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jimojimo's reviews

by jimojimo
This page compiles all reviews jimojimo has written, sharing their detailed thoughts about movies, TV shows, and more.
12 reviews
Sissy Spacek, Linda Cardellini, Norbert Leo Butz, and Kyle Chandler in Bloodline (2015)

Bloodline

7.8
5
  • Sep 22, 2019
  • "Just doesn't add up" -- Seems like it was written on-the-fly without a plan.

    Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhaal in Nocturnal Animals (2016)

    Nocturnal Animals

    7.4
    3
  • Dec 16, 2016
  • A big middle finger to the audience

    This movie was almost good. Then it ended.

    I sat through the first 20 min, thinking what a snoozer this was. Then a story started to unfold. The main character, a well to do lady who owns an art gallery gets a manuscript in the mail from her ex husband. She begins to read it, and the story she's reading is played out in the movie.

    The story is fictional (though quite allegorical) and involves involves her ex-husband. It's about him not being able to save his family from a gang of rowdies on a deserted west Texas highway. The story starts getting suspenseful and interesting. We follow the incident, the aftermath, and the lawman who tries to find and bring justice to the rowdies. It starts becoming a gripping revenge thriller.

    Then it ends.

    I get it--the "...stops a beating heart" reference which was (quite literally) pounded into the audience's ears. And I get the "meaning". But there was a good story going and it just ended. If there's a term similar to "blue b*lls" for what a movie audience feels when let down, well, the entire audience left with a big case of that.
    Tina Fey in Whiskey Tango Foxtrot (2016)

    Whiskey Tango Foxtrot

    6.6
    8
  • Mar 20, 2016
  • 30 Rock meets Zero Dark Thirty

    This movie was entertaining throughout and enjoyable, but not a blockbuster. As my subject line says, it's like a mashup of 30-Rock and Zero Dark Thirty.

    This is not a "Tina Fey comedy" as the trailers seem to say. But it has a lot of great laughs nonetheless, but mixed in with some serious drama.

    There are a few very realistic and gory combat scenes, mixed in with the work-a-day world of Tina Fey's character. Based on a true story, the real Kim Baker described herself as a Tina Fey type character. She had a humdrum job, boyfriend issues, workplace politics. She then gets asked if she'd like to (read: told) to go on assignment in Afghanistan. She accepts because her life in New York was getting boring for her.

    In "the Kabubble"--as the press and contractors refer to their fenced in life in Kabul--she finds that she still has workplace politics, boyfriend issues, etc. but at least she'll have fun stories to tell to her friends and maybe children. Another big plus for her--in New York she's a "6, maybe 6 1/2", but in Afghanistan she's "like a 9, maybe 9 1/2" as her colleague (Margot Robbie, who appears to be channeling CBS news' Lara Logan) tells her. "What are you then, a 15?" asks Tina's character.

    So the story arc ends up being mostly around a Scottish photographer who "fancies" her, though Tina's character will have none of it, for a while anyway. Various things happen, a backstabbing (figurative) by a work friend, and a kidnapping of a close friend--the latter for which she ends up trying to use her Kabul political connections (which her "9" status has helped her achieve) to try and get information about the kidnappers' identity. This would be a double-whammy for her--getting a friend free and also getting a huge story.

    So without getting into spoilers, that is pretty much the plot-- nothing earth shattering but it was enough to keep me involved, laughing, and entertained throughout.
    A.C.O.D. (2013)

    A.C.O.D.

    5.7
    4
  • Feb 7, 2014
  • A few funny moments, but too clearly a personal catharsis

    As I started watching this movie, it became very obvious that this was a very personal, cathartic movie. I have no problem with that, it's done all the time--but what's important, interesting, funny, and meaningful to the writer/director, doesn't always translate into something meaningful to the viewer unless there is far more skill in the storytelling. And that is what I think this movie lacked.

    The plot simply covers the story of a a kid named Carter (and his younger brother Trey) who's father was a philanderer as a husband, as well as fairly cold and distant as a father. The father and mother haven't spoken for 20 years and the father has gone through several other step moms over those years.

