Stranger Than Fiction
I'm not a Will Ferrell fan by any means, in fact I don't really like the man, but I really enjoyed this movie.
IMDB: "Everybody knows that your life is a story. But what if a story was your life? Harold Crick is your average IRS agent: monotonous, boring, and repetitive. But one day this all changes when Harold begins to hear an author inside his head narrating his life. The narrator it is extraordinarily accurate, and Harold recognizes the voice as an esteemed author he saw on TV. But when the narration reveals that he is going to die, Harold must find the author of the story, and ultimately his life, to convince her to change the ending of the story before it is too late."
I'd class this as a "thinking man's movie". It's not funny (not intentionally, some scenes have a dry humour), it's like a light science fiction. What if the events in your life were being written by someone else, who just thought they were writing a story? It follows Harold as he changes from being a monotonous person with no life outside of work, to someone who wants to have a real life of his own, one that he controls and is responsible for. My description probably makes it sound a bit dull but there's enough in the film to keep you occupied, and I came away thinking about it for a few days.
I'd recommend it and so have intentionally left out spoilers.
8/10
Superbad
A good one here, it follows the events of 3 students on the last day of college before they all go off to University. It's an important party tonight, with all 3 of them tasked with getting the alcohol for it, and all wanting to secure girlfriends for the holiday. The film starts on the last day at college and then most of it is spent on the events leading up to the party that night. To make the film interesting, one freak event leads to another, which leads to another, and you're thinking "how will they ever make it??".
IMDB: "Seth and Evan are best friends, inseparable, navigating the last weeks of high school. Usually shunned by the popular kids, Seth and Evan luck into an invitation to a party, and spend a long day, with the help of their nerdy friend Fogell, trying to score enough alcohol to lubricate the party and inebriate two girls, Jules and Becca, so they can kick-start their sex lives and go off to college with a summer full of experience and new skills. Their quest is complicated by Fogell's falling in with two inept cops who both slow and assist the plan. If they do get the liquor to the party, what then? Is sex the only rite of passage at hand?"
It's funny and serious. One to watch on a Friday or Saturday night, but not with your mum due to the intense profanity. It reminded me exactly of what it was like finishing school, with all the excitement and promise of what was to come - the film really captures that atmosphere. It moved me a little, it has some special real-life moments in, and I felt I was on their journey with them.
9/10
Click!
Another good one I saw very recently. I saw this advertised as "man gets a remote control that controls reality" with a picture of Adam Sandler, so I naturally assumed it would be a comedy with him e.g. putting his wife in slo-mo as she undressed, or clicking 'mute' when she was shouting at him.
I was completely wrong, it's not a comedy at all. It's like a variation on A Christmas Carol, where someone gets a different perspective on their life and sees what effect this has on the people he loves. It's another "thinking man's movie", not too heavy but enough to leave you thinking about it for a few days.
IMDB: "A workaholic architect finds a universal remote that allows him to fast-forward and rewind to different parts of his life. Complications arise when the remote starts to overrule his choices."
Once he gets the remote, he's told it "learns" from how he uses it and will do it automatically next time. He gets a cold and 'fast forwards' until he's better, and wakes up feeling completely better...so for the week when he's unwell (which he didn't directly experience), his body goes into auto-pilot as his mind/soul isn't really present. He misses out the cold, but next time he gets ill for longer he realises he's starting to miss out on the lives and experiences of the people he loves as he's ill for longer, and he loses control over what happens since the remote has now 'learnt' to skip illness, and more.
Recommended, and it all resolves itself in the end so don't worry!
8/10



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