Total Number of Movies in Joel’s Collection: 1,338 Page Number: 7 / 27
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The Fall

Director: Tarsem Singh
Starring: Catinca Untaru, Justine Waddell, Lee Pace, Kim Uylenbroek, Aiden Lithgow, Sean Gilder, Ronald France, Andrew Roussouw, Michael Huff, Grant Swanby, Emil Hostina, Robin Smith, Jeetu Verma, Leo Bill, Marcus Wesley, Ayesha Verman
Genre: Adventure, Fantasy, Drama, Thriller, Science Fiction, Foreign
Studio: Roadside Attractions, LLC
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.1 (1,332 votes)
Release: May 2008
Summary: In a hospital on the outskirts of 1920s Los Angeles, an injured stuntman begins to tell a fellow patient, a little girl with a broken arm, a fantastic story about 5 mythical heroes. Thanks to his fractured state of mind and her vivid imagination, the line between fiction and reality starts to blur as the tale advances.
 

The Fall - The Complete First Season

Director: Jakob Verbruggen
Starring: Gillian Anderson, Jamie Dornan, Niamh McGrady
Genre: Action, Crime, Drama, Family, Thriller
Studio: BBC TWO
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 8.4
Release: May 2013
Summary: A psychological thriller that examines the lives of two hunters. One is a serial killer who stalks his victims in and around Belfast and the other is a talented female Detective Superintendent from the MET who is brought in to catch him.
 

Fallen

Director: Gregory Hoblit
Starring: Denzel Washington, John Goodman, Donald Sutherland, Embeth Davidtz, James Gandolfini
Genre: Fantasy, Thriller
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.9 (39,276 votes)
Release: Jan 1998
Summary: Assigned to nab a killer before he or she strikes again, tough homicide detective John Hobbes knows he's on a dangerous assignment -- and one for which he's uniquely suited. But there's more to it than he realizes. Turns out he's not just up against a killer: He must face an evil spirit that can morph from one innocent bystander to the next
 

Falling Down

Director: Joel Schumacher
Starring: Michael Douglas, Robert Duvall, Barbara Hershey, Tuesday Weld, Rachel Ticotin
Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.4 (5 votes)
Release: Feb 1993
Summary: An unemployed defense worker frustrated with the various flaws he sees in society, begins to psychotically and violently lash out against them.
 

The Family Man

Director: Brett Ratner
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Téa Leoni, Don Cheadle, Saul Rubinek, Makenzie Vega, Ryan Milkovich, Jake Milkovich, Lisa Thornhill, Jeremy Piven, Amber Valletta
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance, Holiday
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6
Release: Dec 2000
Summary: A modern-day Frank Capra story. Jack Campbell, a successful and talented businessman, is happily living his single life. He has everything, or so he thinks. One day he wakes up in a new life where he didn't leave his college girlfriend for a London trip. He's married to Kate, lives in Jersey and has two kids. He, of course, desperately wants his life back for which he has worked 13 years for. He's president of P. K. Lassiter Investment House and not a tire salesman at Big Ed's. He drives a Ferrari and not a mini-van that never starts. And most importantly he doesn't wake up in the morning with kids jumping on the bed. After a bad start, day by day he's more confident in his new life and starts to see what he's been missing. Turns out money's good to have but that's not everything.
 

Fantasia

Director: Ben Sharpsteen, Hamilton Luske, Samuel Armstrong, James Algar, Bill Roberts, Paul Satterfield, Jim Handley, Ford Beebe, T. Hee, Norman Ferguson, Wilfred Jackson
Starring: Leopold Stokowski, Deems Taylor, Walt Disney, James MacDonald, Julietta Novis, Paul J. Smith
Genre: Fantasy, Animation, Science Fiction, Music, Family
Studio: Walt Disney Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 7.8 (49,000 votes)
Release: Nov 1940
Summary: Fantasia is the adventurous 1940 experiment from Disney. The film sets Disney animated characters to classical music as Mickey Mouse uses his magic wand to set broomsticks dancing in one of the more famous elaborate scenes. The film was groundbreaking in its usage of animation and music and is still considered a masterpiece decades later.
 

