Category: On TV and Movies

 Movie Review: <i>Men in Black 3 (MIB3)</i>
0

Movie Review: Men in Black 3 (MIB3)

by

Sequels are hard.  “Men in Black 3” is no exception. After an attention-grabbing, keeping-in-the-MIB-mode (and a once-only-ultra-risqué scene) opening, “MIB3” strives in a ho-hum way to maintain the MIB quirky vibe and “odd couple” relationship between Agent J (Will Smith) and Agent K (a wan-looking Tommy Lee Jones). Each actor does their best with mediocre, […]

Movie Review: <i>U.N. Me</i>
0

Movie Review: U.N. Me

by

Every once in a while, I watch a movie that I hate. U.N. Me is just such a movie. I hated watching it but I have to recommend that others see this movie.  Why?  Because I believe that even if the truth is brutally hard to digest, it’s better than ignorance. I hated what was […]

Watching Movies Through Catholic Eyes
0

Watching Movies Through Catholic Eyes

by

In How to Read a Film, author James Monaco writes that movies “have drastically changed the way we perceive the world… yet we all too naturally accept the vast amounts of information they convey to us in massive doses without questioning how they tell us what they tell.” When it comes to movies, how we […]

<i>The Avengers</i> and Our Fascination with Saviors
0

The Avengers and Our Fascination with Saviors

by

Like the Hulk, The Avengers, directed by the imaginative Joss Whedon, has smashed all previous weekend box-office records, hauling in over $200M in just three days. So what is it about these kinds of films that draws people to see them over and over? Part of it is the sheer spectacle of it all, some […]

Movie Review: <em>Love’s Everlasting Courage</em>
0

Movie Review: Love’s Everlasting Courage

by

Popular Christian author Janette Oke’s first book was Love Comes Softly. Janette was born during the depression years on a Canadian prairie farm and she remembers her childhood as full of love, laughter, family life and faith. Janette drew upon these themes for her debut novel and her many other popular books that followed. I […]

Upcoming Movie Review: <i>For Greater Glory</i>
0

Upcoming Movie Review: For Greater Glory

by

I’m doing something I’ve never done before. I’ve never written a movie review for a movie I have not yet seen or a book review for book I have not yet read. But I am so excited by the “buzz” about an upcoming movie that I thought I’d let you in on some of it. […]

Movie Review: <em>The Hunger Games</em>
0

Movie Review: The Hunger Games

by

The Hunger Games is set in a way beyond dystopia future in which the rulers living in the Third-Reich-like “Capitol” keep the peons in the “Districts” in fear and subjugation by holding gladiatorial games each year. The combatants are children and teenagers, picked at random to fight to the death, each representing their District. And […]

<em>The Hunger Games:</em> A Catholic Parent’s Guide to Themes and Issues
6

The Hunger Games: A Catholic Parent’s Guide to Themes and Issues

by

The movie version of The Hunger Games debuted on March 23, and it is breaking all records. What follows is a review of The Hunger Games Trilogy by author, Suzanne Collins. **Spoiler Alert—The plot is discussed here in detail for parental benefit. The level of detail is to help facilitate a discussion with your child […]

Movie Review: <em>War Horse</em>
0

Movie Review: War Horse

by

Baby seals, puppies and horses all seem to have a universal ability to tug at people’s heartstrings. It’s just something about how we’re made, and Steven Spielberg’s War Horse doesn’t disappoint in that department. This film takes you on an emotional ride from the opening scene, the birth of a horse in rural England, right […]

Movie Review: <em>We Bought a Zoo</em>
0

Movie Review: We Bought a Zoo

by

Benjamin Mee (Matt Damon) and his two children, Dylan (Colin Ford) and Rosie (Maggie Elizabeth Jones), lost their wife and mother, Katherine, just six months ago. The family is grieving and Benjamin is floundering in his job as a journalist. Dylan (fourteen) is moody, angry and in regular trouble at school. Rosie (seven) misses her […]

Movie Review: <em>We Bought A Zoo</em>
0

Movie Review: We Bought A Zoo

by

Everyone has made at least one impulsive purchase in his or her life. Pet shops and women’s clothing stores thrive on such buys. But not many of us would be tempted to buy an entire zoo on impulse. Ah, but in the movies there are no limits as to what can happen. In the film, […]

Secular Scapegoats and <em>The Hunger Games</em>
0

Secular Scapegoats and The Hunger Games

by

The Hunger Games trilogy penned by Suzanne Collins has proven to be hugely successful, and deservedly so. The tale of post-apocalyptic love, poverty, war, and oppression poignantly captures the fundamental injustice of tyranny. As the film premiere of the first book dominated the box office this past weekend, it’s worth reflecting on what can be […]

