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    <title>Jon Lamoreaux’s Movie Blog</title>
    <description>Jon Lamoreaux’s Movie Blog</description>
    <link>http://99x.dnn.cumulus.net/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/BlogId/49/Default.aspx</link>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 07 Feb 2012 04:09:43 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Paranormal Activity 3</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" border="0" align="left" hspace="4" height="120" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_ParanormalActivity3_210x120_10212011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;You would think the third film in a franchise would round out the series  and bring some sense of closure even if that closure is false as we’ve  learned with the Saw films and Friday the 13th franchise, among others.   It’s way different though with Paranormal Activity 3 in the sense  there’s a hint at how all of this haunting activity came about or at  least where it derives from.  Yet it’s ambiguous enough to leave you  wondering what happens in the present, what happened in the past, and  what’s going to happen the minute the lights go out.  Paranormal  Activity movies are always a series of happenings and seem random but  are also anxiously expected.  You know that with a camera panning a room  or moving slowly toward the darkness that something is bound to happen,  and you tense up ready for the worst.  And even when it is the worst  you’re never quite prepared.  That’s the secret to these films that big  or small the “boo” is always off center and always, always catching you  off guard.  Or pushing you off your guard.  No matter how guarded you  are.  And you will be guarded after the first one or two small incidents  that occur in the film’s 40 minute set-up.  Actually, I’m looking at my  watch 30 minutes in wondering when the action will start, like I did  with the previous films.  The frightening always takes awhile.  But the  chills you get once they arrive are swift and lingering.  The low rumble  rises unexplained and with no clue of its origins strikes like a  wrecking ball; the sound as ghostly as the entity it accompanies.   That’s Paranormal Activity for you.  And actually, this is just the  beginning.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/9024/Paranormal-Activity-3.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
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      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 21 Oct 2011 20:25:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>3</slash:comments>
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    <item>
      <title>October Movies</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" width="210" vspace="4" alt="" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_OctoberMovies_210x120_10142011.jpg" style="margin-right: 10px;" /&gt;It’s that time of year for scary movies.  As I like to say with changing  of the clock so too comes the changing of genres at your local  Cineplex. The scare your pants off genre which coincides with less  light, longer shadows and quickly approaching nightfall with a certain  sense of anti-cheery melancholy the shortly-lived euphoric rise and fall  of colorful leaves seem to bring.  Which brings us to Footloose, a  perfect example of scariness Hollywood likes to spend money on in hopes  of an easy return on “sure-thing” investments. Why isn’t anyone  threatening to #occupyhollywood?  Probably because they on occasion do  edify the emotions, or at least pretend to care about pleasing us.  I  say sure-thing about Footloose but I really don’t know with today’s  plugged-in generation, if they can tolerate kids juking and jiving  themselves around camera ready to vent the frustrations of hardline  scripture thumping parents from the Bible belt. Does the Bible belt  still exist?  And maybe that’s why Halloween and October films seem to  be so much more palpable; that the horror genre wakes up the senses and  reminds us we’re still alive, that we’re not beaten down by “the man;”  that though all that stuff on screen is fake it can still make us  appreciate the smallest things in life like a smile from a McDonald’s  employee. The following then are nine jump-out-of-your-seat horror and  haunted films for October 2011.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/9002/October-Movies.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/9002/October-Movies.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 14 Oct 2011 19:32:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>11</slash:comments>
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    <item>
      <title>Ides Of March</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" border="0" align="left" hspace="4" height="120" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_IdesOfMarch_210x120_10072011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;What the heck are ides?  I’d say they’re the synth beats and horns that  pop from John Williams style orchestral backgrounds during quiet,  graceful and cinematic interludes in George Clooney's new directorial  effort The Ides of March. Actually Ides of March is a Shakespeare and  Roman reference, to Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar and the Roman calendar  day 15 of March (and 15th of a few other months, day 13 some months). I  think the reference here is that Caesar was warned in Shakespeare's play  not to go to the location of his eventual demise, his murder, on a  specific day, the ides of March. And so it is with that sense of deeper  meaning in this political drama starring some of the best actors in the  business—Philip Seymour Hoffman, Paul Giamatti, Jeffrey Wright, Marisa  Tomei—that Ryan Gosling's young idealist Stephen helps Caesar, I mean  Clooney, with his run for the presidency. The film is surprisingly film  noir in style at times while delivering a Sydney Lumet “lite” treatment  of a pivotal moment during primaries on the rocky campaign road to the  white house.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8988/Ides-Of-March.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