Fantastic Mr. Fox

Director: Wes Anderson
Starring: George Clooney, Meryl Streep, Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Wallace Wolodarsky, Michael Gambon, Willem Dafoe, Owen Wilson, Jarvis Cocker, Wes Anderson, Karen Duffy, Helen McCrory, Roman Coppola, Garth Jennings, Brian Cox, Adrien Brody
Genre: Adventure, Animation, Comedy, Family
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Release: Nov 2009
Summary: The Fantastic Mr. Fox bored with his current life, plans a heist against the three local farmers. The farmers, tired of sharing their chickens with the sly fox, seek revenge against him and his family.
 

Far From Heaven

Director: Todd Haynes
Starring: Julianne Moore, Dennis Haysbert
Genre: Drama
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.4 (28,124 votes)
Release: Dec 2002
Summary: This uniquely beautiful film--from one of the smartest and most idiosyncratic of contemporary directors, Todd Haynes ("Safe", "Velvet Goldmine")--takes the lush 1950s visual style of so-called women's pictures (particularly those of Douglas Sirk, director of "Imitation of Life" and "Magnificent Obsession") to tell a story that mixes both sexual and racial prejudice. Julianne Moore, an amazing fusion of vulnerability and will power, plays a housewife whose husband (Dennis Quaid) has a secret gay life. When she finds solace in the company of a black gardener (Dennis Haysbert), rumors and peer pressure destroy any chance she has at happiness. It's astonishing how a movie with such a stylized veneer can be so emotionally compelling; the cast and filmmakers have such an impeccable command of the look and feel of the genre that every moment is simultaneously artificial and deeply felt. "Far from Heaven" is ingenious and completely engrossing. "--Bret Fetzer"
 

Farewell

Director: Christian Carlon
Starring: Willem Dafoe, Guillaume Canet, Fred Ward, Emir Kusturica, Diane Kruger
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Neoclassics Films
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 6.8 (3,871 votes)
Release: Apr 2011
Summary: In the vein of The Lives Of Others but only loosely based on an incredible true story, FAREWELL is an espionage film about events that changed history. In 1981, Colonel Grigoriev (Kusturica) of the KGB, disenchanted with the Communist ideal, decides he is going to change the world. Discreetly, he makes contact with Pierre (Canet), a French engineer working in Moscow and passes on documents to him - mainly concerning the United States and France - containing information which would uncover the most important Soviet Cold War espionage operation known to date. During a period of two years, French President Francois Mitterrand and US President Ronald Reagan personally vetted the documents supplied by this source in Moscow, to whom the French Secret Service gave the codename Farewell. Farewell smuggled out information that would cause actions which sounded the death knell of the Soviet Union before the end of the decade. In his own way, Farewell played a small part in changing the world. In this dramatization, which does not include the fact that the real Grigoriev attacked his mistress and murdered a policeman, he avoids traditional espionage methods too well known to the KGB and does not ask for financial compensation. He simply follows his destiny, so that a new world might dawn for his fellow Russians, but especially for his son.
 

Fargo

Director: Joel Coen
Starring: William H. Macy, Steve Buscemi, Peter Stormare, Kristin Rudrüd, Harve Presnell
Genre: Crime, Drama
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.2 (260,854 votes)
Release: Apr 1996
Summary: Leave it to the wildly inventive Coen brothers (Joel directs, Ethan produces, they both write) to concoct a fiendishly clever kidnap caper that's simultaneously a comedy of errors, a Midwestern satire, a taut suspense thriller, and a violent tale of criminal misfortune. It all begins when a hapless car salesman (played to perfection by William H. Macy) ineptly orchestrates the kidnapping of his own wife. The plan goes horribly awry in the hands of bumbling bad guys Steve Buscemi and Peter Stormare (one of them being described by a local girl as "kinda funny lookin'" and "not circumcised"), and the pregnant sheriff of Brainerd, Minnesota, (played exquisitely by Frances McDormand in an Oscar-winning role) is suddenly faced with a case of multiple murders. Her investigation is laced with offbeat observations about life in the rural hinterland of Minnesota and North Dakota, and "Fargo" embraces its local yokels with affectionate humor. At times shocking and hilarious, "Fargo" is utterly unique and distinctly American, bearing the unmistakable stamp of its inspired creators. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Fast & Furious

