I wanted to like it and forget its weak, ill-conceived script. Only it really was rather inconsistent and unconvincing with its feeble plot and unrelatable (at least to me) characters. However, strangely enough, I have to recognize the cast delivered quite sharp performances. For instance, Julianne Moore tried her best, with both charms and talents, but the story-line and the hardly funny situations didn't help her in the effort. The same is for the rest of the cast, they were not bad at all, it was what they were given to perform which was rather poor.
My favorite feature in the film: the voiceover commenting the action with an ironically Austenesque tone. 3 out of 5 stars.
The Help (2011) Impossible not to love this movie, no matter if you have or haven't read the book. It's a great moving story of ordinary women, who become extraordinary thanks to their bravery and to their talent at writing and telling stories. Words that change the world, revolutionary weapons. Skeeter (Emma Stone), a young white journalist aspiring to become a writer and two African-American maids (Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer) decide to write a book exposing the hypocrisy, racism and cruelty of the wealthy white community living in Jackson, Mississipi. In the Civil Rights Era, these three women face hardship and ostracism in their fight for justice and equality. Sisterhood and friendship beyond racial prejudices.
In 2012 Viola Davis won a well deserved Academy Award for her performance as Aibileen Clark in this film.
5 stars out of 5.
My week with Marilyn (2011)
This is another lovely movie, highly acclaimed when it came out. I simply loved it for its awesome cast and its in-depth portrait of the unforgettable, unique Marilyn, and the greatest British actor, Sir Laurence Olivier. The characterization and the performances are so touching, so respectful, so delicate.
This is the adaptation of a book, an autobiographical one, "The Prince, The Showgirl and Me", written by Colin Clark, an employee of Sir Laurence Olivier who happened to have a very intense brief encounter with Marilyn Monroe, when she spent some time in England to shoot "The Prince and The Showgirl".
The declining mature star, melancholic and envious of the incredible natural talent of the young rising star, his total admiration for her stunning beauty and the magic she could work on any man, the mesmer and spells that, unwillingly, she cast. Sir Olivier and Marilyn, both fundamentally unhappy: he for his fear of losing his fame and the love of his audience with old age, she for her frailty, her longing for being loved and accepted, her fears and her obsessions. Kenneth Branagh and Michelle Williams are awesome in their performances, just as Eddie Redmayne is sweet and touching in his role. He is the protagonist and the narrator: Colin Clark, an ordinary man blessed and lucky enough to become Marilyn's favorite companion for a week. Marilyn, seen through his eyes, becomes a moving, fragile, beautiful woman who just needs to be loved. The cast includes Judi Dench, Julia Ormond, Toby Jones, Simon Russel Beale, Jim Carter, Miranda Raison, Emma Watson, Dominic Cooper and Derek Jakobi. How could I miss it ? 5 stars out of 5.
The Hunger Games (2012)