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      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 07 Oct 2011 23:08:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>21</slash:comments>
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    <item>
      <title>50/50</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img height="120" align="left" width="210" alt="" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99x_blogs_210x120_5050.jpg" style="margin-right: 10px;" /&gt;Based on a true story, Will Reiser was really sick.  He’s the screenwriter who happens to be friends with Superbad (2007) writers Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg.  They talked about the idea of a comedy about cancer.  How no one really confronts it by laughing at it, making fun of it, by being derisive yet angry about it.  But rather how it’s always approached from an overly dramatic way.  In telling his parents, Adam, played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, uses the film Terms of Endearment (1983) for example as an opener to the conversation about his diagnosis of cancer.  Challenging that great but also very sad film idea is an unlikely pair who face this thing together and do so in what feels like a very natural and realistic way.  Surprising themselves I think as they skew this idea of facing death—Adam, who happens to have cancer, playing an unlikely straight man to Seth Rogen’s very funny bachelor friend Kyle.  As it turns out 50/50 is a buddy film that feels like Zach Braff’s introspective Garden State (2004) with musical and cinematic stylings of something like Mike Nichols’ The Graduate (1967).  But even as Radiohead’s High and Dry pinpoints Adam’s isolation like many a lonely man in film 50/50 punches its way to finding an audience as if it’s fighting a disease itself.  And I think it finds its cure in trying to find its voice among other films within the genre.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt; &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://www.99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8976/50-50.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
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      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 30 Sep 2011 20:50:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>34</slash:comments>
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      <title>Moneyball</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" alt="" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_Moneyball_210x120_09232011.jpg" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" /&gt;This film could not have been released at a better time.  Just as  baseball is reaching its fall classic summit here in 2011, both leagues  fighting it out in the wild card race…if you’re a baseball fan this is a  must see especially here on the brink of playoffs.  Moneyball is one of  the first films adapted from a book where I felt like the movie was  better than the book.  Usually it’s the other way around.  That may be  because Moneyball is not necessarily a fiction book that weaves a  narrative like Elmore Leonard or J.R.R. Tolkien.  It’s really more of a  non-fiction story, a true story of how a guy named Billy Beane, General  Manager of the Oakland A’s from 1995 to present faced with a low salary  for his baseball team in 2001—39 million as opposed to the Yankees’ 114  million—how Beane had to find a different way to create his next team.   These days the Yankees spend over 200 million a year while someone like  the Florida Marlins hover around a total team salary of 14 million.   Moneyball the film is a look into exactly how Beane went about it in  2002, the year after the A’s were in the playoffs and as a team could no  longer afford the players who, because of their prior successful year,  were now stars. Players like Jason Giambi, Johnny Damon, and Jason  Isringhausen.  Moneyball is about how Bean’s methods changed the game of  baseball recruiting forever.  Starring Brad Pitt as Billy Beane, Philip  Seymour Hoffman as Oakland A’s manager Art Howe, and Jonah Hill as  player stats bean counter Peter Brand.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8959/Moneyball.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8959/Moneyball.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 23 Sep 2011 14:49:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>57</slash:comments>