Director: Justin Lin
Starring: Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Michelle Rodriguez, Jordana Brewster, John Ortiz
Genre: Action & Adventure
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.5 (103,425 votes)
Release: Jul 2009
Summary: Heading back to the streets where it all began, two men rejoin two women to blast muscle, tuner and exotic cars across Los Angeles and floor through the Mexican desert. When a crime brings them back to L.A., fugitive ex-con Dom Toretto reignites his feud with agent Brian O'Connor. But as they are forced to confront a shared enemy, Dom and Brian must give in to an uncertain new trust if they hope to outmaneuver him. And from convoy heists to precision tunnel crawls across international lines, two men will find the best way to get revenge: push the limits of what's possible behind the wheel.
 

Fast & Furious 6

Director: Justin Lin
Starring: Paul Walker, Vin Diesel, Dwayne Johnson, Jordana Brewster, Luke Evans, Michelle Rodriguez, Tyrese Gibson, Gal Gadot, Sung Kang, Ludacris, Kim Kold, Thure Lindhardt, Elsa Pataky, Clara Paget, Joe Taslim, Shea Whigham, John Ortiz, Gina Carano
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Universal Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Release: May 2013
Summary: Since Dom (Diesel) and Brian's (Walker) Rio heist toppled a kingpin's empire and left their crew with $100 million, our heroes have scattered across the globe. But their inability to return home and living forever on the lam have left their lives incomplete. Meanwhile, Hobbs (Johnson) has been tracking an organization of lethally skilled mercenary drivers across 12 countries, whose mastermind (Evans) is aided by a ruthless second-in-command revealed to be the love Dom thought was dead, Letty (Rodriguez). The only way to stop the criminal outfit is to outmatch them at street level, so Hobbs asks Dom to assemble his elite team in London. Payment? Full pardons for all of them so they can return home and make their families whole again.
 

Fast & The Furious: Tokyo Drift

Director: Justin Lin
Starring: Lucas Black, Zachery Ty Bryan, Bow Wow, Damien Marzette, Trula M. Marcus
Genre: Action & Adventure
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 4.7 (42 votes)
Release: Jun 2006
 

The Fast and the Furious

Director: Rob Cohen
Starring: Paul Walker, Michelle Rodriguez
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.4 (150,291 votes)
Release: Jun 2001
Summary: A guilty pleasure with excess horsepower, "The Fast and the Furious" efficiently combines time-honored male fantasies (hot cars, hot women, hot action) into a vacuous plot of crystalline purity. It's trash, but it's "fun" trash, in which a hotshot Los Angeles cop named Brian (Paul Walker) infiltrates a gang of street racers suspected of fencing stolen goods from hijacked trucks. The gang leader is Dom (Vin Diesel), ex-con and reigning king of the street racers, who lives for those 10 seconds of freedom when his high-performance "rice rocket" (a highly modified Asian import) hurtles toward another quarter-mile victory. Racing is street theater for a lawless youth subculture, and Dom is a star behind the wheel--charismatic, dangerous, and protective toward his sister Mia (Jordana Brewster), who's attracted to Brian as the newest member of Dom's car-crazy team.
Director Rob Cohen treats this like Roman tragedy for MTV junkies, pushing every scene to adrenaline-pumping extremes; when his camera isn't caressing a spectrum of nitrous oxide-enhanced dream machines, it's ogling countless slim 'n' sexy race babes. The undercover-cop scenario cheaply borrows the split-loyalty theme perfected in "Donnie Brasco"; a rival Asian gang adds mystery and menace; and digital trickery is cleverly employed to explore the fuel-injected innards of the day-glo racecars. It's about as substantial as a perfume ad, but just as alluring, and for heavy-metal maniacs of any age, Diesel's superblown '69 Charger proves that Detroit muscle never goes out of style. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Fast Five

Director: Justin Lin, Neal H. Moritz
Starring: Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson, Jordana Brewster, Tyrese Gibson
Genre: Action, Crime, Thriller
Studio: NBCU
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.3 (163,816 votes)
Release: Apr 2011
Summary: Former cop Brian O'Conner partners with ex-con Dom Toretto on the opposite side of the law. Since Brian and Mia Toretto broke Dom out of custody, they've blown across many borders to elude authorities. Now backed into a corner in Rio de Janeiro, they must pull one last job in order to gain their freedom. As they assemble their elite team of top racers, the unlikely allies know their only shot of getting out for good means confronting the corrupt businessman who wants them dead. But he's not the only one on their tail. Hard-nosed federal agent Luke Hobbs never misses his target. When he is assigned to track down Dom and Brian, he and his strike team launch an all-out assault to capture them. But as his men tear through Brazil, Hobbs learns he can't separate the good guys from the bad. Now, he must rely on his instincts to corner his prey... before someone else runs them down first.
 

