Posts tagged Rose Byrne
This Is Where I Leave You “And Stay with You Forever”
Sep 29th
Posted by Channel 1 Networks in Hotshots Movie Reviews
“Hotshots” looks at a movie!
THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU is a very funny movie with a very unfortunate title, but with a very good ensemble cast about a family who all get back together for a week in order to honor their father’s wishes when he dies.
Jason Bateman plays Judd Altman, and the movie begins when he comes home early from work and finds his wife in bed with his boss having sex.
Tina Fey plays Wendy Altman, Judd’s sister, and she calls Judd while he is still trying to process the new development in his life to tell Judd that their father died, and a dying wish of his was that the whole Altman family return home to sit shiva and mourn his death for seven days even though he wasn’t a practicing Jew.
Jane Fonda plays Hillary Altman, the mother who is a child psychotherapist with a very successful book that contains more information about her children than they cared to share, but she tells them, “Secrets are cancer to a family.”
Adam Driver plays Phillip Altman, the baby of the family, and although he has fancy possessions he is still regarded as worthless, and he shows up with his much older, richer girlfriend, who is a psychotherapist.
Corey Stoll plays Paul Altman, the oldest of the children, who stayed in town to help his father run the family sporting goods store, who is married to Alice, one of Judd’s old girlfriends and who badly wants a baby, but she and Paul are still childless.
And then there are other assorted family members and children, as well as another old girlfriend of Judd’s, Penny, played by Rose Byrne, who not only still lives in town but who also still has longings for Judd.
The family sits on the couch in the living room to receive neighbors and friends who come by to pay their respects, but when they can’t take the bickering anymore or the infighting among them, some sneak out of the house as often as possible.
Also, unexpected people show up unannounced which adds to the discomfort of the family, but delight to the audience, and some scenes are downright hilarious.
You will laugh, you will cry, you will think your pants will never dry.
THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU will stay with you forever.
I’m Dan Culberson and this is “Hotshots.”
This Is Where I Leave You – Movie Trailer
Sep 22nd
Posted by Channel 1 Networks in Movie Trailers
When their father passes away, four grown siblings, bruised and banged up by their respective adult lives, are forced to return to their childhood home and live under the same roof together for a week, along with their over-sharing mother and an assortment of spouses, exes and might-have-beens. Confronting their history and the frayed states of their relationships among the people who know and love them best, they ultimately reconnect in hysterical and emotionally affecting ways amid the chaos, humor, heartache and redemption that only families can provide-driving us insane even as they remind us of our truest, and often best, selves.
Neighbors “Bro’s before Neighbors”
May 15th
Posted by Channel 1 Networks in Hotshots Movie Reviews
(“Bro’s before Neighbors”)
“Hotshots” looks at a movie!
NEIGHBORS won the top spot at the box office its first weekend of release, which is another reason that this film should not be confused with the 1981 NEIGHBORS, which was John Belushi’s last film.
However, the plot about the arrival of rowdy new neighbors who disrupt the lives of a couple who are already living there is the same, except that the part of Dan Aykroyd has been replaced by an entire fraternity house led by Teddy, played by Zac Efron.
The couple are Mac and Kelly Radner, played by Seth Rogen and Rose Byrne, they have a baby daughter named Stella, and when they see some of the shenanigans taking place next door at the Beta Psi Delta fraternity house, Kelly says to Mac, “Just because we have a house and a baby doesn’t mean that we’re old people.”
You see, at first Mac and Kelly envy the youthful exuberance of the fraternity boys and their parties attended by attractive college students of boys and hot-looking girls, and they go next door to welcome the new neighbors to the neighborhood.
Teddy accepts the fraternity’s new neighbors and their surprising gift and invites Mac and Kelly to the party of the moment so everything will be cool later.
Teddy tells Mac and Kelly that if any of the parties gets too noisy, they need to call the fraternity first and not the cops, which is a good indication of what is going to happen later, right?
Well, the fraternity brothers have a goal that they want to achieve, which the audience learns at the beginning of the movie, and to achieve that goal, they party every night, which causes Mac to call the police what he believes to be anonymously after he can’t get anyone at the party to pick up the phone.
Naturally, the fraternity brothers retaliate when they are told by the police that Mac called them, which they know because the police have caller ID.
And the game is on, escalating with each retaliation by the two parties, so to speak, culminating in an attempt by Mac and Kelly to interfere with the brothers’ mantra of “bro’s before ho’s” and get them to fight among themselves after a violation of Teddy’s relationship with his girlfriend.
NEIGHBORS is enjoyable, but probably only to young people.
I’m Dan Culberson and this is “Hotshots.”