Florence Foster Jenkins is my new hero. This is a great movie about a rich society woman who didn’t let her TERRIBLE voice keep her from giving a singing concert at Carnegie Hall. Meryl Streep is wonderful as this delusional lady who uses her money and social standing to promote her love of music. Hugh Grant is a surprise and delight as her devoted husband who bribes reviewers (without his wife’s knowledge) and keeps her away from bad reviews. This movie made me laugh and brought a tear to my eye at the end. Was Florence brave or delusional? Either way, you have to admire someone who loved music so passionately and wanted to share the joy she got out of sharing it with the world. Anyone who knows me, knows I am a dreadful but enthusiastic singer. If you need proof, check out this video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcPq69iOBgY Florence Foster Jenkins and I live by this motto, “Some people can say I don’t sing well, but no one can say I didn’t sing.” Check out this movie and be entertained, and perhaps just a little inspired to dare to try it. What ever it is!
Bad Moms
Meh!
The Legend of Tarzan
Let me start by saying that I have been watching Tarzan movies since I was a kid. I have seen Tarzan in every possible situation you can think of, including New York! So I was expecting a ho hum story full of the same, old same old. I must say I was pleasantly surprised. This Tarzan shows us Lord Greystoke, eight years out of the jungle, living in his palatial estate with lovely wife Jane. How he became Tarzan is told in flashbacks throughout the movie. I loved the scenes between Tarzan and his ape family. You could feel the love Tarzan and his mother had for each other. The effects are top notch. The main actors, Alexander Skarsgard, Margot Robbie, Samuel L. Jackson ( providing some much appreciated comic relief) and Christoph Waltz, all do a nice job with a script that is full of holes and is kind of slow at times. Even so, there is much action, the obligatory Tarzan yell and plenty of animals. If you have never seen or read about Tarzan, this movie isn’t a bad place to start.
Jason Bourne
I know, I know. We all know the plot of every Jason Bourne movie. First, he is off the grid, looking for answers about his past. He uncovers information. Someone high up is involved. They try to kill him. He is outfoxes them, sometimes with help. He is involved in several exciting chases and finally the bad guy gets killed. But, there are unanswered questions so he has to go back off the grid until the next movie. You know what? It doesn’t matter because Jason Bourne movies with Matt Damon make a good action thriller and a great way to pass a few hours on a Saturday afternoon. This movie has the added good sense to include Tommy Lee Jones, and this really isn’t a spoiler, as the baddie. Even if the next Jason Bourne movie has this exact same formula, I will be right there watching.
Captain Fantastic
I feel it is my duty to let you know before I continue that this is not a super hero movie. However, Ben Cash, as played by the great Viggo Mortensen, is a flawed father who adapts and grows in order to give his kids a better life; that is my idea of a hero anyway. The story centers on Ben and his six kids who live deep in the Washington wilderness while his wife is being treated for a mental illness. They live “off the grid” while learning to hunt, be self-sufficient,make and grow most of what they need, and read and discuss meaty literature. When Ben gets news of his wife’s suicide, he and the kids decide to leave their mountain Utopia to attend her funeral in another state. I won’t go into detail about what happens next, but Viggo Mortensen gives a nuanced and, to me, Oscar caliber performance as the conflicted father. I enjoyed how the sheltered kids come in contact with modern society ( they have never had a coke or hot dog). This is a warm, funny, thought-provoking movie that will make you laugh and cry. I would hesitate to bring young kids, especially since Viggo goes full frontal for one particular scene, but I think children over 13 might find much here to think about. I highly recommend this little indie film and hope it finds the audience it deserves.
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