Faster

Director: George Tillman Jr.
Starring: Dwayne Johnson, Billy Bob Thornton, Maggie Grace, Carla Gugino, Tom Berenger, Jan Hoag, Courtney Gains, Michael Irby, Josh Clark, Michael Blain-Rozgay, Mike Epps, Sidney S. Liufau, Moon Bloodgood, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Oliver Jackson-Cohen
Genre: Drama, Action, Thriller
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.4 (54,564 votes)
Release: Nov 2010
Summary: Driver (Dwayne Johnson) has spent the last 10 years in prison planning revenge for the murder of his brother. Now that Driver is free to carry out his deadly plan only two men stand in his way- Billy Bob Thornton plays a veteran cop and Oliver Jackson-Cohen, a crazy hitman. With those two close on his trail, Driver races to carry out his mission as the mystery surrounding his brothers murder deepens.
 

Ferris Bueller's Day Off

Director: John Hughes
Starring: Matthew Broderick, Alan Ruck, Mia Sara, Jeffrey Jones, Jennifer Grey
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.9 (154,980 votes)
Release: Oct 1999
Summary: Like a soda pop left open all night, "Bueller" seems to have lost its effervescence over time. Sure, Matthew Broderick is still appealing as the perennial truant, Ferris, who fakes his parents out and takes one memorable day off from school. Jeffrey Jones is nasty and scheming as the principal who's out to catch him. Jennifer Grey is winning as Ferris's sister (who ends up making out in the police station with a prophetic vision of Charlie Sheen). But there's a definite sense that this film was of a particular time frame: the '80s. It's still fun, though. There's Ferris singing "Twist and Shout" during a Chicago parade, and a lovely sequence in the Art Institute. But don't get it and expect your kids to love it the way you did. Like it or not, it's yours alone. "--Keith Simanton"
 

The Fifth Element

Director: Luc Besson
Starring: Bruce Willis, Milla Jovovich, Gary Oldman, Ian Holm, Chris Tucker
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.6 (224,396 votes)
Release: Dec 1997
Summary: Ancient curses, all-powerful monsters, shape-changing assassins, scantily-clad stewardesses, laser battles, huge explosions, a perfect woman, a malcontent hero--what more can you ask of a big-budget science fiction movie? Luc Besson's high-octane film incorporates presidents, rock stars, and cab drivers into its peculiar plot, traversing worlds and encountering some pretty wild aliens. Bruce Willis stars as a down-and-out cabbie who must win the love of Leeloo (Milla Jovovich) to save Earth from destruction by Jean-Baptiste Emmanuel Zorg (Gary Oldman) and a dark, unearthly force that makes Darth Vader look like an Ewok. "--Geoff Riley"
 

Fight Club

Director: David Fincher
Starring: Brad Pitt, Edward Norton, Helena Bonham Carter, Meat Loaf, Zach Grenier
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.9 (734,377 votes)
Release: Jun 2000
Summary: All films take a certain suspension of disbelief. "Fight Club" takes perhaps more than others, but if you're willing to let yourself get caught up in the anarchy, this film, based on the novel by Chuck Palahniuk, is a modern-day morality play warning of the decay of society. Edward Norton is the unnamed protagonist, a man going through life on cruise control, feeling nothing. To fill his hours, he begins attending support groups and 12-step meetings. True, he isn't actually afflicted with the problems, but he finds solace in the groups. This is destroyed, however, when he meets Marla (Helena Bonham Carter), also faking her way through groups. Spiraling back into insomnia, Norton finds his life is changed once again, by a chance encounter with Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt), whose forthright style and no-nonsense way of taking what he wants appeal to our narrator. Tyler and the protagonist find a new way to feel release: they fight. They fight each other, and then as others are attracted to their ways, they fight the men who come to join their newly formed Fight Club. Marla begins a destructive affair with Tyler, and things fly out of control, as Fight Club grows into a nationwide fascist group that escapes the protagonist's control.
"Fight Club", directed by David Fincher ("Seven"), is not for the faint of heart; the violence is no holds barred. But the film is captivating and beautifully shot, with some thought-provoking ideas. Pitt and Norton are an unbeatable duo, and the film has some surprisingly humorous moments. The film leaves you with a sense of profound discomfort and a desire to see it again, if for no other reason than to just to take it all in. "--Jenny Brown"
 