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      <title>Straw Dogs</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_StrawDogs_210x120_09192011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;Straw Dogs is that rare remake that stays pretty true to its original  balancing the artistry set forth by that earlier film’s cast and crew  while infusing version 2.0 with the marketability, talent and mentored  bite in movie-making pizzazz today’s audiences expect.  Which means this  version goes to eleven with the psychological playfulness director Sam  Peckinpah brought to the 1971 violent-before-its-time original. This  Straw Dogs also exaggerates the very tricks of the trade slow motion  master Peckinpah institutionalized for Hollywood—specifically the gun  that literally blows a man off the ground and throws him several  feet—touched up and presented nostalgically here by Rod Lurie (The Last  Castle (2001), The Contender (2000)) as almost homage to Peckinpah.  The  fact Lurie doe not employ slow motion however confounds me because  Lurie is so verbatim in most of the retelling.  But confusion is a very  small part of what makes this Straw Dogs so much more evocative.  Saying  to Peckinpah, I saw what you did Obi Wan of the slow-mo violence and  have learned much of your ways but now let me show you what I have  unique within me while also honoring your tutelage.  Straw Dogs stars  James Marsden in the role made famous by Dustin Hoffman, and also stars  Kate Bosworth (whom Marsden starred with in Superman Returns (2006)).   Also starring James Woods and sort-of newcomer Alexander Skarsgard  (HBO’s True Blood).  Straw Dogs is based on the Gordon Williams novel  “The Siege of Trencher’s Farm.”  By the film’s finale you’ll see just  why siege is such a correct term to describe Straw Dogs.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8941/Straw-Dogs.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8941/Straw-Dogs.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8941/Straw-Dogs.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 19 Sep 2011 16:26:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>44</slash:comments>
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    <item>
      <title>Contagion</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_Contagion_210x120_09092011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;Think Steven Soderbergh’s Traffic from 2000 with a soundtrack from TRON:  Legacy.  Director Steven Soderbergh who won the Best Director Oscar for  Traffic and was nominated for directing Erin Brockovich (2000) works  his talent for assembling a corral of stars (see Soderbergh’s Ocean’s  Eleven (2001)) in a multi-location, mixed-genre virus film which if  anything is exemplary of how ensemble disaster films should be made.   Contagion is part science fiction, part crime thriller, part action film  at times but mostly it works in the fear genre of horror.  Even Kate  Winslet says it best, as Dr. Erin Mears on a mission to contain the  spread of a new world virus, while people continue to ignore other more  likely dangers it’s “a plastic shark in the water that will keep people  from swimming.”  In addition to trying to define the unpredictable  actions of humans in a situation like this she is making an appropriate  reference to Jaws (1975), one of the greatest unseen villain horror  films ever made.  Contagion isn’t necessarily any different from virus  films like Outbreak (1995) or The Andromeda Strain (1971), or even AMC’s  The Walking Dead for that matter, where suddenly there’s the appearance  of a new SARS or H1-N1 type of infectious agent made downright  monstrous for dramatic effect that no one seems to have a cure for.  It  feels and looks like the flu but soon people are foaming at the mouth  and convulsing with seizures before fixing their eyes with dying breath  on something that could possibly be described as the devil.  Like those  horror ghost films you see where the person literally dies of fear.  I  recently saw it again in mix-genre master David Lynch’s Mulholland Drive  (2001)…a guy telling his account of a dream he had where he saw the  face of a hideous man who lived behind a diner.  The incident was so  scary and shocking for him in exploring the truth of his dream that he  dies right there on the spot.  It’s that kind of death in Contagion that  gets your attention.  And it’s Soderbergh’s kind of directing that  keeps your attention for the duration of the film.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8927/Contagion.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8927/Contagion.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8927/Contagion.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 09 Sep 2011 23:59:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>75</slash:comments>
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      <title>The Debt</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_TheDebt_210x120_09022011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;Here’s another remake but The Debt seems to be going more for Oscar gold  than blockbuster extravaganza. A kind of moral dilemma spy thriller  with an all-star cast—Oscar winner Helen Mirren, Oscar nominee Tom  Wilkenson, Avatar’s Sam Worthington, and Ciaran Hinds of Munich (2002)  and Road to Perdition (2005)—as Mossad agents in the late 90’s, and as  the same in 1965 hunting down a Nazi war criminal known as the surgeon  of Birkenau.  Played by Jesper Christensen (Casino Royale (2002),  Quantum of Solace (2005)), he’s one of those Josef Mengele types that  used humans to perform horrific medical procedures, the results of one  such case mentioned in the film is blindness in which herr doktor tried  to change the natural color of a person’s eyes.  Red-headed beauty  Jessica Chastain (brilliantly portrayed mother in Tree of Life) plays a  younger version of Mirren’s character who bravely and cleverly tussles  with the Nazi, while in the stirrups of his gynecological chair.  It’s  one of the most creepy and spine-tingling film moments this year.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8906/The-Debt.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
