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Rachael Leigh Cook

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Bob Funk
Bob Funk

$26.98
This was being advertised heavily and trailered as an outrageous comedy, which admittedly the first act has a few great lines and moments, but it quickly devolves into a serous take on alcoholism and life changes.

The lead womanizing, alcoholic, ranting character was played well by Michael Leydon Campbell, and from what I have seen before this is his breakout role. He manages to fit five different personalities into this story and has all of the screen time, even though he is not given listing on the front cover. The supporting cast has a slew of recognizable faces, including Stephen Root, Grace Zabriskie (much better seen in the Big Love series), Eddie Jemsion (Ocean's trilogy) and Rachael Leigh Cook as the absent love interest.

The segmented story follows him as he devolves into an alcoholic mess, all while losing his job, "friends", motivation and easy one night stands from his main bar. Once the second and third acts materialize the few laughs go away, and a serious recovery tone takes over. The only other funny line later in the movie is from Grace's character with that "I am an island in the middle of Crazy River".

The movie drags in quite a few areas, Campbell's rants get irritating, but his life lessons learned make for a somewhat redeeming quality as far as a message film goes.

Aside from a couple plant reviews here, cover art that has nothing to do with the film (the large picture on the back never happens, planted quotes including..."RLC's best since She's All That" - hardly, "RLC shines as the heroine.." - not even close, she trips into the last scene to try and redeem the absent love story), no special features and average picture and sound, makes this an overall non-recommendation. But maybe some of the spot supporting performances will make this a decent rental for their fans.

Rachael Leigh Cook (Celebrity Bios)
Rachael Leigh Cook (Celebrity Bios)

$6.95
It's sick...Thousands of little girls who want to be like her and even more little boys who dream of having her. It's really sad, there is even an entire cult style web page deticated to Ms. Cook run by desperate lonely computer freaks and visited by equally pathetic die hard fans (check out ...for a few laughs in the community section!). This book is meant for these "people" and should not be picked up by anyone else. If only these people could understand the probability of a celebrity actually wanting to meet a pathetic loser who ... over her picture every night!
All Hat (Widescreen)
All Hat (Widescreen)

$14.98
All Hat (Leonard Farlinger, 2007)

I liked All Hat when I read it a few years ago, and when I found out a movie version had been made, I was a little hesitant to see it; after all, how many decent books have been ruined by awful movies? I finally screwed up my courage and gave it a watch tonight, however, and I needn't have worried; while I liked the book, I loved the movie. It's gutsy, funny, and sharp, and it actually loses some of the inevitable confusion one gets in a book that starts you off with a big ensemble cast; the characters are more distinct here than they are on the page, in my estimation.

All Hat is your classic Heist film, though as envisioned more recently by Tarantino or Mamet; there's a great plan, but Murphy's law dominates as soon as the execution begins. Set on the wide plains of Ontario, All Hat stars a number of different groups involved in all this. First of all, there's Ray Dokes (The Stone Angel's Luke Kirby); if there's a male lead, he's it. Ray just got out of prison after two years he served for assault (the relation of the details of the assault is one of the movie's funniest scenes, if in a low-key way). While he's getting back on his feet, Ray is staying with Pete Culpepper (Keith Carradine), a blue-collar trainer at a local racetrack who helps Ray land a job as a roofer. Ray's a good, hardworking kid, but trouble tends to find him. Usually it's the kind of trouble with an hourglass figure. There's existing tension between Ray and his ex-girlfriend Etta (Lisa Ray of The World Unseen), but there's also Pete's young, vivacious exercise rider Cassie (Rachael Leigh Cook, who should need no introduction) to draw Ray's eye. And after all this, I'm just done describing the first group! I'll stick with one other. In the same way that Ray and Pete come off, as much as anyone in this movie can, as the good guys, the bad guys are headed up by Sonny Stanton (Saw IV's Noam Jenkins), the wastrel son of a man who's kind of Pete Culpepper's opposite, the trainer whose stereotype is the real meaning behind the phrase "the sport of kings". Dad's health is in decline, and Sonny is just waiting for him to die so he can take over the family business. Dad's trainer is the pragmatic, though good-hearted, Jackson Jones (the wonderful Ernie Hudson, who really needs more work), and he's got two stablehand/assistants, his brother Paulie (Ararat's David Alpay) and Sonny's childhood friend Dean Calder (Joel Keller, form the long-running Canadian TV series Blue Murder). (Another thing the movie made slightly clearer than the book--Paulie isn't just a well-meaning naif, he's actually mildly mentally challenged. Maybe I'm an idiot for missing that in the book, but...)

There are others, including the fantastic actor Graham Greene, but I'm this far and I haven't even gotten to the plot. Sonny is trying to buy up all the surrounding land to develop, and Etta is holding out despite the fact that she and her Alzheimer's-suffering father are way, way behind, and the bank's going to foreclose any minute now. Sonny, however, has some pretty big financial problems of his own, and so he comes up with a dastardly plan--kill off his father's prize horse and make it look like an accident. True to form, he puts that in the hands of Dean and Paulie, who are pretty much sure to screw it up...

As you can probably tell by the synopsis here, I found that the plot of the movie played second fiddle to the characters, and I had no problem with that at all; many of my favorite heist movies (including Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs and Mamet's Heist) are character-driven. The key is the balance, and I have to say that All Hat doesn't quite get there (certainly not in the way that, say House of Games does) , but if you're going to err, I'd certainly prefer erring on the side of character than on the side of plot. Given that, I can't fault Brad Smith, who adapted his own novel for the screen, for going for the character-driven screenplay with which he came up; it's a success. Smith's long-limbed, easy humor comes through here full force, and the relationships between these characters never once feel unrealistic or forced. (I should probably take points off for that, actually, since so many real-life relationships are both unrealistic and forced. But I digress.) All Hat is a movie that unjustly fell into obscurity almost immediately upon its release. I suggest rediscovering it. It's obviously far too early to consider calling All Hat a western classic, but if you can do it for Brokeback Mountain, you can do it for All Hat as well. A fine, fine movie. ****

Tangled
Tangled

$14.99
A must see for all Jonathan Rhys Meyers fans wanting to see a little more....of his acting in the beginning of his career.
"He is young and ambitious and needs to have it all no matter what it cost him or who he hurts" He's the guy your mother warned you about.

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