The Lunchbox
This is a tiny movie that reminds everyone that love is often found as a result of happy accidents.
This is a tiny movie that reminds everyone that love is often found as a result of happy accidents.
This film does teach a profound lesson. Never smoke pot when preparing a Thanksgiving Dinner. Never!
While this film will soon be forgotten, it has the greatest magical white horse since the one that appeared in Mike Newell’s classic Into the West (1992).
An accurate review of this film could have simply said, “I really didn’t like it, enough said”.
What if the cost of being madly in love forced you to hide in a public closet as if you didn’t exist?
Director Spike Jonze has done some interesting work, but please do not compare this film to either Being John Malkovich (1999) or Adaptation (2002).
Though the film contains some very good performances, my overall reaction was captured long ago by the famous words of Marlon Brando in On the Waterfront (1954), and I paraphrase, “It coulda been… Continue reading
Rating: Shallene Woodley is as unforgettable here as she was in Alexander Payne’s The Descendants (2011), and she reminds everyone that the key to being 18 is not to lose focus.
Rating: Shakespeare knew that love is indeed a many splendored thing despite its journey down some confusing, winding roads.