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      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 02 Sep 2011 23:14:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>96</slash:comments>
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      <title>Senna</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_Senna_210x120_08262011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;If you can imagine, you’re sitting outside Apres Diem in Midtown  enjoying espresso and some exotic dessert waxing poetic about the  economy when a dozen or so Ferraris pull up and proceed to back into  velvet roped-off parking spots.  You could almost hear the distinctive  whining of the engines coming off of I75 making their way down 10th  Street to Monroe before slowing to the rumble of gargling horsepower the  sound of the engines make as if all 10,000 horses are grumbling about  having to come to a stop.  And where the Ferraris go so do the Porches  and the BMWs.  The front of the Landmark Midtown Art Cinema looked more  like a car show than the restaurant and entertainment hub called The  Promenade.  All of them here to pay respects to the Brazilian Formula  One driver Ayrton Senna who won an unprecedented 33 plus victories as a  driver and was crowned Formula One’s World Champion three times before  his untimely death at the age of 34. Senna the documentary gets into the  head and heart of Ayrton who took an intellectual and emotional  approach to driving that was always as much a spiritual drive as it was a  passionate one.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8896/Senna.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
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      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 26 Aug 2011 19:26:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>84</slash:comments>
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      <title>Attack The Block</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img height="120" align="left" width="210" alt="" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99x_blogs_210x120_attacktheblock.jpg" style="margin-right: 10px;" /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Fireworks light up the night sky in the opening of this Science Fiction urban dramedy set in and around a city block in a SoLo neighborhood (South London).  A single lady in her mid-twenties walking home to her apartment building (the dark towering building always lingering in the background like King Kong) comes across a group of sinister thugs wearing hoods and bandanas to hide their identities.  The leader, Moses, pulls out a knife, gets in her face and threatens some serious bejeezus out of her until she coughs up everything she has, including a ring she’s rather fond of.  She’s not happy about the whole incident, afraid, yet cocky enough to tell these kids where to go.  Turns out kids are exactly what they are and we get the impression they use whatever little cash and pawn-able items they can get to buy candy and soda, kid stuff, to enjoy while playing FIFA soccer on their Xbox or Playstation.  A bulk of their booty however goes to the block’s real menace, a rapping, kingpin boss drug dealer named Hi-Hatz who threatens Moses into compliance.  Hi-Hatz is paranoid Moses will rival his domain, his block, while at the same time making Moses his number one, his consigliore (or whatever the SoLo version of that is).  Keeping his friends close but his enemies closer.  In an instant we can see dilemma in Moses, his face shows it all: Do I really want to be the boss of this block?  Will I get my block knocked off?  Who does this guy with a name like Hi-Hatz think he is?  What’s my next move?  It all sounds like an introspective, classic hard-boiled film noir gangster film the likes of John Huston’s Maltese Falcon (1941), a good yolk within a bad shell; or an undercover cop film like Ringo Lam’s Hong Kong gangster film City of Fire (1987), the film Tarantino used for portions of Reservoir Dogs (1992)—essentially a man stuck in a dilemma conditioned to be someone he’s not.  Seriously, Attack the Block is less serious than all of that, but it has that tone…as if drugs and crime are the attackers on the block.  When actually it’s monkey-like beasts from outer space.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8873/Attack-The-Block.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
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      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Aug 2011 21:19:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>97</slash:comments>
      <trackback:ping>http://99x.dnn.cumulus.net/DesktopModules/Blog/Trackback.aspx?id=8873</trackback:ping>