    I'm sure the "seminal" moment of Carter's 9th birthday was a huge deal to writer, but it was thrust at us so quickly at the beginning of the movie that we didn't have time for any background/setup to even know or care what was going on. To me, that scene which was apparently so pivotal ended up a throwaway scene because the writer seemed so eager to tell it that he told it too soon without any context whatsoever.

    So we fast forward to Carter's now-successful (at least career-wise) life. There are a lot of funny moments here, but nothing we couldn't see in a half-hour sitcom. But the road the movie takes us down is a bit meandering and it seems very clear that we're going to have some sort of too-neatly wrapped up happy ending designed to close every loose end with a perfect situation and end all the pain of all the children who've gone through this situation.

    To me, it just smacked too much of someone dumping his messed-up life on us and his wish of what could have been. It didn't make for an entertaining movie. Maybe a half-hour episode of Trophy Wife or something would have been a better venue for this story. Jimo
    Michael B. Jordan in Fruitvale Station (2013)

    Fruitvale Station

    7.5
    4
  • Feb 7, 2014
  • Nice film-work, but unbalanced, a bit tedious to watch. Should have been a Short.

    Leonardo DiCaprio, Chris Kerson, and Jonah Hill in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)

    The Wolf of Wall Street

    8.2
    4
  • Jan 17, 2014
  • Please Scorsese--hire an editor..

    First, the good: DiCaprio does a very good job of portraying a sleazy sociopath. It was truly a great performance.

    However, the main problem of this movie was lack of editing. There were way too many scenes in which a point was being made or a mood created-- and this took place in about 20 seconds--a nod to good film making...

    ...However, these same scenes then droned on and on for, in some cases, over 5 minutes! We get it--he's making a pep-talk speech to his staff-- we got that in the first 15 seconds. But why continue the same rah-rah pep-talk for a full 5 minutes without adding *anything* new??

    This was just one example of many scenes that got so stale and I kept thinking--where was the editor? Why didn't he shave a few minutes off these scenes and keep the pace going?

    So all in all--I felt what could have been a decent movie was just a long, boring slog.
    Leslie Mann and Paul Rudd in This Is 40 (2012)

    This Is 40

    6.2
    8
  • Dec 22, 2012
  • No plot--but very funny consistently: "humor porn"

    First off--this is well worth seeing, it is consistently funny--and at times keel-over funny. However if you're looking for a meaningful plot that gets neatly wrapped up, that's not gonna happen. Like porn, the plot was just there as an excuse for the many 'money shots'--the consistently funny gags about typical 40ish couple's lives.

    Rudd's character is suffering a struggling business (and also maybe a little of 'struggling business'--if you know what I mean). Mann's character has a business also, that is suffering. Their kids are dealing with various modern-kid issues--Facebook bullies, trying to devour entire seasons of "Lost" in a matter of days, etc. The parents fight, the kids fight, Rudd & Mann each have issues with their own parents--one with abandonment issues, the other with what might be the polar opposite of abandonment.

    And the gags and issues that arise, I can tell you, are all based in reality--it's a good composite of the issues that this demographic actually faces--only depicted with the cinematic equivalent of the "Photoshop saturation slider" cranked to 11.

    A special mention for Leslie Mann and Judd Apatow's kids--they actually can act, and they were excellent in this film. They belonged in the film--not 'becuase their daddy is the producer'--but because they added big-time in both the many comedy scenes they were in, but also in the movie's scattered drama moments. Very adorable kids, who blended into this movie effortlessly and definitely added to its charm.

    So that's the plot, and in the end, it leaves you with hope that things will get better, but never really pounds that point down and gift-wraps a sappy, happy ending, but it doesn't need to--the plot is just a vehicle to tow all of the gags with.

    And the gags, mini-skits, etc, are very funny, and very consistent--me, my wife, and most of the theater were laughing through the bulk of the film (Stay for the ending credits--the blooper reel with Melissa McCarthy may be one of the funniest of the entire movie).

    So that's it--I give it a 8--well worth seeing in the theater, and when it comes out on DVD, I'll definitely rent it and see it again.
    Katherine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher in Killers (2010)

    Killers

    5.5
    1
  • Mar 24, 2011
  • Stupid. Just stupid.

    This movie was so over-the-top stupid that it went beyond "hey, it's over- the-top but let's just go with it and have fun". No. Let's not. It was just stupid. Boring, stupid, senseless.

