![]() OK Weekly Magazine Tom Cruise & Katie Holmes April 17, 2006 Issue (Sarah Shahi, Tori Spelling, Debra Messing) $16.00 OK! Weekly Magazine, April 17, 2006 Issue. The cover is Katie Holmes & Tom Cruise (4 pages). Also featured inside: Jessica Simpson, Jennifer Aniston (4 pages), Debra Messing (4 pages), Tori Spelling (4 pages), Lisaraye McCoy, Matt LeBlanc, Melanie Griffith, Nicole Richie, Eva Longoria, Angelina Jolie (3 pages), Beyonce, Wynonna Judd & Cowboy Troy, Hank Azaria, Fred Goss, Paris Hilton, Mary J. Blige, George Clooney (4 pages), Sarah Shahi (6 pages), etc... ![]() Sarah Shahi White Top 16x20 Photo $32.00 Show support for your favorite celebrity or athlete with a high quality photo! This 16x20 will look great displayed in any fan's home or office. Many other photos available, including movie stills, actors & actresses, musicians, athletes, and more! ![]() Shades of Ray $19.99 First off, giving a white dude a tan and having them have stubble doesn't make them half Pakistani. That part just kept drawing me out of the movie. I didn't know what to expect when I decided to watch this movie. I just saw I could watch it for free and I was like "Let's go for it!" ==================SPOILER ALERT======================= I wasn't disappointed by watching this movie, but it was extremely predictable. It does follow the plot of most love stories, in that guy proposes to girl, guy meets new girl, guy doesn't tell either girl about his affiliation with the other girl, girls meet each other, guy breaks up with the old girl, guy stays with new girl, and everything is happy. ==================END SPOILER========================= What this movie does differently is talk about race. Yeah, the guy is white, but with a tan and stubble, but "Chuck" tries to pass off as half Pakistani. He denies the half Pakistani in him and tries to only go out with white women. "Hey! Where the white women at?" This movie tries too much to go into racism, and it just ended up taking me out of the movie experience. This movie does say that you should try to be with people similar to you, but if you don't it won't necessarily kill you. It's all just personal preference. When most movies say that you should go for X person, Shades of Ray is nice in that it specifically says that you can never know which is better, that it is a personal choice you have to make. It is also charming and entertaining. Near the beginning, I did find myself laughing at a bunch of things, with one of my roommates telling me to be quiet, but that fizzled out when it started going into the "lubby dubby" part of the movie. I did find it really entertaining when he was shot down for not being Iranian/Persian. Hahahahahaha. i lold (I like jokes that just knock people down all over. "He's not white enough" followed by "He's not Persian.") Anyways, I would like to rate this as a 3.5/5, but it only goes by each star, so it's closer to 3/5 than 4/5. This is a charming movie that's predictable, but it stands above most love stories that follow the same linear progression. |
|