Date: 18/12 >>
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - Christmas movies are here, many of them cynical comedies as befits our cynical times. Yet Christmas is also a time for giving. Getting back to our jaundiced times, however, do you wonder about the people who have extended themselves to you by contributing presents so different from the usual, with so much of the giver's own time and life behind the offering? What is your benefactor is someone you do not know, or perhaps have met once or twice? Now you're really suspicious.
SEVEN POUNDS
Columbia Pictures
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: C
Directed by: Gabriele Muccino
Written By: Grant Nieporte
Cast: Will Smith, Rosario Dawson, Woody Harrelson, Michael Ealy, Barry Pepper
Opens: December 19, 2008
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - Christmas movies are here, many of them cynical comedies as befits our cynical times. Yet Christmas is also a time for giving. Getting back to our jaundiced times, however, do you wonder about the people who have extended themselves to you by contributing presents so different from the usual, with so much of the giver's own time and life behind the offering? What is your benefactor is someone you do not know, or perhaps have met once or twice? Now you're really suspicious.
SEVEN POUNDS
Columbia Pictures
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: C
Directed by: Gabriele Muccino
Written By: Grant Nieporte
Cast: Will Smith, Rosario Dawson, Woody Harrelson, Michael Ealy, Barry Pepper
Opens: December 19, 2008
Date: 15/12 >>
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - Slumdog Millionaire took the lion's share of awards, named best picture by New York Film Critics Online (NYFCO), composed of 27 web-based reviewers and 2 print critics with a strong online presence. Sean Penn was named best actor for his role in Milk while Sally Hawkins received best actress honors for her performance in Happy-Go-Lucky. Best director honors went to Danny Boyle and his co-director, Loveleen Tandan for Slumdog Millionaire. Heath Ledger was named best supporting actor for The Dark Knight and Penelope Cruz was selected as best supporting actress for Vicki Cristina Barcelona. 4 Months, 3 Weeks 2 Days was NYFCO's choice for best foreign film, while best documentary honors went to Man on Wire.
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - Slumdog Millionaire took the lion's share of awards, named best picture by New York Film Critics Online (NYFCO), composed of 27 web-based reviewers and 2 print critics with a strong online presence. Sean Penn was named best actor for his role in Milk while Sally Hawkins received best actress honors for her performance in Happy-Go-Lucky. Best director honors went to Danny Boyle and his co-director, Loveleen Tandan for Slumdog Millionaire. Heath Ledger was named best supporting actor for The Dark Knight and Penelope Cruz was selected as best supporting actress for Vicki Cristina Barcelona. 4 Months, 3 Weeks 2 Days was NYFCO's choice for best foreign film, while best documentary honors went to Man on Wire.
Date: 11/12 >>
Two international science projects - one led by The University of Arizona, and one with considerable UA involvement - lead Time Magazine's list of Top 10 Scientific Discoveries, crowning a year of unprecedented science achievement for Arizona's land grant university.
Time ranked the Large Hadron Collider - the massive particle accelerator straddling the swiss-French border - at the top of the 2008 list. The Phoenix Mars Mission ranked second.
The University of Arizona has a significant stake in both.
Two international science projects - one led by The University of Arizona, and one with considerable UA involvement - lead Time Magazine's list of Top 10 Scientific Discoveries, crowning a year of unprecedented science achievement for Arizona's land grant university.
Time ranked the Large Hadron Collider - the massive particle accelerator straddling the swiss-French border - at the top of the 2008 list. The Phoenix Mars Mission ranked second.
The University of Arizona has a significant stake in both.
Date: 11/12 >>
Rory's Tip
I’d like to share with you the following missive from one of our anglers. Please keep in mind that thanks to our winter stocking program, you can create family memories like the ones below throughout our temperate winter fishing season. Dreams of trout dancing on the end of the line might even be more alluring than dancing sugar plum fairies.
If you are looking for places to take your family to catch some memories, try the Lower Salt River near Phoenix for rainbow trout. With a low pressure system expected in the state this weekend, fishing should be pretty good, especially when the barometer is dropping. It’s also a great place to dunk worms in the current or for learning how to fly fish.
Both Canyon and Saguaro lakes have been liberally stocked with trout. I would try corn at those lakes – they also have catfish and carp.
Tempe Town Lake is another good bet for the family. Some anglers there this past weekend did extremely well.
