Contagion,” the latest from helmer Steven Soderbergh.  The most egregious is Warner Bros.’ US marketing campaign which uses taglines including “The world goes viral September 9,” “Don’t talk to anyone,” “Don’t touch anyone,” and the heroic “Nothing spreads like fear.” Oh, please! Read More

Ted Faraone

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2011/07/29 at 12:00am

Attack the Block (Movie Review)

07.29.2011 | By |

Other than the accents, the thing that may most differentiate British sci-fi pic Attack the Block from its American counterparts is a relative lack of firearms. It was only a few years ago that the British copper began to carry a gun. Clubs were sufficient for generations. Read More

Ted Faraone

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2011/07/28 at 12:00am

Cowboys and Aliens (Movie Review)

07.28.2011 | By |

Director Jon Favreau seems to have found his niche with high-concept genre mashups. While his shift toward big-budget spectacles has been lucrative, it leaves some audiences yearning for the character-driven work of his earlier career. His latest effort, Cowboys & Aliens, relies on bankable stars to navigate a tonally inconsistent landscape. Read More

Ted Faraone

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2011/07/21 at 12:00am

Friends with Benefits (Movie Review)

07.21.2011 | By |

Friends with Benefits

It is sometimes amazing to see a well-worn Hollywood formula repackaged for the umpteenth time and still work.  Such is the case of “Friends with Benefits,†a star vehicle for Justin Timberlake (art director Dylan) and Mila Kunis (headhunter Jamie).  Before the opening titles there are two breakups:  Dylan’s girl in LA dumps him and Jamie’s boyfriend in New York dumps her — just as both are dragging their tardy guys to their favorite chick flicks.  Via a cute bit of editing (kudos to Tia Nolan) auds are led to believe briefly that it is one breakup — Dylan and Jamie — until the bi-coastal synchronicity sets in.  Both battle scarred veterans retire from the field.  No more romance for them.
 
Jamie lures Dylan to New York for a job interview to be the new art director of GQ Magazine.  He aces the interview.  The pair become fast friends — as in we like each other but there’s no sex.  That changes when Jamie utters, “God!  I want sex.â€Â  Can two great friends have a sexual relationship that is “no relationship, no emotions, just sex, whatever happens?â€Â  Auds will quickly figure out the answer.  As Stephen Sondheim wrote in one of the lyrics to A Little Night Music, eventually the nets descend.  The questions for “Friends with Benefits†are “How long will the arrangement last?â€, “When will the nets descend?â€, and “What happens after the inevitable breakup?â€
 
While skein is busy answering said questions, pic reveals itself as a valentine to New York City, which is as much a character as any of the cast.  In the opening reel Jamie takes Dylan on a tour of New York to sell him on leaving LA.  It’s full “fish out of water†Angelino in Gotham jokes, but it works — both cinematically and as a plot device.  Dylan is sold.  Good thing, too, because by the time they get to the “just sex†part, pic is on to its second reel.
 
It’s nice to see Timberlake in a non-smarmy role, which he handles convincingly, but it is Kunis who steals her scenes as the tough, fast-talking, wisecracker.  Supporting roles are notable.  Patricia Clarkson does a star-turn as Jamie’s goofy, ex-hippie mom wherein there is a running gag about the nationality of Jamie’s dad.  Woody Harrelson has the unenviable task of being comic relief in a comedy.  His over-the-top gay sports editor sports more cliché gay jock jokes than your critic imagined exist.  To his credit, he plays the role big, bold, and farcical — think of Zach Galifianakis minus the annoying aspects.  Richard Jenkins as Dylan’s dad suffering the early stages of Alzheimer’s Disease and Jenna Elfman as sister Annie anchor pic’s serious scenes.  Jenkins comes across as sympathetic rather than pathetic.  Elfman has the least to work with but does well with what scribes Harley Peyton, David A. Newman, Keith Merryman and Will Gluck (who also directed) give her as the primary caregiver for dad and her son, a ten-year-old tuxedoed magician (Nolan Gould) whose trick failures are another one of pic’s myriad running gags.  In this regard “Friends with Benefits†bares careful scrutiny.  There are no loose ends.  Everything that happens in the picture happens for a reason and will probably happen again to move the plot along — or at least leave auds saying, “I knew that was coming.â€Â  Sharp-eyed viewers will notice Paul Mazursky’s 1969 sexual revolution comedy, “Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice,†unspooling on a TV in the background of one scene.  It is one of pic’s many inside-film references.
 
