Knocked Up
I enjoyed this a lot more than Superbad. It was cute and funny without being constantly stupid, which was good. I felt like it was fairly sexist, though - the women are all neurotic, overbearing and shrieky, and Katherine Heigl's character was just not as interesting or endearing as Seth Rogen's. Also, why didn't she get an abortion? They never discuss that. Everybody's like 'Abortion!' and she never gives a reason for not getting one, which makes me feel like the writers were saying that shouldn't be an option - whether or not that's the case.
It had a lot of moments where it was really, really funny, though, so points for that. The pregnant sex was hilarious. I loved Paul Rudd in it too.
7 out of 10
Männer wie wir (Balls)
It's the gay German 'Mighty Ducks!' Okay, no, but it's an absolutely stereotypical sports movie with absolutely stereotypical gay men, and it's absolutely stereotypically...charming and adorable. Yeah, I know I'm biased, but it was damn cute, and the adversity was, for once, real and not imagined. Our hero, Ecki, is facing real judgment from everyone he cares about, especially his asshole father, and proving himself through sport becomes about more than just beating the baddies, it's about proving himself as a man. Most of the characters are one-dimensional, although there's a leather daddy threesome that is the cutest threesome I've ever seen on screen with a nice subplot, and Ecki's love interest is gorgeous. It's well-done, if not overly original, and you'll probably be cheering at the end like we were. Sentimental suckers, the lot of us.
6 out of 10
Ocean's Thirteen
It was better than Twelve, but I still don't feel like everyone was as at the top of the game as they were for Eleven. There were some great moments (Danny and Rusty bonding over Oprah is killer, Eddie Izzard makes a fun appearance, and the subplot with the Mexican factory worker revolution is adorable and had me cracking up) that made the movie well worth watching, and there's a great retro mood and colour palette to the whole thing. However, I couldn't help feeling like they got into the job way too soon without enough setup, which made some parts drag for me. Al Pacino just oozes menace as the villain of this piece, and everybody actually gets given something to do, which is nice to see.
6 out of 10
ETA: New Lost promo!
Green Queen
I enjoyed this a lot more than Superbad. It was cute and funny without being constantly stupid, which was good. I felt like it was fairly sexist, though - the women are all neurotic, overbearing and shrieky, and Katherine Heigl's character was just not as interesting or endearing as Seth Rogen's. Also, why didn't she get an abortion? They never discuss that. Everybody's like 'Abortion!' and she never gives a reason for not getting one, which makes me feel like the writers were saying that shouldn't be an option - whether or not that's the case.
It had a lot of moments where it was really, really funny, though, so points for that. The pregnant sex was hilarious. I loved Paul Rudd in it too.
7 out of 10
Männer wie wir (Balls)
It's the gay German 'Mighty Ducks!' Okay, no, but it's an absolutely stereotypical sports movie with absolutely stereotypical gay men, and it's absolutely stereotypically...charming and adorable. Yeah, I know I'm biased, but it was damn cute, and the adversity was, for once, real and not imagined. Our hero, Ecki, is facing real judgment from everyone he cares about, especially his asshole father, and proving himself through sport becomes about more than just beating the baddies, it's about proving himself as a man. Most of the characters are one-dimensional, although there's a leather daddy threesome that is the cutest threesome I've ever seen on screen with a nice subplot, and Ecki's love interest is gorgeous. It's well-done, if not overly original, and you'll probably be cheering at the end like we were. Sentimental suckers, the lot of us.
6 out of 10
Ocean's Thirteen
It was better than Twelve, but I still don't feel like everyone was as at the top of the game as they were for Eleven. There were some great moments (Danny and Rusty bonding over Oprah is killer, Eddie Izzard makes a fun appearance, and the subplot with the Mexican factory worker revolution is adorable and had me cracking up) that made the movie well worth watching, and there's a great retro mood and colour palette to the whole thing. However, I couldn't help feeling like they got into the job way too soon without enough setup, which made some parts drag for me. Al Pacino just oozes menace as the villain of this piece, and everybody actually gets given something to do, which is nice to see.
6 out of 10
ETA: New Lost promo!
Green Queen
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It's not really necessary to the narrative to have a reason why she doesn't have an abortion since we know based on the title alone that she's going to have the baby. I'm trying to remember how they dealt with the abortion issue in Juno, but I forget.
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[I can't remember, does Alison actually talk about it with anyone or does she just call Ben and say "I'm having the baby"?]
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And I think the thing about the abortion was just that she didn't want to have one. Not much explanation needed, I think. She just wouldn't.
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