Rory's Tip

If you are looking for places to take your family to catch some memories, try the Lower Salt River near Phoenix for rainbow trout. With a low pressure system expected in the state this weekend, fishing should be pretty good, especially when the barometer is dropping. It’s also a great place to dunk worms in the current or for learning how to fly fish.
Both Canyon and Saguaro lakes have been liberally stocked with trout. I would try corn at those lakes – they also have catfish and carp.
Tempe Town Lake is another good bet for the family. Some anglers there this past weekend did extremely well.
Date: 06/12 >>
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - This Gran Torino has as its potential passengers a mixed group of people who are stereotyped throughout, with awfully silly dialogue and old-fashioned acting. This might please some in the audience who want to reminisce about the grand old movies like "Boys Town" and "Men of Boys Town" with Spencer Tracy in the role of Father Flanagan—determined to say the young 'uns. Clint Eastwood both directs and anchors the production, taking the role of Walt Kowalski, an old salt in an inner-city Detroit neighborhood where political correctness is ignored by the blue-collar types who revel in calling one another by every racial and ethnic pejorative in the books lest they be considered girly-men. Walt Kowalski is no girly-man, nor is his aging Golden Labrador Retriever, Daisy—who at the time of the story's opening is not only the man's best friend but the only one.
Warner Bros.
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: C
Directed by: Clint Eastwood
Written By: Nick Schenk from Dave Johannson and Nick Schenk's story
Cast: Clint Eastwood, Geraldine Hughes, John Carroll Lynch, Cory Hardrict, Dreama Walker, Brian Haley
Opens: December 17, 2008
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - This Gran Torino has as its potential passengers a mixed group of people who are stereotyped throughout, with awfully silly dialogue and old-fashioned acting. This might please some in the audience who want to reminisce about the grand old movies like "Boys Town" and "Men of Boys Town" with Spencer Tracy in the role of Father Flanagan—determined to say the young 'uns. Clint Eastwood both directs and anchors the production, taking the role of Walt Kowalski, an old salt in an inner-city Detroit neighborhood where political correctness is ignored by the blue-collar types who revel in calling one another by every racial and ethnic pejorative in the books lest they be considered girly-men. Walt Kowalski is no girly-man, nor is his aging Golden Labrador Retriever, Daisy—who at the time of the story's opening is not only the man's best friend but the only one.
Warner Bros.
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: C
Directed by: Clint Eastwood
Written By: Nick Schenk from Dave Johannson and Nick Schenk's story
Cast: Clint Eastwood, Geraldine Hughes, John Carroll Lynch, Cory Hardrict, Dreama Walker, Brian Haley
Opens: December 17, 2008
Date: 05/12 >>
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - A well-acted, if mechanically driven, story based on the complex Valerie Plame Wilson affair—which dealt with the repercussions of outing the truth about the alleged attempt of Saddam Hussein to buy uranium from Niger—"Nothing But the Truth" thankfully simplifies the dynamics that might have gone into a documentary. As a result, theatergoers are treated to a oft-time melodramatic story that would please anybody who likes films based on John Grisham's novels. While the folks in the audience to the left of Attila the Hun will side with a journalist who is put on trial for refusing to name a source of information that led to a front-page story in her newspaper, Rod Lurie's tale, directed by the screenwriter, is a nicely-paced job that has us admiring America's founding fathers who penned the First Amendment, albeit two years after they hammered out the rest. (For the benefit of those who went to public high schools, that addition to the Constitution in 1791 guarantees that Congress shall make no law abridging our freedom of speech.)
NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH
Yari Film Group
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B
Directed and Written by: Rod Lurie
Cast: Kate Beckinsale, Matt Dillon, Angela Bassett, Alan Alda, Vera Farmiga, David Schwimmer, Courtney B. Vance, Noah Wyle
Opens: December 19, 2008
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - A well-acted, if mechanically driven, story based on the complex Valerie Plame Wilson affair—which dealt with the repercussions of outing the truth about the alleged attempt of Saddam Hussein to buy uranium from Niger—"Nothing But the Truth" thankfully simplifies the dynamics that might have gone into a documentary. As a result, theatergoers are treated to a oft-time melodramatic story that would please anybody who likes films based on John Grisham's novels. While the folks in the audience to the left of Attila the Hun will side with a journalist who is put on trial for refusing to name a source of information that led to a front-page story in her newspaper, Rod Lurie's tale, directed by the screenwriter, is a nicely-paced job that has us admiring America's founding fathers who penned the First Amendment, albeit two years after they hammered out the rest. (For the benefit of those who went to public high schools, that addition to the Constitution in 1791 guarantees that Congress shall make no law abridging our freedom of speech.)
NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH
Yari Film Group
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B
Directed and Written by: Rod Lurie
Cast: Kate Beckinsale, Matt Dillon, Angela Bassett, Alan Alda, Vera Farmiga, David Schwimmer, Courtney B. Vance, Noah Wyle
Opens: December 19, 2008
Date: 04/12 >>
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - Thirty years ago a colleague of mine, a fellow high-school teacher, moved from Brooklyn, N.Y. to a Long Island 'burb'. I was stunned, because this guy is urbane and regularly told his English classes to question not only authority but commonly held ideas as well. (He moved back to New York within a month.) The idea, of course, was the American Dream: that living with a spouse, two kids and a dog, surrounded by a white picket fence, equals lifelong happiness. What misfortune befalls to the two principals in "Revolutionary Road" may not be entirely the fault of their move to the suburbs, but leaving the city after they had kids didn't help their situation.
Paramount Vantage
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B+
Directed by: Sam Mendes
Written By: Justin Haythe, from Richard Yates's novel
Cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Kathy Bates, Michael Shannon, Kathryn Hahn, David Harbour, Dylan Baker, Richard Easton, Zoe Kazan, Jay O. Sanders, Max Casella
Opens: December 26, 2008
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - Thirty years ago a colleague of mine, a fellow high-school teacher, moved from Brooklyn, N.Y. to a Long Island 'burb'. I was stunned, because this guy is urbane and regularly told his English classes to question not only authority but commonly held ideas as well. (He moved back to New York within a month.) The idea, of course, was the American Dream: that living with a spouse, two kids and a dog, surrounded by a white picket fence, equals lifelong happiness. What misfortune befalls to the two principals in "Revolutionary Road" may not be entirely the fault of their move to the suburbs, but leaving the city after they had kids didn't help their situation.
Paramount Vantage
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B+
Directed by: Sam Mendes
Written By: Justin Haythe, from Richard Yates's novel
Cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Kathy Bates, Michael Shannon, Kathryn Hahn, David Harbour, Dylan Baker, Richard Easton, Zoe Kazan, Jay O. Sanders, Max Casella
Opens: December 26, 2008
Date: 04/12 >>
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - Scheduled to open just weeks after "Revolutionary Road," "Just Another Love Story" centers on a similar theme. In the former film starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet, a husband and wife tire of their suburban digs and dull neighbors, thinking that moving permanently to Paris might be just the right medicine. In Ole Bomedal's Danish film (with English subtitles), a man with a Walter Mitty imagination dreams of leaving his own suburban humdrum existence with its ritual of supermarket shopping on Saturdays with his wife and two kids and living or re-living a life of danger, passion, and love. The trouble is that unlike Frank and April Wheeler in Sam Mendes's "Revolutionary Road" who can legitimately make the move, he steals another's identity. While identity theft in the U.S. rarely goes further than ripping off another's credit card, the principal character in Ole Bomedal's movie puts his very life into jeopardy.
Koch Lorber Films
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B
Directed and Written by: Ole Bornedal
Cast: Andrew W. Berthelsen, Charlotte Fich, Rebecka Hemse, Dejan Cukic, Nikolaj Lie Kaas
Opens: January 9, 2008
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - Scheduled to open just weeks after "Revolutionary Road," "Just Another Love Story" centers on a similar theme. In the former film starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet, a husband and wife tire of their suburban digs and dull neighbors, thinking that moving permanently to Paris might be just the right medicine. In Ole Bomedal's Danish film (with English subtitles), a man with a Walter Mitty imagination dreams of leaving his own suburban humdrum existence with its ritual of supermarket shopping on Saturdays with his wife and two kids and living or re-living a life of danger, passion, and love. The trouble is that unlike Frank and April Wheeler in Sam Mendes's "Revolutionary Road" who can legitimately make the move, he steals another's identity. While identity theft in the U.S. rarely goes further than ripping off another's credit card, the principal character in Ole Bomedal's movie puts his very life into jeopardy.
Koch Lorber Films
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B
Directed and Written by: Ole Bornedal
Cast: Andrew W. Berthelsen, Charlotte Fich, Rebecka Hemse, Dejan Cukic, Nikolaj Lie Kaas
Opens: January 9, 2008
Date: 25/11 >>
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - After forty-three white men had been elected President of the United States (many of them during a time that slavery was in fashion), mirabile dictu, an African-American made #44. A woman will get the appropriate share of electoral votes in years to come. Heck, possibly even an openly gay person! In fact, gay people, who in almost every state are being denied equality at the marriage license bureaus, have been in positions of political authority only since 1978, when Harvey Milk was elected to the Board of Supervisors in San Francisco. Given the publicity about gay civil unions and gay marriage nowadays, "Milk" would appear torn from today's headlines though the action takes place during the seventies.