    OK, I'm obliged to give a general description of the movie, so here it is: Stupid.

    Don't waste your time. Let me take the bullet for you--don't see this. My wife wanted to see it and I suffered through it trying to be the good husband. At the end she had admitted it was stupid too. I really can't say anything more about it. Just stupid.

    I want my 2 hours back.
    Brad Pitt, Ben Stiller, Will Ferrell, Kathy Griffin, Kristen Alderson, Kristen Ariza, Jack Blessing, David Cross, Walt Dohrn, Tina Fey, Stephen Kearin, Danny Mann, Tom McGrath, Mike Mitchell, J.K. Simmons, Peter Sohn, Justin Theroux, Christopher Knights, Jessica Schulte, Jonah Hill, Brian Hopkins, Jasper Johannes Andrews, Quinn Dempsey Stiller, Emily Nordwind, Ella Stiller, and Kristen Phaneuf in Megamind (2010)

    Megamind

    7.3
    5
  • Nov 20, 2010
  • Another cartoon. How about a "real" movie?

    This movie is just OK--but my general dissatisfaction has little to do with the plot or characters--but more on that in the last paragraph.

    The plot is about two babies from a planet that develops creatures with strength and powers beyond that of humans. Two of these creatures are jettisoned from the planet, and by pure random chance of where their spacecrafts land on earth, the Pitt character (Metro-Man) ends up in the home of a loving family, and the Ferrell character (Megamind) ends up in a prison for the mentally insane. This charts their future course in predictable ways--Metro Man becomes the hero of Metro City, while Megamind, after release from prison--the terms of the release and his upbringing at the "S Chool" (as humorously pronounced by Ferrell)--are never fully explained.

    Anyway, so it's made clear early on that Megamind isn't truly evil but is in it for the sport of it, while Metroman is a bit more full of himself as the hero than than, say, mild-mannered Clark Kent. As part of the plot a third character joins the mix as another super-human hero after a major battle between Megamind and Metroman. This adds a bit of complexity to a story that really has no business being complex--cartoon or not. It also adds dead time to the movie, as this new character isn't really very interesting. Anyway, in the romantic mix for all these characters is Tina Fey, who is the funniest part of the movie--she is a plus for any movie but as explained below--this movie's mediocrity has little to do with the talent.

    So without spoiling anything, we have an ending meant to satisfy us and bring closure to the characters. But this movie, and increasingly *every* animated movie lately, does not satisfy me--and it's not the plot or characters that fall short. It's that I'm tired of CGI animation. I don't care how "good" the quality is, how "realistic" it is--it's not real and frankly it's creepy. If I'm going to see a cartoon I'd prefer a real, hand-drawn cartoon. This CGI, in my opinion, is just wrong. It's too 'real' to be a cartoon but so completely unreal that I never get a true feeling for the characters--no matter how well-voiced or well-written they are. In the early days "Toy Story" was popular but I think the popularity had more to do with the novelty of the Pixar animation--the 'wow' factor. It's ho-hum now--even though the resolution, shading, texture, etc has improved. Ironically the more all of that technology improves the creepier these movies get. I could go on and on about how the newer Star Wars "movies" with Jar-Jar, et al., were soul-less bores, but I'll close here--and hope that those who agree will let their feelings be known to Hollywood. I'll take a real, filmed movie any time over this animation.
    Jeffrey Mowery in Burn After Reading (2008)

    Burn After Reading

    7.0
    4
  • Jan 31, 2009
  • A confusing, unresolved mess.

    At one point in this movie, an CIA agent calls the situation 'a cluster****'. Perhaps not ironic at all is the fact that he's describing the plot to this movie--and he's correct!

    The movie is set in DC, and nearly all characters work for some government department with the exception of Brad Pitt and Francis McDormand's DC gym employees. Pitt's character finds a CD at the gym with what appears to be sensitive CIA info, and he and his co-worker at the gym (McDormand) try to blackmail the owner of the CD, and when that does not go well they head for the Russian embassy to see if there's interest there. Shades of Sean Penn in Falcon and the Snowman there.

    However, Pitt's character is the most glaring 'fish out of water' in this movie--but not because he's not with the government. It's because his character is a character that has never existed in human reality.

