Everyone’s Hero (review)
What began as the last project of Christopher Reeve has ended as a funny, sweet testament to their indefatigable endurance in the face of the most trying of circumstances.
What began as the last project of Christopher Reeve has ended as a funny, sweet testament to their indefatigable endurance in the face of the most trying of circumstances.
It’s as if the WB took Harry Potter and turned it into ‘Five Hot Underwear Models Go Back to High School and Do Magic’…
If you’ve forgotten — or never known — the rhythm and grace that cinema can sing with, then please, for your own sanity, see ‘Man Push Cart,’ and rediscover how achingly lovely a film can be.
Has an abundance of charm and wisdom and heart, thanks to the appealing cast and smart script.
Hilarious, though that wasn’t the plan…
Is it possible that a movie so utterly without redemptive value, so completely, pointlessly uncalled for, can also be, you know, kinda fun?
Cuthbert picked a poor film to get behind as star and producer: it mistakes luridness for tragedy and monotony for sophistication.
Is it just me, or is there something really sweet about Mark Wahlberg? Not to suggest he’s not all manly and muscly and footbally or anything…
Fantasy like we like our movies to be, a cinematic phantasmagoria of a dream version of the past, lush, rich, ridiculously romantic…
Strangely, delicately weird but not entirely satisfying.