Stop What You Are Doing!
0

Stop What You Are Doing!

by

Run to your local theater and see OCTOBER BABY as soon as you are able! Bring as many of your family and friends with you as possible! This film completes the incomplete public discussion of abortion and the dignity of all human life. The frank beauty and power of its message will anger some but […]

<em>October Baby</em> Opens Today
1

October Baby Opens Today

by

I don’t recommend many movies, but today one that you really should see is coming into theaters nationwide. It’s called October Baby, and it deals in a masterful way with a difficult topic — abortion. Abortion is not and should not be an abstract debate. When I’m asked how the pro-life battle has evolved over […]

<em>October Baby</em> and the Battle of Lepanto
0

October Baby and the Battle of Lepanto

by

It is the topic no Hollywood film maker would touch with a ten foot pole.  It is the topic no abortion advocate will discuss let alone admit.  It is the topic many pro-lifers do not even know exists:  survivors of failed abortions.  It is the topic that Jon and Andy Erwin chose for their first […]

<em>Project X</em> and <em>Wanderlust</em> – On Being Lost in America
0

Project X and Wanderlust – On Being Lost in America

by

What does it take to be included, to feel a part of something bigger than yourself? In the past two weeks, two films, made for two generations, have sought to answer that question. Both are comedies, both rated R, and both come to the most dismal answers imaginable. I think it was Francis Schaeffer who […]

On Santorum, Democrats, and 'God’s Will'
1

On Santorum, Democrats, and ‘God’s Will’

by

In case you didn’t notice…. With George W. Bush out of office and a Democrat in the White House, the secular media stopped its handwringing over the president mentioning God. With Rick Santorum’s surge, the hysteria has started again. Every religious utterance by Santorum will be a cause for apoplexy by the liberal press. It […]

<em>Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance</em> Burns Out
0

Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance Burns Out

by

In Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance, Nicholas Cage returns as Johnny Blaze, the man who once made a deal with the devil to save his father’s life, and became the devil’s bounty hunter. In the original Ghost Rider film, when he is in the presence of evil, Blaze turns into the Ghost Rider, a flaming […]

<em>Monsters, Inc</em>: A Door into the Hearts of Post-abortive Fathers
0

Monsters, Inc: A Door into the Hearts of Post-abortive Fathers

by

A few years ago, we lost our DVD of Monsters, Inc. (2001, PIXAR) in a basement flood.  It was a small disappointment, and every once in a while our kids mentioned how much they would like to see it again, but it was one of those back-burner “wants.”  This Christmas season, we bought a copy and […]

<em>Filly Brown</em> and The Sundance Experience
0

Filly Brown and The Sundance Experience

by

The 2012 Sundance Film Festival welcomed the premiere of Filly Brown, the directing debut of Youssef Delara and Michael Olmos. Majo Tonorio (a.k.a. Filly Brown) is an aspiring hip-hop musician from the tough streets of Los Angeles. After pairing up with a talented DJ, Majo cuts a recording with a small-time promoter before catching the […]

Movie Review: <em>Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close</em>
0

Movie Review: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

by

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close is the story of a boy who loses his father in the Twin Towers on 9/11. Oskar Schell (Thomas Horn) seems to have Asperger’s syndrome, and his dad (Tom Hanks) was the only one who really understood his brainy but socially awkward and phobia-ridden son. Oskar’s relationship with his mother […]

The Church at Sundance
0

The Church at Sundance

by

The whole idea behind edgy, independent films is that by prying themselves from the commercial grip of major studios, filmmakers finally have the freedom to tell the truth. Sometimes this works. Last year’s The Redemption of General Butt Naked and Higher Ground were intense explorations of spiritual life. Both films were challenging in different ways, […]

Sundance Festival Movie Review: <em>Father's Chair</em>
0

Sundance Festival Movie Review: Father’s Chair

by

When a child goes missing, a parent experiences a range of emotions fueled by love and the desire to be reunited with their child. This situation is a nightmare no family wants to experience. Yet, if this unfortunate occurrence does strike a home, the strength and unity among family members can offer hope while searching […]

Movie Review: <em>Kid-Thing</em>
0

Movie Review: Kid-Thing

by

Kid-Thing (shown at the Sundance Film Festival) examines the relationship between loneliness and hope as Annie (Sydney Aguirre), a 10-year-old only child, who is neglected by her alcoholic father, spends her days trying to entertain herself by creating trouble. Her misbehavior carries a suspenseful edge. Whether she is stealing food from a convenience store, throwing […]