Where the Wild Things Are (Theaters)

What a disappointment! I was probably 7 or 8 when I first read this book, and I remember letting my imagination take me to new heights with what I would do if I were among “the wild.” So when my 5-year-old son enthusiastically reached for this book, I was excited about reading it to him. Obviously, when the movie’s trailers were released, my boy was really looking forward to October 16th.

This movie is depressing, somewhat morbid, and a little intimidating for children. The book had me thinking that Max was sort of forced into another world by his own imagination after being unruly and for misbehaving towards his mother. The movie tends to dig a lot deeper into emotional and psychological realms where little kids may have a tough time receiving the message or the point of the story.

In one scene, Max sees a pile of bones and asks the Wild Things, “Were those other kings”?

He certainly supposed that other naughty children had come to this strange new land, but the thought of them being killed and eaten by the monsters was way off my preconceived notion about the movie. I thought that scene was a little too bizarre for my son to understand.

Quite the contrast from what I concluded about the book, this movie takes at least 3 stars for its costumery, its characters, and its sets. But I wouldn’t bet on children (younger than 10) enjoying it very much. I do, however, love the soundtrack.

RockNRolla (DVD)

There’s something to be said about Guy Ritchie’s movies. Sure, he borrows liberally from other directors, but he manages to mix everything together to form a style all his own. While his first few films were incredible, he has fallen off a bit with his previous releases.  RockNRolla is Ritchie’s first crime film since 2005′s Revolver, which was met with less than positive reviews. His latest flick, RockNRolla, looks to be a return to form for the director.

RockNRolla isn’t so much a return to form as it is a return to format. Ritchie employs all the elements of his best movies in this one. Interesting characters involved in intertwined plot lines that all converge at the end: check.  Snappy dialogue and unbelievable situations: check. Mysterious Macguffin (read: object that forwards the plot but whose details remain unimportant) that everyone is scrambling to get a hold of: check. Unique torture methods employed by local gangster kingpin: check. It seems that he went over a checklist for this movie and included the elements that made his other movies so great.  Unfortunately, all he did was include them. He doesn’t try to improve on these ideas and it becomes clear that not only are they a bit recycled, but they were originally done better.

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Trailer : Watchmen

300′s Zack Snyder brings Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ critically acclaimed comic book Watchmen to the big screen, courtesy of DC Comics and Warner Bros. Pictures. Set in an alternate universe circa 1985, the film’s world is a highly unstable one where a nuclear war is imminent between America and Russia. Superheroes have long been made to hang up their tights thanks to the government-sponsored Keene Act, but that all changes with the death of The Comedian, a robust ex-hero commando whose mysterious free fall out a window perks the interest of one of the country’s last remaining vigilantes, Rorschach. His investigation leads him to caution many of his other former costumed colleagues, including Dr. Manhattan, Night Owl, Ozymandias, Sally Jupiter, and her daughter, The Silk Spectre. – Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide