March 19th, 2009

Any other actor in the role of Eddie Farrell aka Jonathan, the housesitter, could not have pulled it off. It is as if the role was written with Carvey in mind – his antics and comedic timing were perfectly funny and in every scene he is in(which is pretty much everyone of them), i laughed, wholeheartedly.
“Opportunity Knocks” is the one of the best movies with an SNL alum. If you are a fan of his characters from the show, you will probably like this movie about a con artist that uses the empty house of a wealthy bachelor to get into the lives of his family and fall in love in the process.
Robert Loggia is very good as the father of both the homeowner and Annie, his sister. I remember watching this movie over and over and laughing every time back when it first came on video. Between his karaoke stylings of “Born to be wild” and his imiation of George Bush(the first president in the family), you will be rolling with laughter.
This is a great comedy from a great comedian. I highly recommend it for a great laugh!
Tags: Opportunity Knocks
Posted in 1990s Money Movies | No Comments »
March 19th, 2009

I didn’t want to see this film initially. Its tagline was “A Los Angeles crime saga”. Michael Mann, the director of this film, created Miami Vice, and I thought this was going to be like that. But after some prodding from my sister (who knows my tastes very well), she said I would love this film.
Lo and behold, it’s a masterpiece. It’s an epic film (171 minutes), and it covers a hell of a lot of terrority. The characters seem like real people, not just caricatures. Films in the 1990’s (Pulp Fiction for example) had characters in them that weren’t very real, they were just there to mouth supposedly “cool” dialogue and kill indiscrimately.
Here there is a real, morally ambiguous vibe going on between De Niro and Pacino. While they are different sides of the law, they are pretty much the same. Their personal lives are royally screwed up, they’re very lonely workaholics, and they are really 2 worried souls. Pacino, luckily, doesn’t overact too much, and De Niro is superb as usual. And the supporting cast is just as good. There is not one false note in this film. The bank heist and shootout is one of the greatest action scenes ever, and its staging and execution are superb.
A film with great depth and character, very uncharacteristic of the 1990’s.
Cast
- Al Pacino as Lt. Vincent Hanna
- Robert De Niro as Neil McCauley
- Val Kilmer as Chris Shiherlis
- Jon Voight as Nate
- Tom Sizemore as Michael Cheritto
- Diane Venora as Justine Hanna
- Amy Brenneman as Eady
- Ashley Judd as Charlene Shiherlis
- Mykelti Williamson as Sgt. Drucker
- Wes Studi as Det. Casals
- Ted Levine as Det. Bosko
Tags: Heat
Posted in 1990s Money Movies | No Comments »
March 19th, 2009

I must confess that I had high expectations prior to seeing There Will Be Blood, and from the previews I expected Daniel Day-Lewis’ character to be much more violent that he proved to be. This film is an amazing tour-de-force for Mr. Day-Lewis; he is on screen in almost every scene and so absorbed into Daniel Plainview that you forget this is acting. Plainview is a man who not only distrusts the world but has nothing but suspicious contempt for those around him. Paradoxically, he wants to portray himself as a family man and palms off the child of one of his deceased workers as his son (nicely played by Dillon Freasier). He cares nothing about having a family but reacts violently to the mere suggestion that he is less than a perfect parent.
Daniel Day-Lewis’ performance is so large that it tends to dominate those of his fellow-actors but Paul Dano as Eli Sunday, the local preacher of the Church of the Third Resurrection is equally amazing. Like Plainfield, Eli is performing for the local townspeople and there is a fiery scene where Eli casts out a “ghost” that is giving elderly woman arthritis. An interesting performance is turned in by Kevin J. O’connor as Plainview’s presumed long-lost half-brother. The meekness of O’Connor’s performance is quite a contract to Day-Lewis’ and for a moment in the film Plainview has somebody who he really believes to be family and gives him a job. Cairn Hinds has a small role as Plainview’s right-hand man, the one he sends on errands he does not want to do and, unfortunately does not have enough screen time.
The film begins with no dialogue for several minutes as we watch Day-Lewis digging what seems to be his first oil well alone, gradually changing into a scene years later where he has a small crew of workers. The music by Jonny Greenwood is quite a pastiche with the music sometimes a bit disruptive and sometimes very interesting. I was a bit puzzled by his use of Violin Concerti by Mendelssohn and Bruch as they did not really fit the scene for me.
Tags: There Will Be Blood
Posted in 2000s Money Movies | No Comments »
March 19th, 2009