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      <title>Fright Night</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" border="0" align="left" hspace="4" height="120" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Contests/99X_Contests_FrightNight_210x120_08052011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;This remake of the 1985 film keeps the concept intact.  A neighbor moves  in next door who happens to be a blood thirsty vampire and proceeds to  suck down blood from the necks of neighborhood kids like their bodies  are shamrock shakes in spring.  And the only man ballsy enough to do  anything about it is a teen all of about 17 years-old who seeks the help  of who he thinks is a vampire killing professional.  Charlie Brewster  (not to be confused with Charlie Bartlett (2007)), played here by  star-of-the-future Anton Yelchin of Star Trek (2009) fame, the guy who  played Chekov, and who played Ben Foster’s sweet baby brother in the  2006 Alpha Dogs, is the kid next door.  And the vampire?  None other  than Collin Farrell who puts a twist on the classic vampire antagonist  by offering up a semi-cocky, bachelor version who likes to work in his  yard, eat green apples and drink domestic beer.  He sounds and looks  pretty normal, like Farrell in any of his other films, driving his late  model pick-up and choosing to settle down in a suburban neighborhood  that rivals the planned community suburbia of Levittown, NY.  But unlike  a good neighbor, an altered state is there.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8859/Fright-Night.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8859/Fright-Night.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8859/Fright-Night.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 19 Aug 2011 20:18:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>72</slash:comments>
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      <title>30 Minutes Or Less</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_30MinutesOrLess_210x120_08122011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;Here’s a pizza delivery comedy horror story if ever there was one.   Horror in the sense I’d hate to be the guy delivering pizza’s in this  situation.  Opening with The Hives’ “Tick Tick Boom,” pizza delivery guy  Nick played by Oscar nominated actor Jessie Eisenberg drives his early  ‘90s era Mustang through town racing through traffic lights and near  accidents like he’s being chased by the zombies he helped Woody  Harrelson and Emma Stone kill in 2009’s Zombieland; like he’s gunning it  for his life only to beat the 30 minute timer on his dash or else the  pizza he’s carrying is free.  But he’s no dummy.  When he gets to the  house of the guys who purposefully asked for a delivery outside of a 30  minute driving radius he assess the situation and notices these stoners  are under age.  “I bet it’s going to go good with beer,” he says.  “You  do have beer, right?”  At which point the kids give him well more than  the pizza’s worth and Nick is the better for it pocketing the money and  letting his loser manager deal with the loss.  There’s just enough of  this kind of wit and make-shift action to keep 30 Minutes or Less  interesting.  This is director Ruben Fleischer’s first film since  Zombieland (if you haven’t seen Zombieland go get it today), but 30  Minutes or Less relies more on a ticking plot clock than it does bending  the rules and traits of a genre.  Here we have a heist film where the  pizza delivery guy is forced to rob a bank or suffer the consequences of  the bomb strapped to his body with Kenny “F’n” Powers at the controls.   As in mullet master Danny McBride.  And it’s all loosely similar to an  odd “collar bomb story” from 2003.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8832/30-Minutes-Or-Less.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8832/30-Minutes-Or-Less.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8832/30-Minutes-Or-Less.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 12 Aug 2011 23:01:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>93</slash:comments>
      <trackback:ping>http://99x.dnn.cumulus.net/DesktopModules/Blog/Trackback.aspx?id=8832</trackback:ping>
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      <title>Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_RiseOfThePlanetOfTheApes_210x120_08052011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;Marvel and DC Comics aren’t the only ones with origin films this year.   This sort-of remake of the 1972 Conquest of the Planet of the Apes has  an adorable little chimp named Caesar that grows to be the speaking  leader of a revolting group of apes who want nothing more than to climb  the redwoods of Muir Woods right outside of San Francisco.  The film,  starring James Franco as Caesar’s surrogate father, Will, and Andy  Serkis the near-contortionist performer behind Gollum in the Lord of the  Rings trilogy, as Caesar, gathers a very subtle collection of key sound  and creature elements from all of the Ape films, from the first one,  Planet of the Apes in 1968 to Tim Burton’s remake of that film in 2001,  to re-open the Darryl and Richard Zanuck produced 20th Century Fox  goldmine for what will most likely be another decade of talking Ape  films.  And I’m not talking Dr. Doolittle here.  Audience members new to  this story line will be drawn in by the cute, emotional, human element  of Caesar, how he grows, how he discovers what freedom is, what fear is,  and ultimately what power is.  And they’ll be blown away by Serkis who  will most likely, or should anyway, be recognized by the Academy of  Motion Picture Arts and Sciences next year with a nomination for best  actor for this fascinating portrayal of the primates’ best  representative on screen since Reagan’s Bedtime for Bonzo (1951) or  Tarzan’s Cheeta.  And yes, Grape Ape and King Kong to name a few others.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8813/Rise-Of-The-Planet-Of-The-Apes.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8813/Rise-Of-The-Planet-Of-The-Apes.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8813/Rise-Of-The-Planet-Of-The-Apes.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 05 Aug 2011 20:35:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>90</slash:comments>