    He's overplaying a character that's an amalgam of gay, stupid, jockish, quasi-gutsy, and 'dude'. In this film he's not funny, not cute, he's like the zipper in the dryer that keeps making noise while you're watching TV and you wish it would stop.

    The best and most affecting performance is by Richard Jenkins who plays the lovestruck gym manager. Malkovich's and Swanton's performances are good as well, and so is David Rasche (anyone remember Sledge Hammer?).

    And the music score--very heavy 'suspense' music--does not work as suspense music or as 'comedy ironic suspense' music. And speaking of what isn't a fit--Clooney's basement contraption had no place in this movie at all, it was a giant WTF. It would've been funny in a movie of a different flavor but I just rolled my eyes.

    Anyway, the plot more revolves around who's cheating on whom, and that gets very confusing. Clooney's character is sort of the thread that ties all of the different plot lines together, but it's too confusing and sloppy that it doesn't work. Nor does it ever tie up the numerous loose ends, which is a disappointment of Soprano's proportions.

    I give it 4, for Rashke, Jenkins, Malkovich, and Swanton's performances, but the messy, un resolved plot prevents it from any higher.
    Morgan Freeman, Angelina Jolie, and James McAvoy in Wanted (2008)

    Wanted

    6.7
    2
  • Dec 12, 2008
  • Ridiculous

    First let me state that I'm all for the "implausible-but-fun" movie genre. Transporter 1 & 2 are good examples of films of this genre that work. They were fun to watch, and they didn't try to hard to "sell" the completely implausible plots and physically impossible action sequences. Who cares--they're fun to watch!

    Not so with Wanted. First of all, the implausibility level rises past "implausible" and crashes right through "ridiculous" and into "time-wastingly bizarre" territory. What's worse, stupid dialog and over-obvious camera shots try too hard at every turn to sell what can't be sold. Doesn't the director get it?? We don't *want* to be sold--we'll go with your plot if you just deliver the action.

    It starts in a promising way with some "Office Space" references. Wesley, a hapless office drone is henpecked by his annoying overweight female boss, who looks quite like the "Looks like you've got a case of the Mondays" lady. His cube-mate is taking a lot of time off for 'dentist appointments' to screw Wesely's girlfriend. Then one day he's saved by Angelina Jolie from what she says is an assassination attempt on him. OK, we can go with that...

    ...until she further explains that the attempt was by a rogue member of an assassination fraternity, of which his estranged father was the top member. This fraternity apparently exists only to do battle with another assassination fraternity. How they get paid is unknown, but they seem to have unlimited funds. They also carry out assassinations to "preserve order", but it looks a lot more like these two fraternities just run around killing each other.

    The orders for whom to kill are delivered by a bizarre encryption method consisting of slight imperfections embedded into weaving patterns made by an ancient loom in their front-business--a textile mill near what looks like Goose Island in Chicago. They could have just said a secret "Mr. X" tells them who to kill but I digress. I would've bought the weaving-code thing if they hadn't spent so much time trying to explain it. Again--with movies like this they should just let it go and get on with the action--don't bore us with trying to explain how "if the vertical thread misses the weave and goes *over* the cross thread, it's a zero, and if the horizontal thread goes *under* the cross thread, it's a 1" or some such nonsense. I would've bought the stupid plot-point but it was oversold. Just get on with the action.

    I could go on and on with the bizarre "initiation" process, where he's beaten up daily by "The Repairman", then covered in Krispy-Kreme glaze to 'accelerate the healing'. He learns how to curve a bullet so he can shoot around obstacles. That's where I almost fell asleep. Too much time spent on selling us on how he has to go through all of this to prepare himself to do this ultra-high-priority kill. And of course there are ***SPOILER ALERT*** ridiculous twists upon twists, where everyone he thought was bad was actually good, and vice versa. Or were they? Oh, who cares. It was a waste of time.

    If the movie had just spent a bit more time with some better action sequences then it might've risen to the level of entertainment, but I felt it was extremely overwrought and and downright boring at times.
    The Good Shepherd (2006)

    The Good Shepherd

    6.7
    4
  • May 28, 2007
  • This movie oversteps the 'dramatic license' allowance

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