This is an awesome movie. If you have seen and enjoyed Rod Serlings “Patterns” you will love Executive Suite”. This is all about how corporate america works behind the scenes. The fictional Treadway Corporation is full of back stabbers corporate higher ups who are predigious lairs, cheats, drunks and flim flam men willing to do anything they must to beef up the bottom line.
With these people running a business is nothing but a bottom line driven process. People, employees, towns and everything else is expendible tho those in this companies executive suite. Sit and watch while the corporate elite play God with the lives of rank and file blue collar workers, their town, their lives. Look at the class system in America laid bare as lines are clearly drawn in the Executive Suite.
Actually this 1950’s movie shows the Executive Suite in a much more tame light than it is in real life today. The guys in this movie are too sweet and gentle for todays corporate cut throat where human life is not worth anything that can not be translated into a bottom line profit! If I sound cynical to the max its because thats the way life is in the executive suite. Look at the shabby way the executive hero treats his own son interrupting all their family time together because, the corporation comes first even in front of family!
See it all for yourself in Executive Suite!
Cast
- William Holden as McDonald “Don” Walling
- Barbara Stanwyck as Julia O. Tredway
- Fredric March as Loren Phineas Shaw
- Walter Pidgeon as Frederick Y. Alderson
- Paul Douglas as J. Walter Dudley
- Louis Calhern as George Nyle Caswell
- Dean Jagger as Jesse Q. Grimm
- June Allyson as Mary Blemond Walling
- Nina Foch as Erica Martin
- Shelley Winters as Eva Bardeman
Tags: Executive Suite
Posted in Classic Money Movies | No Comments »
March 19th, 2009

Based on and named after the bestseller book Smartest Guys in the Room, this documentary provides an insightful look into the scandalous fall of Enron Corp. There are no actors in this documentary and yet it is dramatic. Such were the factors leading to the `amazing rise and scandalous fall’ of Enron that even a documentary featuring events preceding that historic day in December 2001, when Enron filed for the largest bankruptcy in the corporate US history, seems like a tale of epic imagination.
This documentary is neither as detailed nor as insightful as the book, but it does a great job of providing an insightful and reasonably detailed account of the Enron saga. Overall, it is not of any incremental value for the people who have read the book. However, if you can’t go through 464 pages, this does a great job of enlightening you on the drama that Enron was.
Cast
- Bethany McLean — Fortune reporter; co-author, The Smartest Guys in the Room
- Peter Elkind — co-author, The Smartest Guys in the Room
- Mike Muckleroy — former Enron executive
- Amanda Martin — former Enron executive
- Charles Wickman — former Enron trader
- John Beard — former Enron accountant
- Bill Lerach — attorney for Enron stockholders
Tags: Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room
Posted in 2000s Money Movies | No Comments »
March 19th, 2009

This movie is by far one of the worst movies I have ever seen. It’s not worth buying it, let alone renting it. Even the cover of this movie is bad. It shows Sandra Bullock in the foreground but she only plays a supporting role in the movie. It’s the man in the background (Jonathan Penner) who has the lead role. It makes me wonder if the cover was made this way just to sell the movie. Penner loses his job and starts his own business by making his own religion but it was done in poor taste. Even if you are a Sanra Bullock fan, there are far better movies than this one.
Cast
- Sandra Bullock
- Jonathan Penner
- Gerald Orange
- George Plimpton
Tags: A Fool and His Money
Posted in 1980s Money Movies | No Comments »
March 19th, 2009

A dark comedy about an infantry platoon that goes behind enemy lines to steal gold bars. Their leader is Kelly (a young Clint Eastwood), an ex-officer who lost his commission after a fratricide incident. With Kelly is the reluctant Sergeant (Telly Savalas), a tank commander (Donald Sutherland), and a scheming supply sergeant (played well by Don Rickles).
The humor is good, though dated with Sutherland acting like a “Hippie” throughout the picture – you have to see it to believe it. Surprisingly for a film of this theme, the film production did an incredible job of recreating WWII scenery with numerous authentic vehicles and weapons; jeeps, Sherman tanks, even T-34 tanks modified to look like German Tiger tanks (these were acquired from a Russian source that used them for one of their films, and are very likely the same ones used in “Saving Private Ryan”).
Humor is mixed with action and some dramatic moments. Probably one of the most unusual scenes is midway through the movie when the tank platoon, under command of “Oddball” (Sutherland) attacks a railroad installation occupied by German units. Bullets and cannon shells erupt in all directions with the tanks oblitering the place, all while Oddball’s crews play country-western music through loudspeakers mounted on their tanks.
The film keeps your interest. It’s interesting to note that it was filmed in the ex-Yugoslavia region.
Cast
- Clint Eastwood as Private Kelly
- Telly Savalas as Master Sergeant “Big Joe”
- Don Rickles as Staff Sergeant “Crapgame”
- Carroll O’Connor as Major General Colt
- Donald Sutherland as Sergeant “Oddball”
- Gavin MacLeod as Moriarty
- Hal Buckley as Captain Maitland
- Stuart Margolin as Private “Little Joe”
- Jeff Morris as Private Cowboy
- Richard Davalos as Private Gutowski
- Perry Lopez as Private Petuko
- Tom Troupe as Corporal Job
- Harry Dean Stanton as Private Willard
Tags: Kelly's Heroes
Posted in Classic Money Movies | No Comments »
March 19th, 2009

