Monday, April 23, 2007

Films Not About Tragedy

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OUT-AND-OUT COMEDIES:

The Trouble with Harry (1955)—directed by Hitchcock, but a comedy!

Ruthless People (1986)—a kidnapping caper; still one of my favorite comedies

Hairspray (1988)—my favorite comedy of all time; will be a movie musical this summer

Serial Mom (1994)—another John Waters comedy, mostly shot around my high school and other familiar sites around Towson

Waking Ned Devine (1998)—one of those twee British comedies about village eccentrics; the scene of the two old men riding naked on the motorcycle alone is worth the price of admission

GalaxyQuest (2000)—a comedy about a Star Trek-like show

American Dreamz (2000)—a satire about a show like American Idol, with Hugh Grant as a combination Ryan Seacrest/Simon Cowell character

Le Chevre (1981)—a French farce about a girl who gets kidnapped and the two mismatched detectives who are sent to find her

The Dinner Game (1998)—another great French comedy about a suave handsome man who tries to play a trick one a clueless ugly one, and the reversals of fortune that ensue

COMEDIES, BUT DRAMATIC TOO:

A Room with a View (1985)---the original Merchant-Ivory blockbuster about pretty English people in Italy

Radio Days (1987)—Woody Allen’s film about growing up in the 1940s

Corrina Corrina (1994)---lovely film about the relationship between a widower and the woman he hires to watch his daughter

Il Postino (1995)---the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda befriends a rural postman in Italy; “heartwarming!” say the critics

Sense and Sensibility---Jane Austen; nuff said

L’Auberge Espagnole (2003)---European youth living together in Barcelona; “delightful!” say the critics

Love Actually (2003)---ensemble British comedy-romance; I love this film; but be warned: there is unexpectedly graphic sex---do not watch with your children or parents

Spellbound (2003)---hilarious documentary about kids in spelling bees

Goodbye, Lenin (2004)---a young man in East Germany tries to hide from his mother the fact that the Wall has fallen and Communism is dead


NOTE COMEDIES, BUT EASY TO LIKE:

Widow’s Peak (1994)---light intrigue in an English village

Chariots of Fire (1981)—about early 1900s British Olympic runners

Mountains of the Moon (1990)—wonderful, wonderful, little-known movie about the two men who discovered the source of the Nile in Africa; the first half is an action movie, the second half a psychological drama

The Last Seduction---slick thriller about a bad husband and his bad wife

Angels & Insects---fascinating movie about a young Charles Darwin staying at a rich man’s mansion and discovering what, and who, he really loves in life

The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999)---oooh, I love this movie! Sneaky, innocent-looking Matt Damon is Ripley

A Walk on the Moon (1999)---a 1950s housewife at a summer family camp is tempted by the “shirt man” . . . who happens to be Viggo Mortensen; contains my all-time favorite sex scene

Frequency (2000)---thriller about a troubled man who comes into contact with his long-dead father through a ham radio and tries to solve a mystery

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2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

So what was your old high school, Lynn? Just so we'll recognize it in the John Waters movie :>)

April 25, 2007 at 1:19 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I just figured out that I can comment back! (I know . . . DUH.) I went to Towson High; beautiful stone building.

April 25, 2007 at 3:38 PM  

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