The Fighter

Director: David O. Russell
Starring: Christian Bale, Mark Wahlberg
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: Paramount Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.9 (160,200 votes)
Release: Mar 2011
Summary: It would be a mistake to confuse "The Fighter" with the story of Mark Wahlberg, though the similarities are striking. Completely convincing as a boxer, Wahlberg plays welterweight Micky Ward, who grew up in working-class Massachusetts. Like the actor-producer, he had eight siblings, one more famous than the rest. Ward's half-brother, Dicky Eklund (a gaunt, crazy-eyed Christian Bale), turned to boxing first, just as Mark's brother, Donnie, preceded him as a performer (first by singing, then by acting). The similarities end there: Dicky, once known as "The Pride of Lowell," traded his promising pugilistic career for a crack pipe (Sugar Ray Leonard cameos as his best-known opponent). As David O. Russell's film begins, the smothering Alice ("Frozen River"'s Melissa Leo) manages Micky's career, while the unpredictable Dicky attempts to train him. Despite his talent in the ring, though, Micky can't catch a break until he meets Charlene (Amy Adams), a spitfire of a bartender who encourages him to stand up for himself. When Dicky ends up in prison, and Micky takes on a more experienced manager, his fortunes start to improve, but it isn't in his nature to abandon the people who raised him, so he attempts to unite the various factions in his life before his shot at the world championship slips away. Though Russell paints Micky's mother, brother, and sisters with a broad brush, Wahlberg anchors the scenario with his patient, level-headed performance. "Rescue Me"'s Jack McGee also deserves notice as his diplomatic dad, George. "--Kathleen C. Fennessy"
 

A Film Unfinished

Director: Yael Hersonski
Starring: Alexander Beyer, Rüdiger Vogler
Genre: Documentary, History, Drama
Studio: Oscilloscope Laboratories
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7.1 (1,080 votes)
Release: Aug 2010
Summary: Yael Hersonski's powerful documentary achieves a remarkable feat through its penetrating look at another film-the now-infamous Nazi-produced film about the Warsaw Ghetto. Discovered after the war, the unfinished work, with no soundtrack, quickly became a resource for historians seeking an authentic record, despite its elaborate propagandistic construction. The later discovery of a long-missing reel complicated earlier readings, showing the manipulations of camera crews in these "everyday" scenes. Well-heeled Jews attending elegant dinners and theatricals (while callously stepping over the dead bodies of compatriots) now appeared as unwilling, but complicit, actors, alternately fearful and in denial of their looming fate.
 

Filth

Director: John S. Baird
Starring: James McAvoy, Imogen Poots, Jamie Bell, Joanne Froggatt, Eddie Marsan, Emun Elliott, Jim Broadbent, Kate Dickie, Shirley Henderson, Ron Donachie, Martin Compston, Iain De Caestecker, David Soul, Pollyanna McIntosh, Shauna Macdonald, Gary Lewis, Natasha O'Keeffe, John Sessions, Brian McCardie
Genre: Comedy, Crime, Drama
Studio: Steel Mill Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Sep 2013
Summary: Scheming Bruce Robertson (James McAvoy), a bigoted and corrupt policeman, is in line for a promotion and will stop at nothing to get what he wants. Enlisted to solve a brutal murder and threatened by the aspirations of his colleagues, including Ray Lennox (Jamie Bell), Bruce sets about ensuring their ruin, right under the nose of unwitting Chief Inspector Toal. As he turns his colleagues against one another by stealing their wives and exposing their secrets, Bruce starts to lose himself in a web of deceit that he can no longer control. His past is slowly catching up with him, and a missing wife, a crippling drug habit and suspicious colleagues start to take their toll on his sanity. The question is: can he keep his grip on reality long enough to disentangle himself from the filth?
 