      <trackback:ping>http://99x.dnn.cumulus.net/DesktopModules/Blog/Trackback.aspx?id=8813</trackback:ping>
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      <title>The Change-Up</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_TheChangeUp_210x120_08052011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;David Dobkin, director of Wedding Crashers (2005), has done with  Atlanta in his new film The Change-Up what Woody Allen does with New  York and Paris which is feature it as a prominent character in the film  and highlight its beauty to add a certain romance to the story.  It’s  the best treatment of the city to date, beating the pants off of  Freejack (1992), or Fluke (1995); or more recently the Farrelly  Brothers’ film Hall Pass which didn’t show any of Atlanta, and didn’t  mention any streets or restaurants, nada about the city, which was  disappointing.  As if it’s suppose to be “Any City, U.S.A.”  But it was  filmed in Atlanta.  So let’s see it.  And that we do in this  switched-bodies comedy of errors, a Freaky Friday (1976) for adults that  is sort of Farrelly Brothers-esque (speaking of the brothers) if we  might be talking their best effort ever.  That’s to say it gets silly at  times, involves physical humor and potty humor if you want to use that  term, and mostly from a male perspective.  But it also has a Frank Capra  moment or two in that our crisscrossed heroes, Ryan Reynolds and Jason  Bateman, learn a few things about themselves they wouldn’t have known  otherwise.  Like Ebenezer Scrooge and George Bailey, theses are guys  that get a glimpse of their lives lived differently, for better or  worse.  While we the audience get glimpses of Atlanta that is better  than any ad campaign the city could buy.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8811/The-Change-Up.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8811/The-Change-Up.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8811/The-Change-Up.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 05 Aug 2011 20:24:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>83</slash:comments>
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      <title>Cowboys And Aliens</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_CowboysAliens_210x120_07292011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;Cowboys and Aliens, the play on “cowboys and indians” kids used to say  as they imagined themselves in a John Ford western, or in the old Tom  Mix silent films, is the latest genre mix from Iron Man (2008) and Elf  (2003) director Jon Favreau.  Yes it is part western and part sci-fi not  dissimilar to Priest released earlier this year which had the extra  genre of horror.  I suppose Cowboys and Aliens has a little horror if  you think alien autopsies could be horrific, and in one scene I suppose  emotionally it’s pretty horrific for our hero Jake played by Daniel  Craig.  He’s a real cowboy in the sense of the loner, Clint Eastwood  man-with-no-name type of rolling stone of the Sergio Leone collection,  and of Eastwood’s own Pale Rider ( 1985), High Plains Drifter (1973), or  even Unforgiven (1992)…the cowboy in search of something if not a small  bit of redemption the audience isn’t necessarily privy to.  Cowboys and  Aliens is no Unforgiven, that’s for sure, and it lacks a visual style  that Leone would have applied, or even Favreau himself applied to Iron  Man.  But it also stars Harrison Ford, Clancy Brown, Sam Rockwell,  Olivia Wilde and Paul Dano who collectively empower Favreau’s film with a  sense of a real throwback to the westerns of the ‘80s.  1980s to be  exact.  A decade we might not necessarily think of in terms of westerns  but a period where Favreau most likely discovered his love of film.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8806/Cowboys-And-Aliens.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8806/Cowboys-And-Aliens.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8806/Cowboys-And-Aliens.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 29 Jul 2011 20:02:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>117</slash:comments>
      <trackback:ping>http://99x.dnn.cumulus.net/DesktopModules/Blog/Trackback.aspx?id=8806</trackback:ping>
