Revenge of the Sith

Many fans have felt let down by the prequel trilogy. Lucas had done some things to Star Wars that made even yours truly cringe at the very sight and sound. The first two installments were not the greatest, but still held up on their own. The comic relief from Episodes I and II was, how would you say, horrible. Episode I had Jar Jar Binks, who in my opinion, is the worst character ever thought up in movie history. My word, how did Lucas possibly think up Jar Jar Binks, seriously. I guess it is sweet irony for the Star Wars Universe that Jar Jar was the one who gave the Chancellor emergency executive powers that ultimately was the downfall of the Republic. Secondly, in Episode II, Jar Jar was left out for most of the movie, however, Lucas decided to replace Jar Jar's stupidity with C-3PO. I had so much trouble sitting and listening to Threepio's stupid puns and one liners in Episode II. The comic relief had always been R2-D2, and that is the way it should have stayed. In Episode III, Artoo was the comic relief, and I enjoyed it very much, Episode III was the prequel that felt the most like the original trilogy.
The movie was great, and it had every aspect that made the original trilogy great. It had the heroes and the villains. The Jedi vs. The Sith. That is the way it has always been. Episode I had the great lightsaber duel between Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan and Darth Maul, however, there was nothing that was built upon that. Episode II brought Count Dooku, who in my opinion was a horrible choice for a villain. I feel he was too old to play a Dark Lord of the Sith. With Episode III, we have Count Dooku, Darth Sidious or The Emperor, and the new Darth Vader. I was happy to see Count Dooku killed in the beginning of the movie, mostly because I did not ever like the character. And seeing Palpatine just transform himself into the essence of evil made my skin crawl. How he turned Anakin Skywalker into Darth Vader was just incredible. Other reviews have bashed how Anakin is turned, but I totally bought it. His love, his want for power so he wouldn't lose Padme like he lost his mother, it was totally believable. I mean, Darth Vader always had good in him, but he was twisted by the Dark side of the force and that is what happened. He craved more power and by turning to the Dark side, he achieved it. He did not turn to the Dark side over just the totally desire to have absolute power, but to make sure that Padme lived. I bought his change even if others did not.





Yoda again did a good job of proving why he is the most powerful Jedi. Mace Windu was supposed to be powerful, but was killed by the Emperor and Vader. Yoda though again does his unique saber fighting in this one, and does fight off the Emperor very well. We do understand why Yoda does not have a lightsaber in the original trilogy and we see why Yoda goes to Degobah. After he is almost killed from his battle with the Emperor that ends in a draw, he feels he has failed and decides to go into exile. He awaits the coming of age of Luke, who Obi-Wan takes to Tatoonie and tells Yoda he will watch over the boy. It brings everything full circle and leads greatly into the original trilogy.

I guess I cannot find really any flaws in this movie. People will always criticize the CG and everything, but this is Lucas' life work, the very thing he has spent more time than anything making it perfect. I have loved Star Wars my entire life and I will always love Star Wars, regardless of the little flaws. Greedo shooting first, Jar Jar Binks, and C-3PO's puns were basically my only really big problems with the whole saga. Oh yeah, and who cannot forget those Ewoks, which I mean, they were not a horrible idea, but not something that would totally bring down the Emperor's best troops. I guess I wish that the Stormtroopers would have been a little more militaristic in the original trilogy, but I have to look at the fact that they were made 20 some years ago. Technology has advanced and so the prequels looked more flashy. I also see the original trilogy as the dark ages of that galaxy far far away. With that, my review of Star Wars: Episode III, Revenge of the Sith comes to an end. I told you a lot of what happens, and how I feel about what happens. Hope that you are able to form your own opinions on the movie, and hopefully you will enjoy it as I have. That is my take, Hope you enjoyed it.
Good Ol' Fashioned Family Fun

Now I was always a fan of Family Guy, but never really watched it on TV when it was on. Mainly that was Fox's fault because they kept moving it around so no one really knew what time it was actually on. So when the DVDs came out, I snatched those up in a heart beat. As I watched the old episodes over and over, I longed for new ones. Then when Fox announced it would be showing new Family Guy episodes starting in May, I almost jumped for joy.....wait, I did jump for joy. I waited and waited until finally May 1st came and the new episode was shown.
The new episode of Family Guy, which kicked off it's fourth season, was a work of genius by Seth MacFarlene. It had everything that I loved about Family Guy. The pop culture references were just amazing and the jokes left me laughing the entire time. Brian and Stewie were always two of my favorite characters and in the episode they delivered their classic greatness. The Star Trek joke while Brian is changing Stewie just made me, and hopefully every other nerd just smile with glee.

I enjoyed the return of Family Guy extensively. I caught the follow up episode, which was good, but was not as good as the first episode of Season 4. I am very interested to see were MacFarlene takes this show now. It has already continued the greatness it had back from 1999-2002. I encourage everyone to watch MacFarlene's original masterpiece at 8:00 central time on Fox.
Finding Neverland

Running Time: 106 min
Rating:PG
Quote: JM Berrie: "Those boys should never be sent to bed... they always wake up a day older."
Some Good Old Hitchin'