“How to Succeed…” on film is not a total disaster. There are some very good moments in it, such as Rudy Valee hamming it up in “Grand Old Ivy” and Robert Morse doing the same in “Brotherhood of Man” and “I Believe in You”, but some moments in the film are completely uncalled for.
Michelle Lee singing “I Believe in You” as a romantic song towards the end of the Act I absolutley ruined the sardonic, unromantic tone of the show. This scene, while only lasting three minutes, ruins the entire story and concept.
Most of the songs sung by Lee’s Rosemary from the stage play are also cut from the film, ruining her characther, turning her into a sympathetic romantic lead, not a tough as nails broad.
Bud Frump is also given less to do here. His two big numbers are cut, making him more of a straightfoward antagonist than a comic villan.
While Morse, Sammy Smith, Valee and Ruth Kobart are preserved wonderfully on the screen, the rest of the film flops rather badly.
Tags: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying
Posted in Classic Money Movies | No Comments »
March 19th, 2009

No one likes to be pushed around, and when a person is pushed too hard, too often, they just kind of…snap.
Dick was a nice guy; he had a well-paying job, the perfect house, a wife, a dog, and a kid. After losing his job, being unable to find another because of his ruined reputation, and learning that his house was going to be repossessed, Dick snapped, and so did his wife.
I love movies where people lose it, just great. Jim Carrey plays Dick and Tea Leoni, Jane, as they steal and get revenge on those who treated them badly. Alec Baldwin also makes an appearance as the deplorable boss, who is pretty much responsible for most of the crazy people and their actions.
Now, I should say that if you are not a fan of Jim Carrey or can’t stand his type of comedy, this probably isn’t for you. I enjoyed it, and it’s a fun movie to watch if you don’t read too much into how morally wrong the stealing is and the question of why they get away with so many things. It’s another one of those no substance, no great revelation type of movies, so there you go.
Cast
- Jim Carrey as Richard “Dick” Harper
- Téa Leoni as Jane Harper
- Alec Baldwin as Jack McCallister
- Richard Jenkins as Frank Bascombe
- Angie Harmon as Veronica Cleeman
- John Michael Higgins as Garth
- Richard Burgi as Joe Cleeman
- Carlos Jacott as Oz Peterson
- Stephanie Weir as Deborah “Debbie” Peterson
Tags: Fun with Dick and Jane
Posted in 2000s Money Movies | No Comments »
March 19th, 2009

Singing and comedy, two of the hardest skills to acquire and perfect, are showcased with much gusto in this two-hour comedy musical about two honest professionals who try their hand at conwork to earn some money. Matthew Broderick plays a middle-aged accountant at the bottom of his company’s totem pole.
Nathan Lane plays an over-the-hill movie producer. The latter is losing money and its the former’s task to document it. Together, they come up with a plan to make some money. To do it, they acquire the rights for a ludicrious play, “Springtime for Hitler”, from a ridiculous ex-Nazi, hire a flamboyant director and his crew of gay and not so gayish men, and assemble a cast led by a Swedish bombshell. Together, they put on a stage performance that does incredibly well, to their chagrin. Trouble comes by way of the law, but all well that ends well.
This movie was quite entertaining to watch. It bombed at the theatres, as the total take was barely enough to cover the salaries of true-life half-Swedish actress Uma Thurman. But the movie has picked up steam in the DVD market.
It is family friendly with good doses of various sorts of comedy: sarcasm, wit, irony, slapstick, and plain ludicrousness that inspires laughter and probably a lot of exasperation from any viewer. The music itself is quite impressive. The two male leads are known singers, but to see Uma Thurman sing and dance was in itself worth the rental price of this movie. Most importantly, no mushy romance music/scenes. I highly recommend it.
Cast
- Nathan Lane as Max Bialystock
- Matthew Broderick as Leo Bloom
- Will Ferrell as Franz Liebkind
- Uma Thurman as Ulla
- Gary Beach as Roger De Bris
- Roger Bart as Carmen Ghia
- Jon Lovitz as Mr. Marks
- Michael McKean as Prison Trustee
- David Huddleston as Judge
- Eileen Essell as Hold Me-Touch Me
- Debra Monk as Lick Me-Bite Me
- Andrea Martin as Kiss Me-Feel Me
- John Barrowman as show starter
Tags: The Producers
Posted in 2000s Money Movies | No Comments »