L: Change the World - Watched this with my sisters, loved it just as much as ever and teared up at the end like always.
A Christmas Carol - The newest one, with the performance capture, starring Jim Carrey. This is the only Christmas Carol movie I can stand, and I loved being able to see it on DVD at last. Forgot to check out the special features, though XD
I watched about half an hour of PotC: On Stranger Tides before it got stuck in the player :/
Abduction - Meh, worth watching only because it was on the plane and there was nothing else to do. Whatshisface is a really lame actor, though, and he isn't even good-looking. Blah, but it was nice to see Jason Isaacs. My first thought when he came on screen was that it would be reeeeally scary to have him as your dad XD
Take Cover - An indie movie that I loved, but definitely isn't for everyone. Think Signs without the aliens or horror elements, and that's what it's like. It's about a man who's happily married and has a young, deaf daughter - a nice little life and a steady job, not a whole lot of money but enough to get by - and then he starts getting nightmares about a freakish storm and starts believing they're visions of the future. And everything goes downhill from there. I thought it was an excellent movie, and very well acted.
Kavi - A 20-minute movie about a slave boy in modern-day India who is forced to work in a brick kiln. It seemed to be an accurate window into the horrible things that are going on today that seem utterly unbelievable to a Western audience.
The Debt - An okay movie, with a bit too much objectionable content for me to want to see it again (and I think it was even edited for viewing in the plane, so I don't really want to find out what the unedited version was like). It's about three secret agents who were trying to kidnap a Nazi scientist from East Germany and take him to put him on trial for his crimes. Kind of exciting, and I've always liked that time period, and the amount of foreign languages/accents was fun, but...yeah. Wouldn't watch it again.
Ice Age 3 - Surprisingly good for a third installment, and actually better than Ice Age 2, but obviously nowhere near as good as the first one. Funny in parts, and I really did like Buck's character, but it just didn't shine like the first one, didn't have as much heart, and too much crude humor for my tastes.
Megamind - OHHHHHHHH MAAAAAN I LOVE THIS MOVIE!!!! I could tell from the trailer that I would, and I was right!
Man, Dreamworks has come so far since the days of Shrek. This had the minimum of crude humor (which is usually what keeps me from leaping at the chance to watch Dreamworks movies), was incredibly funny and interesting, and even managed to touch my heart. How to Train Your Dragon is still by far my favorite Dreamworks movie, but this one comes in as a close second. I was also expecting, from the trailers, that the ultimate message of the movie was going to be "evil can be good too, depending on your perspective," but was pleasantly surprised to discover that [spoiler]it was more about someone evil turning good in the end because he realizes that his life is empty otherwise. I thought that was an
excellent message for a children's movie.[/spoiler]
You can find out things about the past that you never knew. And from what you've learned, you may see some things differently in the present. You're the one that changes. Not the past.
- Ellone, Final Fantasy VIII
"There's a difference between maliciously offending somebody - on purpose - and somebody being offended by...truth. If you're offended by the
truth, that's your problem. I have no obligation to not offend you if I'm speaking the truth. The truth is
supposed to offend you; that's how you know you don't got it."
- Brad Stine