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Horror on December 19th, 2006 by Chad Everett
There aren’t too many movies that I like that start at the end. This one isn’t likely to make me a convert. It starts with a man (Bill Pullman) jumping to his death from a hotel balcony. At least, I think it was a hotel. It may have been an apartment. I really couldn’t tell.
And that was the second part of the problem. I was completely and utterly lost all the way through this movie. I followed the plot well enough, but I spent much of the time trying to figure out what was happening around the plot. That’s no fun.
What I can tell you is that Karen (Sarah Michelle Gellar) is some sort of exchange student. At least, she is an American. Suddenly, due to the death of a nurse or housekeeper or something, an opening becomes available for her, and so she jumps at the chance. But the house where she will be working is possessed by the spirit or someone who was killed. Apparently an ancient proverb says that someone killed with great emotion will remain there, and that’s what happened.
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Posted to
Drama on October 17th, 2006 by Chad Everett
This film is told through the eyes of Christina as she tries to get into Princeton and she talks about how family is the most important thing that someone can have. She tells the college about when she and her mother Flor (Paz Vega) came to the United States to work for John Clasky (Adam Sandler) and his wife Deborah Clasky (Téa Leoni).
Flor could speak no English, so she relied on Christina to translate, and to say that John and Deborah were unhappy is to put it mildly. They were miserable. Over the summer, the family moved to the beach house, and now used to the services of Flor, Deborah insisted that she come along, and that meant that Christina needed to come too.
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Posted to
Action on July 15th, 2006 by Chad Everett
This remake of the 1972 classic The Poseidon Adventure is better than most remakes. It’s certainly better than the 2005 made-for-television version that had terrorists wanting to sink the ship, instead of the rogue wave capsizing the luxury ocean liner.
Don’t get me wrong – the original is still better by a longshot. But this one at least does it justice. Where the classic had a good tale to tell, this one perhaps falls a bit short. But where it at least made up for that shortcoming, it definitely had some action all the way through, and one thing that impressed me was that people died. Who would have thought?
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