Sleuth (Redux)

“I heard a rumor you wanted to marry my wife.”

In 1972 Michael Caine starred as Milo Tindle, a young man forced into a deadly game of wits when he meets his lover’s husband (Laurence Olivier).  Sleuth remains a favorite of many fans of Caine, and ranks among IMDb’s top 250 films.  This remake does not.

Last year director Kenneth Branagh decided to remake the film enlisting Caine to play the older role this time and casting Jude Law as the new Milo.  The result is a curiosity and although it may be of interest to film students or as a comparison to the original, there’s little to recommend this version on its own merits.

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Words & Music

Hey folks!  Here’s a look at new music and books hitting the shelves today from your pals here at RazorFine!  Today’s new books include the latest novel of Anne McCaffrey’s Twins of Petaybee Series, new novels from Linda Fairstein, Salmon Rushdie, and Laura Lippman, and examinations of Nixon’s trip to China and Buck O’Neil’s baseball career.  Today’s new music includes albums from Shawn Mullins, Mike Patton, Snoop Dogg, Rick Ross, and Randy Jackson presents a new volume of tunes for all you Idol fans.  Check out all this and more inside the Full Diagnosis.

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10,000 Clichés

  • Title: 10,000 B.C.
  • IMDB: link

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I’ve given all-around awesome German Roland Emmerich credit before for making kick ass blockbusters like, as the zillions of ads this weekend say, Independence Day and The Day After Tomorrow; but his newest mega-budget effort 10,000 B.C. is proof that the guy isn’t infallible.  His scripts have left something (a lot of something) to be desire; but he can usually make up for it with some expert action directing.  So what happens when the he’s off his game?

You know how it goes.  Your father ditches your pre-historic village one night, and the rest of the tribe treats you like shit for it.  Sucks, right?  Well, so it goes for our hero, the eloquently named D’Leh (Steven Strait).  He does finally catch a break when he wins the woman of his dreams (Camilla Belle) by killing an animal, but then these asshole Mongol-Viking hybrids come along and all like kidnap her and most of the village.

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The Bank Job

  • Title: The Bank Job
  • IMDB: link

“We’re not bank robbers.”
“Maybe that’s why we could get away with it.”

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Terry (Jason Stratham) and his small-time crook pals (Daniel Mays, Michael Jibson, Stephen Campbell Moore, Alki David, James Faulkner) are offered a chance at the biggest score of their lives by one of Terry’s old flames, Martine (Safron Burrows).

Trouble is they only know have the half the story.  Martine is actually working for MI5 (British Intelligence) who desperately need some damaging photographs from a safety deposit box owned by a black militant (Peter De Jersey) who is using them to blackmail the government.

Tim (Richard Lintern) is given the assignment of capturing the damaging material without using any company resources, as the government can not be tied to the operation if all goes wrong.  He blackmails Martine into getting her friends to do the job.

The job is further complicated by a pornographer (David Suchet) whose ledger of police payoffs is also hidden among the treasures the team lifts from the bank.

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Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day

  • Title: Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day
  • IMDB: link

“I, for one, am not running around town with Oliver Twist’s mom.”

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Delysia Lafosse (Amy Adams) is a lounge singer and aspiring actress.  She’s sweet, lovable, and willing to use her sexual wiles to make her dreams come true.  As the film opens Delysia is dating three men: the owner of the club where she works (Mark Strong) who provides her with a luxurious apartment, a young Broadway producer (Tom Payne) who is casting a coveted role, and Michael (Lee Pace), a penniless piano player and the love of her young life.

Into this juggling act arrives Guinevere Pettigrew (Frances McDormand), an out of work governess unable to find work.  Taking the job as Delysia’s social secretary under less than reputable circumstances, Mrs. Pettigrew becomes the friend and older sister Delysia so needs.

There’s not much to the plot other than misunderstandings and white lies.  Almost everyone here could do what the script calls for in their sleep.  McDormand is the star of the piece.  Adams is sweet as the lovable mixed-up tart.  And everyone else is mostly forgettable.

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