Final Fantasy - The Spirits Within

Director: Moto Sakakibara, Hironobu Sakaguchi
Starring: Ming-Na, Alec Baldwin, Ving Rhames, Steve Buscemi, Peri Gilpin
Genre: Animation
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.4 (56,073 votes)
Release: Aug 2002
Summary: Earth is a desolate wasteland in "Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within". Humanity has been decimated by an invasion of Phantoms, insubstantial aliens that extract and devour the spirits of living things. The few remaining humans have retreated to a handful of cities that are protected by massive bio-energy shields. The beautiful Dr. Aki Ross (voiced by Ming-Na) and her mentor Dr. Sid (Donald Sutherland) have discovered that the energy signatures of eight key Earth spirits can cancel out and destroy the Phantoms. With the help of Captain Edwards (Alec Baldwin) and his band of marines, they must scour the globe for the last two remaining spirits before General Hein (James Woods) manipulates the refugee government into attacking the aliens with an orbital laser that may also destroy the Earth.
Hironobu Sakaguchi's film is taken from the popular "Final Fantasy" video game franchise, which is particularly well suited to film adaptation with its series of original stories, but the movie features entirely new characters and settings. And like "Toy Story" and "Shrek", "Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within" is completely computer generated. Unlike those cartoon comedies, though, "The Spirits Within" is a serious science fiction drama with astonishingly human digital actors. Aki, the female lead, appeared in a full-page spread in "Maxim" magazine's Hot 100 list--and was indistinguishable from the real-life models. The setting and conflict make for incredible action, but it's the larger issues, character interaction, and human elements that really make the movie shine. "The Spirits Within" is not simply a science fiction movie, in the same way that "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" is not simply a kung fu flick. The result is a fantastic summer movie with better action and more emotion than "Pearl Harbor", and actors more lifelike than those in that other video game movie, "Tomb Raider". "--Mike Fehlauer"
 

Finding Nemo

Director: Andrew Stanton, Lee Unkrich
Starring: Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Alexander Gould, Willem Dafoe, Brad Garrett
Genre: Animation
Studio: Walt Disney Video
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 8.1 (60 votes)
Release: Nov 2003
Summary: A delightful undersea world unfolds in Pixar's animated adventure "Finding Nemo". When his son Nemo is captured by a scuba-diver, a nervous-nellie clownfish named Marlin (voiced by Albert Brooks) sets off into the vast--and astonishingly detailed--ocean to find him. Along the way he hooks up with a scatterbrained blue tang fish named Dory (Ellen DeGeneres), who's both helpful and a hindrance, sometimes at the same time. Faced with sharks, deep-sea anglers, fields of poisonous jellyfish, sea turtles, pelicans, and much more, Marlin rises above his neuroses in this wonderfully funny and nonstop thrill ride--rarely does more than 10 minutes pass without a sequence destined to become a theme park attraction. Pixar continues its run of impeccable artistic and economic success (their movies include "Toy Story", "A Bug's Life", "Toy Story 2", and "Monsters, Inc"). Also featuring the voices of Willem Dafoe, Geoffrey Rush, and Allison Janney. "--Bret Fetzer"
 

Finding Neverland

Director: Marc Forster
Starring: Johnny Depp, Kate Winslet, Julie Christie, Dustin Hoffman, Freddie Highmore, Radha Mitchell, Kate Maberly, Joe Prospero, Nick Roud, Luke Spill, Ian Hart, Kelly Macdonald, Toby Jones
Genre: Drama, Foreign, Family
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 7.8 (133,051 votes)
Release: Nov 2004
Summary: Finding Neverland is an amusing drama about how the story of Peter Pan and Neverland came to be. During a writing slump play writer J.M. Barrie meets the widowed Sylvia and her three children who soon become an important part of Barrie’s life and the inspiration that lead him to create his masterpiece “Peter Pan.”
 