MILK
Focus Features
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B+
Directed by: Gus Van Sant
Written By: Dustin Lance Black
Cast: Sean Penn, Josh Brolin, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Diego Luna, Brandon Boyce
Opens: November 26, 2008
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - After forty-three white men had been elected President of the United States (many of them during a time that slavery was in fashion), mirabile dictu, an African-American made #44. A woman will get the appropriate share of electoral votes in years to come. Heck, possibly even an openly gay person! In fact, gay people, who in almost every state are being denied equality at the marriage license bureaus, have been in positions of political authority only since 1978, when Harvey Milk was elected to the Board of Supervisors in San Francisco. Given the publicity about gay civil unions and gay marriage nowadays, "Milk" would appear torn from today's headlines though the action takes place during the seventies.
MILK
Focus Features
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B+
Directed by: Gus Van Sant
Written By: Dustin Lance Black
Cast: Sean Penn, Josh Brolin, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Diego Luna, Brandon Boyce
Opens: November 26, 2008
Date: 24/11 >>
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - The public finds time travel fascinating at least since Jules Verne"s "20,000 League Under the Sea" which predicted the later invention of the submarine. Writers of such sci-fi is are not simply telling imaginative storoes: they may be making points about the state of the world in their own time while prognosticating the sort of future that will emerge, given current conditions, e.g. George Orwell's "1984.. H.G. Wells' "The Time Machine" introduced primary school students to the world of the future in a book written with appropriate short sentences. Nacho Vigalondo's movie "Timecrimes," or "Cronocrimenes" as it is known in its native Spain, introduces some horror in the sci-fi, but this just might be the only film of the genre that is so modest that the time traveler does not go more than a few hours into the past. By doing this, the adventurer can actually look at himself, as the 50-ish Hector (Karra Elejalde) does, with a journey that affords him even more time to feel regrets. If only he had not been peering into the woods that surrounded his spacious house in Northern Spain, as doing this allowed him to spot a comely young woman (Barbara Goenaga) taking off her clothes inexplicably. Keeping his sightiing a secret from his wife Clara (Candela Fernandez), he ambles on into the forest, which results in an identity crisis that finds him ready to commit suicide—or rather to kill two other people named Hector who look surprisingly like him.
TIMECRIMES (Los Cronocrimenes)
Magnet Releasing
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B
Directed and Written by: Nacho Vigalondo
Cast: Karra Elejalde, Candela Fernandez, Barbara Goenaga, Nacho Vigalondo, Juan Inciarte
Opens: December 5, 2008
By Harvey Karten (AZR) - The public finds time travel fascinating at least since Jules Verne"s "20,000 League Under the Sea" which predicted the later invention of the submarine. Writers of such sci-fi is are not simply telling imaginative storoes: they may be making points about the state of the world in their own time while prognosticating the sort of future that will emerge, given current conditions, e.g. George Orwell's "1984.. H.G. Wells' "The Time Machine" introduced primary school students to the world of the future in a book written with appropriate short sentences. Nacho Vigalondo's movie "Timecrimes," or "Cronocrimenes" as it is known in its native Spain, introduces some horror in the sci-fi, but this just might be the only film of the genre that is so modest that the time traveler does not go more than a few hours into the past. By doing this, the adventurer can actually look at himself, as the 50-ish Hector (Karra Elejalde) does, with a journey that affords him even more time to feel regrets. If only he had not been peering into the woods that surrounded his spacious house in Northern Spain, as doing this allowed him to spot a comely young woman (Barbara Goenaga) taking off her clothes inexplicably. Keeping his sightiing a secret from his wife Clara (Candela Fernandez), he ambles on into the forest, which results in an identity crisis that finds him ready to commit suicide—or rather to kill two other people named Hector who look surprisingly like him.
TIMECRIMES (Los Cronocrimenes)
Magnet Releasing
Reviewed for Arizona Reporter by Harvey Karten
Grade: B
Directed and Written by: Nacho Vigalondo
Cast: Karra Elejalde, Candela Fernandez, Barbara Goenaga, Nacho Vigalondo, Juan Inciarte
Opens: December 5, 2008

