Everyone Says I Love You (1996)

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My wife was complaining the other day that it’d been a while since we’ve watched a romance movie. She’d also recently mentioned that some of the only kind of humor that she can appreciate are Woody Allen movies. Everyone Says I Love You has all that and is a musical to boot, thus killing many birds with one stone. It’s particularly known for featuring singing performances by famous actors not known for their musical talents.

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A Most Violent Year (2014)

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It seems like we’ve been seeing actor Oscar Isaac everywhere these days, beginning in Inside Llewyn Davis last year, David Simon’s excellent miniseries Show Me a Hero recently and of course the new Star Wars. But what made me interested in this film is that it’s the third feature film by J.C. Chandor and that both of his previous works were amazing. It helps as well that it made it onto the best of the year lists of multiple critics at the end of last year.

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Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015)

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It’s Star Wars so it has open with the trademark slow text crawl. I’m okay with that even though I’m bored of it after six movies and innumerable videogames. Next comes a long, tracking shot of the familiar wedge shape of a Star Destroyer, except from a novel angle. Homage. I’m down with that. But when we see Max von Sydow wearing clothes that make him suspiciously resemble Alec Guinness and the McGuffin being hidden in this iteration’s version of the lovable droid, I start cringing. Long before it recreates the cantina scene, to seek transportation to boot, or show the shadowy, disfigured behind-the-scenes big bad via hologram, I’ve realized this isn’t so much a continuation of the original trilogy as a beat-for-beat remake.

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Better Luck Tomorrow (2002)

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These days Justin Lin is best known for the Fast and Furious movies though he is also slated to take over the next iteration of the rebooted Star Trek franchise. But like everyone else, he had to start somewhere and Better Luck Tomorrow was his feature film debut. This one only has middling ratings on Rotten Tomatoes but Roger Ebert saw fit to award it four out of four stars and commented that it’s extremely rare to see a film focused on the experiences of Asian-Americans. That’s pretty much why I was interested in this film myself.

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The General (1926)

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We’d previously watched Buster Keaton’s Sherlock, Jr. and ended up being surprised by how funny and creative it is. It stands to reason that we had pretty high expectations for The General. Keaton himself considered it his best film and is ranked among the greatest American films ever made. Unfortunately those expectations were largely dashed. It turns out that while Sherlock, Jr. is indisputably a comedy, The General isn’t. Instead, it’s an action-adventure film with some comedic elements and that makes all the difference.

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The unexamined life is a life not worth living