Fireflies in the Garden

Director: Dennis Lee
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Willem Dafoe, Emily Watson, Julia Roberts
Genre: Drama
Studio: RCV
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 9.2 (106,634 votes)
Release: Jul 2008
Summary: Academy Award-winning short filmmaker Dennis Lee (Jesus Henry Christ) expands into feature-length territory with this semi-autobiographical tale about a family struggling to see their way through a devastating and unforeseen tragedy. Julia Roberts, Ryan Reynolds, Carrie-Anne Moss, and Emily Watson star.
 

Firefly - The Complete Series

Director: Joss Whedon, Tim Minear, Vern Gillum
Starring: Nathan Fillion, Gina Torres, Alan Tudyk, Morena Baccarin, Adam Baldwin
Genre: Drama, Sci-Fi
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 9.2 (106,634 votes)
Release: Dec 2003
Summary: As the 2005 theatrical release of "Serenity" made clear, "Firefly" was a science fiction concept that deserved a second chance. Devoted fans (or "Browncoats") knew it all along, and with this well-packaged DVD set, those who missed the show's original broadcasts can see what they missed. Creator Joss Whedon's ambitious science-fiction Western (Whedon's third series after "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Angel") was canceled after only 11 of these 14 episodes had aired on the Fox network, but history has proven that its demise was woefully premature. Whedon's generic hybrid got off to a shaky start when network executives demanded an action-packed one-hour premiere ("The Train Job"); in hindsight the intended two-hour pilot (also titled "Serenity," and oddly enough, the final episode aired) provides a better introduction to the show's concept and splendid ensemble cast. Obsessive fans can debate the quirky logic of combining spaceships with direct parallels to frontier America (it's 500 years in the future, and embattled humankind has expanded into the galaxy, where undeveloped "outer rim" planets struggle with the equivalent of Old West accommodations), but Whedon and his gifted co-writers and directors make it work, at least well enough to fashion a credible context from the incongruous culture-clashing of past, present, and future technologies, along with a polyglot language (the result of two dominant superpowers) that combines English with an abundance of Chinese slang.

What makes it work is Whedon's delightfully well-chosen cast and their nine well-developed characters--a typically Whedon-esque extended family--each providing a unique perspective on their adventures aboard Serenity, the junky but beloved "Firefly-class" starship they call home. As a veteran of the disadvantaged Independent faction's war against the all-powerful planetary Alliance (think of it as Underdogs vs. Overlords), Serenity captain Malcolm Reynolds (Nathan Fillion) leads his compact crew on a quest for survival. They're renegades with an amoral agenda, taking any job that pays well, but "Firefly's" complex tapestry of right and wrong (and peace vs. violence) is richer and deeper than it first appears. Tantalizing clues about Blue Sun (an insidious mega-corporation with a mysteriously evil agenda), its ties to the Alliance, and the traumatizing use of Serenity's resident stowaway (Summer Glau) as a guinea pig in the development of advanced warfare were clear indications "Firefly" was heading for exciting revelations that were precluded by the series' cancellation. Fortunately, the big-screen "Serenity" (which can be enjoyed independently of the series) ensured that Whedon's wild extraterrestrial west had not seen its final sunset. Its very existence confirms that these 14 episodes (and enjoyable bonus features) will endure as irrefutable proof Fox made a glaring mistake in canceling the series. --"Jeff Shannon"
 

A Fish Called Wanda

Director: Charles Crichton
Starring: John Cleese, Jamie Lee Curtis, Kevin Kline, Michael Palin, Cynthia Cleese
Genre: Comedy, Crime
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.6 (79,199 votes)
Release: Jul 1988
Summary: Kevin Kline took home an Oscar for his performance as a self-absorbed lothario who prepares for lovemaking by drinking in his own "manly" musk, but it would be hard to single him out as the best thing about the film. The fact is, the entire cast of this hilarious comedy is perfect: John Cleese as the conservative barrister defending a member of sexy Jamie Lee Curtis's gang, Ms. Curtis as the conniving crook out to grab the haul for herself, and Michael Palin as the stuttering, animal-loving hit man whose attempts to murder a little old lady only decrease the size of her poodle pack. Cleese cowrote the zingy script with British comedy veteran Charles Crichton ("The Lavender Hill Mob"), whose smooth direction balances Monty Python farce, hysterically tasteless gags, and an unexpectedly romantic subplot with style and confidence. "--Sean Axmaker"
 