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      <title>Captain America: The First Avenger</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" border="0" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_CaptainAmerica_210x120_07222011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;My thoughts on this are that “The First Avenger” came as an  afterthought.  Almost as if the studio didn’t think the film itself  couldn’t carry on its own beyond preview audiences, that adding  “Avengers” to the title piques the interest even more.  Underestimating  audiences as usual.  Why does Captain America need that?  This is Cap!   He doesn’t need that extra title.  All of the Marvel films of late have  been tagged with a Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) S.H.I.E.L.D. visit,  S.H.I.E.L.D. standing for Supreme Headquarters International Espionage  Law-enforcement Division.  This in anticipation of The Avengers film due  out next year featuring a kind of Marvel collection of greatest hits:  Iron Man, The Hulk, Thor, Captain America (who made his first appearance  in 1941 and then a comeback in the sixties with The Avengers comic book  series).  The group also includes some X-Men.  But it’s almost like  we’re in a hurry to get there, so much of a hurry in fact that films  like Thor aren’t getting the kind of solid treatment other films like  Iron Man and Spiderman are getting.  I feel like the Thor film was more  of a sales prelude, watered down and created quickly to make an  appearance, to make a buck, to give audiences a preview of and sort of  string us along in a Lord of the Rings manner toward a climactic episode  which I’m guessing is The Avengers movie, or an Avengers trilogy.  The  kind of thing they did with B-movies of Captain America’s era.  Captain  America: The First Avenger could almost be included in that kind of  “preview” category, sort of tepid in its bang for the Sci-Fi Action  Adventure buck.  That’s not to say it’s bad though, it’s actually pretty  good but in categories we might not expect.  I’d say patriotic  nostalgia being the most prominent.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8800/Captain-America-The-First-Avenger.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8800/Captain-America-The-First-Avenger.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8800/Captain-America-The-First-Avenger.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 22 Jul 2011 20:44:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>100</slash:comments>
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      <title>Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img height="120" align="left" width="210" style="margin-right: 10px;" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99x_blogs_210x120_harrypotterDH2.jpg" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Not a car on the road.  No cops, no people, no busses.  If you want to rob a bank do it on the night of a new Harry Potter release.  I haven't seen lines around buildings and concessions eight lines deep since Star Wars, and recently The Dark Knight.  Theaters were sold out across the board even 3AM screenings early Friday morning (one theater manager said he had it on 14 screens).  And the recent high school grads had an occasion, an event to break out their graduation gowns once again.  If the last Potter film is anything it is an event, and will probably be one of the greatest film events of this decade if not the century.  It's not the best movie ever, you have to start there.  But technically some of the best filmmaking in terms of sound design, visual effects, digital imagery, editing, even lighting and cinematography, historically.  There’s no denying that the one thing the Potter films have had since the first one, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, way back in 2001, is polished craft and style that is visually stunning and at times truly magical.  I say way back in 2001 to exaggerate the sense of era we’re talking about here.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt; &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8796/Harry-Potter-and-the-Deathly-Hallows-Part-2.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8796/Harry-Potter-and-the-Deathly-Hallows-Part-2.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8796/Harry-Potter-and-the-Deathly-Hallows-Part-2.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 15 Jul 2011 20:27:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>121</slash:comments>
      <trackback:ping>http://99x.dnn.cumulus.net/DesktopModules/Blog/Trackback.aspx?id=8796</trackback:ping>
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      <title>Horrible Bosses</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_HorribleBosses_210x120_07122011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;Here's one where the concept is greater than the content.  I mean who  doesn't want to see a balding, receded hairlined Colin Farrell?  Of  three bad mannered bosses he’s the one advertised as the tool.  But  Horrible Bosses also has Jennifer Aniston, touted as the sexually  harassing maneater.  Why isn't she bald?  See that just doesn't work  because no matter how bad or horrible a boss Aniston is in this comedy  directed by Seth Gordon (Four Christmases (2008), The King of Kong: A  Fistful of Dollars (2007)) she still looks great.  And so does third  horrible boss “psycho” David Harken played by Kevin Spacey.  Oscar  winner Spacey can turn on the bad-ass anytime while being “horrible” and  still come out aces high.  So just how horrible are these bosses?  Not  so bad really.  In fact the beginning of Horrible Bosses has these three  champion actors, Farrell, Spacey, and Aniston in the entertainment hot  seat driving the film so well that the characters the stories revolve  around played by Charlie Day, Jason Bateman, and Jason Sudeikis look  like candy-faced tykes wetting themselves in the backseat, as they take a  backseat to these densely packed performances.  But that’s just the way  it’s written, see.  A decent introduction to Horrible Bosses.  As the  second act develops we get a heck of a lot more of Bateman, Sudeikis and  Day and the playing field starts to even out.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8791/Horrible-Bosses.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8791/Horrible-Bosses.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8791/Horrible-Bosses.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 12 Jul 2011 16:52:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>80</slash:comments>
