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SonOfMoog

Joined Oct 2002
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SonOfMoog's rating
Alias Jesse James

Alias Jesse James

6.4
6
  • Jan 25, 2008
  • Looney Tunes Hope

    The Parent Trap

    The Parent Trap

    6.7
    8
  • Nov 16, 2007
  • Lovable Lindsay

    This movie is so sweet it should have a warning label for diabetics. Natasha Richardson and Dennis Quaid play divorced parents who more than a decade later are not sure why they divorced. Instead of opting for joint custody, each of them opted for sole custody of one of their twin daughters. The girls grow up never knowing because their parents never said they had an identical twin sibling. When the twins meet in camp and discover who they are, the plot is set in motion.

    Richardson and Quaid are wonderful as the likable parents, still very much in love, even after a decade apart. But, the star of this picture and the one on whom the story turns is Lohan. She is bright, perky, adorable, and completely convincing as both Hallie and Annie. If she isn't, this movie falls apart fast. But, not to worry. Lovable Lindsay makes not a single false step.

    She is so good, I found myself thinking about the actress, not the character, feeling a twinge of sadness that Lindsay was not more like Hallie and Annie. This is a wonderful movie, almost too sweet at times. It had me in tears at all the right moments: when the twins meet, when they learn they are sisters, when the parents discover they've switched places, and when the parents inevitably reconcile. First rate family entertainment thanks to a star performance from a very young, very talented Lohan.
    Sands of Iwo Jima

    Sands of Iwo Jima

    7.0
    10
  • Sep 2, 2007
  • The Best War Movie Ever Made

    I've not seen every war movie ever made, nor have I seen every performance of John Wayne's, but I remain convinced that this is the best war movie ever made, and Wayne's best performance. Wayne is Stryker, John M., tough-talking Marine sergeant, in charge of a squad of men, and determined to keep them alive, which proves somewhat difficult as these Marines storm the beaches at Guadalcanal, Tarawa and Iwo Jima. Stryker is a man of intense personal longing, first, for his family at home, and then for the men he is charged with leading. And, what makes Sands memorable is we see this longing etched on the face of Wayne in every scene where he appears. This is not one of his B-western walkthroughs. It helps that the lines are so good. There are the usual clichés in any war movie, but the movie also rings true in many scenes. There is an especially poignant one between Stryker and a woman trying to raise an infant son alone. But, most of all, the battle scenes are believable. The famous flag-raising was not one of those scenes, however. This was pure Hollywood, though it was re-enacted by three of the men who did it for real: John Bradley, Rene Gagnon, and Ira Hayes. Two memorable scenes:

    1) Two soldiers talking:

    First: This is the poorest soil I've ever seen Second: That's war. First: What's war? Second: Trading real estate for men.

    Worthless real estate at that.

    2) The second scene is of a Jewish soldier who is fatally wounded, whose last words are, "Shema, Yisroel. Adonai elohenu adonai echad." This is part of Deuteronomy 6:4 in Hebrew, and memorable because Hollywood is not a place known for its expression of conventional religious spirituality ..
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