The Plot (warning spoilers abound in this part):
Poor Arthur Dent, he's really not having that great of a day. he's got his mind on the girl that got away. his house is about to be destroyed to make way for a road, and his friend Ford Perfect decides to tell him that he's an alien. wait...wwwhhhaaaaaa? yeah all this happens before lunch too. before Arthur can say "hey i remember that time you wanted to have a probe party..." some demolition ships land and tell all of us Earth citizens that the planet is scheduled for demolition to make way for a hyperspace expressway. Arthur and Ford barely have time to hitchhike off the planet before Earth goes the way of...some planet that has been blown up before to make way for a hyperspace expressway......
what follows is a trek across the galaxy that involves a stolen ship, a rather crazy john malcovich, a manic depressive robot, and the search for the ultimate question in the universe. the plot never really seems to disappoint, although not reading the novels before hand i can't say that it sticks close. the plot does draw out my biggest criticism of the movie though. the love story. we're supposed to believe that arthur and his girl (named trillian, i was giggling at the thought that she was named after my messaging program too) fall in love after only about 20 minutes of interaction time on screen? while both martin freeman and zooey deschanel function fine on their own, pairing them together as perspective members of a relationships comes off as really wooden and unnecessary. you could have easily skipped that part of the movie and been completely happy. granted the love story isn't the biggest part of the movie, but it's the part i had the biggest problem with.

most of the acting is above average here. you've got martin freeman (the guy from the office tv show and love actually). who's got one of the best "what the f$#%" faces i've seen. he really brings across the fact that he has no idea what the hell is going on. and really fits well despite my comment about the love story. zooey deschanel (the blonde girl from elf) isn't so lucky. since the majority of her interactions with the characters almost completely revolve around the love story i wasn't really a fan of her in this movie. her dry humor works some of the time, but not enough to make her a good choice for the role. sam rockwell impresses as the president of the galaxy ZAPHOD BEEBLEBROX (he would have wanted it capitalized), constantly making the audience bounce between hating him for being such a jackass. and at the same time not minding it because he's just dumb enough to put the thought in your mind that maybe he doesn't know what he's doing. rounding out the main cast is mos def, who really suprised me in this movie. he did an excellent job of bringing ford perfect to life. having not seen his screen or stage work before i was a little skeptical being that he comes from that "rapper turned actor" crowd. man was i wrong. he brings on of the best performances of the film. it's worth mentioning too that both alan rickman (the voice of marvin the depressed robot) and stephen fry (the narrator and the voice of the guide itself) did really good jobs as well. they both bring their characters to life and in marvins case rickman keeps the character whinny but still likeable enough that he doesn't become annoying. plus marvins solution to the alien problem at the end worth seeing.
the visuals:
nothing in this film really stands out except for one thing. the improbability drive (what the stolen ship uses to jump the characters across space) turns who ever is in the ship into any random object for a short time after they come back into normal space. this produces some of the best visual gags in the movie, and the best on screen vomiting i've seen in a movie....ever. the CGI is well done and works with the film well. and the sets are all very good at complimenting the story. there really isn't any camera work or visiual effects in general that really push the movie in any way. this movie may not have set out to do that, but something about how bland a lot of the scenes were shot kind got to me. nothing in this area works against the film, but it made me walk out of the theater going "eh" instead of going "wow that was really cool". which is what a film like this is supposed to do.
overall:
i liked The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, just not a lot. there are enough memorable performances and on the ball humor to make it worth seeing. though i don't know if it's worth eight bucks and popcorn. rent it defiantly, but only really see it if star wars is sold out and you absolutely need to sit in a theater for an hour and a half. oh and if anyone knows where i can find myself a marvin robot that'd be really cool.....i give it a B-
There Is No Place Like Home For An Irishman

The play takes place in Ireland, on the Isle of Inishmaan, in 1934. The people who live in Inishmaan are very few, and they all know each other. Kate and Eileen run a small store out of their home. Johnnypateenmike, who's name is just as funny as the character, is the local gossip. He brings news to everyone, and mooches items from people, especially Kate Eileen for his news. The story, however, revolves around Billy, a physically challenged young man who is not given the time of day by anyone, including Helen, who Billy loves. Kate and Eileen are Billy's foster aunts, and because he is crippled, they treat him like a child. Billy learns from Johnnypateenmike about a film being filmed in Inishmore and Billy quickly begins to dream about life in America, living in Hollywood. Billy begins his journey and soon ends up right back in Inishmaan.
The journey that Billy takes is because he wants to make something better for himself. However, he does this for the wrong reasons. He feels his life at home is horrible, because he doesn't seem to get any respect from anyone. What he does not realize is that after he leaves, everyone feels lost without Billy. No one really makes a huge deal, except of course, Kate and Eileen. They even try and pass it off at first, but they cannot. Billy had so much at home for him, and learns while in America, that life without his family is not worth it, so he travels back to Inishmaan.

I loved this play, hands down, loved it. First and foremost, I love all Irish culture. I am Irish and very proud of it. To sit in the audience and watch this gripping tale, I was just in amazement. To see all the performers on stage, bringing 1934 Ireland to life was very moving. I have always wanted to go to Ireland, be around many Irish people, and to sit and watch a play, which was actually written by a true Irishman, was a dream come true for yours truly. The language was all correct, the accents the performers used were incredible. I have never heard so many Americans, from Wisconsin of all places, bring out a true Irish accent. They all did a very good job of bringing McDonagh's play to life on the stage of UWO's Fredric March Theatre.
The music that was chosen for in between scenes and for the intermission was well picked. There was the traditional Irish music. The fiddles, the flutes, everything. I am very keen on this kind of music, and for me, it helped set the feeling even more for the play. I personally got really involved. They also used some music that was made in America at the time. A lot of what they played was Bing Crosby. I think this was done to bring out the American culture, the culture Billy originally yearns for in the play.
As a critic of the films and plays that I view, I would have to say I do not have any criticism for this play. I mean, there is always the normal lines that get messed up from time to time, but in live production, that can be expected. I went on the second night of the show and it was stellar. I am sure it was even better on the weekend showings. I am giving this play 4 stars on a 4 star scale. It was just very impressive. I would recommend seeing this play if it ever available. I am also very curious about McDonagh's other works. Having the Irish pride that I do, I will probably love all of his plays. But for "The Cripple of Inishmaan," I loved it, no doubt about it, a spectacular play.