      <trackback:ping>http://99x.dnn.cumulus.net/DesktopModules/Blog/Trackback.aspx?id=8791</trackback:ping>
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      <title>Transformers: Dark Of The Moon</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_TransformersDarkSideOfTheMoon_210x120_06302011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;After the first film in 2007 I was comfortable in saying I wasn't a  fan.  That yes I liked the cars and yes the nostalgia of Transformers  from my childhood, and yes Megan Fox, but the cacophony of mega muscle  visual and sound effects and lack of story substance just left me  deflated of protein, a movie watching diabetic from all the filmmaking  sugar. Then Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009) came out and  annihilated any hopes of recovery...Fallen was like a cancer where I was  concerned. I would never want to see another Transformer film again  only forcing myself to go to others in an ability to continue on this  passionate study of film and critical writing, as a duty to myself and  to stay somewhat on top of the latest film news.  And so what a shock to  see improvement here in Transformers: Dark of the Moon, and what looks  like an advancement toward a cure for an overindulgent style and heavily  augmented type of visual storytelling I had long ago labeled Michael  Bay disease.  The antidote it seems is in the mix of analyzing the  failures of prior transforming robot character concoctions and getting  serious help in looking for ways to improve the snake oil.  After all,  Paramount Pictures, Steven Spielberg and Bay all have reputations on the  line.  Part of finding a vaccine is fighting 3D bacteria because Dark  of the Moon certainly gives it a shot, while giving the audience an  intravenous shot of patriotism to make them feel better about money  they’re spending at the box office.  What I’m trying to say here is not  only is Dark of the Moon the best in the franchise but finally we get a  summer blockbuster film worthy of its moniker.  &lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8784/Transformers-Dark-Of-The-Moon.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8784/Transformers-Dark-Of-The-Moon.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8784/Transformers-Dark-Of-The-Moon.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 30 Jun 2011 14:36:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <slash:comments>67</slash:comments>
      <trackback:ping>http://99x.dnn.cumulus.net/DesktopModules/Blog/Trackback.aspx?id=8784</trackback:ping>
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      <title>Bad Teacher</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img width="210" vspace="4" hspace="4" height="120" align="left" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 10px" src="/Portals/8/99X_Blogs/Lamoreaux/99X_Blogs_Lamoreaux_BadTeacher_210x120_06272011.jpg" alt="" /&gt;This could be Cameron Diaz’s best film, and the same can be said of  director Jake Kasdan.  Both have flirted with great work, especially  Diaz who has had Golden Globe nominations for Best Actress in films like  Vanilla Sky (2001), Gangs of New York (2002), Being John Malkovich  (1999), and There’s Something About Mary (1998).  Most of those films  were dramas but humor like in Mary can go a long way in fooling us in to  believing something is worth its weight in gold.  And Bad Teacher is  funny.  Yeah, this review stuff is pretty subjective.  How can you tell  if a film is really funny, it it’s only funny to the reviewer, me, or  will it be funny to anyone else?  The test of that I believe is in the  character and often times the expectation of what we know a character’s  role should be.  In this case the stereotypical mentoring, caring,  matronly, disciplined and dignified middle school teacher.  It’s ironic  then that the teacher we’re introduced to, Elizabeth Halsey played by  Ms. Diaz is a) smokin’ hot, b) could care less about the students and  avoids their emotional needs at ever cost, c) takes drugs and drinks  alcohol while on the job, and d) doesn’t teach but rather puts movies on  about teachers that teach like those in Stand and Deliver (1988), or  Lean on Me (1989) while she sleeps at her desk. That irony works well in  that it’s not what you would expect, and Diaz has the freedom to take  the role to levels that only a pro can take it meaning low, and I mean  really low, before reaching the high road that lovable characters in  good movies generally get to.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;a href=http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8780/Bad-Teacher.aspx&gt;More...&lt;/a&gt;</description>
      <link>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8780/Bad-Teacher.aspx</link>
      <author>pat.obrien@cumulus.com</author>
      <comments>http://99x.com/Blogs/JonLamoreauxsMovieBlog/tabid/637/EntryId/8780/Bad-Teacher.aspx#Comments</comments>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 27 Jun 2011 18:46:00 GMT</pubDate>
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