Plot hinges on the overheard conversation, a truly shopworn device, but it gets the point across.  Jamie, unseen by Annie and Dylan, listens to Dylan argue with his sister that there is no relationship between Jamie and him; that the girl is damaged goods.  This leads to the inevitable breakup which takes place on Independence Day weekend at Dylan’s oceanfront boyhood home in what appears to be Santa Barbara.
 
Rest of pic’s 109 minutes are spent keeping auds guessing whether it will end as a romantic comedy (“Before Sunsetâ€) or a weeper (“The Break-Upâ€).  Dénouement’s impetus comes from two characters both unlikely given their backgrounds and at the same time very likely given Hollywood tradition:  The parents.  Jenkins’ Mr. Harper in a lucid moment, punctuated by a perfectly timed gag, clarifies Dylan’s thinking.  Goofy, unreliable Lorna (Clarkson) does likewise for Jamie.  This plot trick has been done to death, but here it enjoys a resurrection.
 
“Friends with Benefits†is rated R.  For once the R rating is right.  There’s plenty of language and some pretty hot sex.  Children won’t understand it.  However, for adults it offers good lensing, adequate sound, and about a laugh a minute — even in the serious scenes.

Ted Faraone

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2010/11/10 at 12:00am

The King’s Speech (Movie Review)

11.10.2010 | By |

There are several delicious ironies about The King’s Speech, billed as an historical drama and directed by Tom Hooper from a screenplay by David Seidler. The first is the title. The King’s Speech is given at the opening of the British Parliament. Read More

Ted Faraone

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2010/11/05 at 12:00am

Due Date (Movie Review)

11.5.2010 | By |

Due Date from helmer Todd Phillips, who dumped The Hangover on innocent, unsuspecting auds, follows the former’s formula. This 100 minute R-rated piece of cinematic phlegm involves a road trip, drugs, many smashed automobiles, and extraordinary vulgarity. It also features a totally underused female lead, Michelle Monaghan, in a role that is the polar opposite of her groundbreaking work in Trucker. Read More

Ted Faraone

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2010/10/31 at 12:00am

Saw 3D (Movie Review)

10.31.2010 | By |

Updated May 2026

James Frey, whose fictional autobiography A Million Little Pieces got him roasted on Oprah Winfrey’s sofa for 48 minutes, got off easy compared to Bobby Dagen. Played by Sean Patrick Flanery, Dagen is tortured along with the audience for 90 minutes after concocting a fake bestseller about surviving the Jigsaw killer. That is the premise of Saw 3D, also known as Saw VII, depending on your point of view. Read More

Ted Faraone

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2010/10/24 at 12:00am

Monsters (Movie Review)

10.24.2010 | By |

It has been reported that Monsters was made for $15,000. That would put it in company with Paranormal Activity. It’s also a lot of baloney. Read More

Ted Faraone

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2010/08/13 at 12:00am

La Soga (Movie Review)

08.13.2010 | By |

The Dominican Republic boasts many achievements in addition to its natural beauty, but film arguably is not one of them. That’s why La Soga (The Noose), a 2009 effort by helmer Josh Crook, comes as such a welcome surprise. In the Spanish-speaking world, one tends to think instead of Spain, Argentina, and Mexico as hotbeds of cinema. Read More

Ted Faraone

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2010/08/07 at 12:00am

The Other Guys (Movie Review)

08.7.2010 | By |

The Other Guys, like almost every good picture in which Will Ferrell has starred, is a vehicle for his comic genius. The plot is preposterous. There is adequate vulgarity to please teenage boys. Read More

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