Fish Tank

Director: Andrea Arnold
Starring: Katie Jarvis, Rebecca Griffiths, Carrie-Ann Savill, Toyin Ogidi, Grant Wild
Genre: Drama
Studio: Artificial Eye
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7
Release: Feb 2011
Summary: A mother and daughter find themselves locked in an ugly battle over the same man in this drama from writer and director Andrea Arnold. Mia Williams (Katie Jarvis) is 15 years old and lives in a shabby apartment block with her mother, Joanne (Kierston Wareing), and younger sister, Tyler (Rebecca Griffiths). Mia is a reckless and rebellious teenager who frequently argues with her mother and sister and has run afoul of the authorities at school, leading to her being suspended. With plenty of time on her hands, Mia spends her days drinking when she can find alcohol and partying in a empty flat near her apartment. Joanne is a single mother, and she's begun dating a new man, Connor (Michael Fassbender); when Joanne brings him home to meet the girls, Mia is immediately attracted to him, and it's soon clear Connor feels the same way about her. Mia attempts to seduce Connor to take him away from her mother, and when she succeeds, Joanne's greatest anger is not with the man who has slept with her underaged daughter, but the girl who is now a rival for the affections of her lover. Fish Tank was an official selection at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival.
 

A Fistful of Dollars

Director: Sergio Leone
Starring: Clint Eastwood, Marianne Koch, Wolfgang Lukschy, José Calvo, Gian Maria Volonté, Sieghardt Rupp, Antonio Prieto, Margarita Lozano, Daniel Martín, Bruno Carotenuto, Benito Stefanelli, Mario Brega, Joseph Egger
Genre: Action, Western, Foreign
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.0 (72,927 votes)
Release: Jan 1967
Summary: A Fistful of Dollars (Italian: Per un pugno di dollari) is a 1964 Italian spaghetti western film directed by Sergio Leone and starring Clint Eastwood, alongside Gian Maria Volonté, Marianne Koch, Wolfgang Lukschy, Sieghardt Rupp, José Calvo, Antonio Prieto, and Joseph Egger. Released in Italy in 1964 and then in the United States in 1967, it initiated the popularity of the Spaghetti Western film genre. It was followed by For a Few Dollars More (1965) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966), also starring Eastwood. Collectively, the films are commonly known as the "Dollars Trilogy," or "The Man With No Name Trilogy." The film is an unofficial remake of the Akira Kurosawa film Yojimbo (1961), resulting in a successful lawsuit by Toho. In the United States, the United Artists publicity campaign referred to Eastwood's character in all three films as the "Man with No Name."
 

Flash Gordon

Director: Mike Hodges
Starring: Sam J. Jones, Melody Anderson, Max von Sydow, Topol, Ornella Muti, Timothy Dalton, Richard O'Brien, Brian Blessed, William Hootkins, Peter Wyngarde, Mariangela Melato, John Osborne, John Hallam, Philip Stone, Suzanne Danielle
Genre: Action, Adventure, Comedy, Fantasy, Science Fiction
Studio: NBC Universal
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 6.3 (24,380 votes)
Release: Dec 1980
Summary: A football player and his friends travel to the planet Mongo and find themselves fighting the tyrant, Ming the Merciless, to save Earth.
 

Fletch

Director: Michael Ritchie
Starring: Chevy Chase, Joe Don Baker, Dana Wheeler-Nicholson, Richard Libertini, Tim Matheson
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Universal Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 6.8 (26,591 votes)
Release: Aug 1998
Summary: Gregory McDonald's lightweight mystery novel about an undercover newspaper reporter cracking a police drug ring is transformed by screenwriter Andrew Bergman ("Blazing Saddles", and writer/director of "The Freshman" and "Honeymoon in Vegas") into a fairly sarcastic and occasionally very funny Chevy Chase vehicle. Enjoyment of the film pivots on whether you find Chase's flippant, smart-ass brand of verbal humor funny, or merely egocentric. If you don't like Chase, there's really no one else worth watching (Geena Davis is sadly underused). Chase seems born to play I.M. "Fletch" Fletcher, a disillusioned investigative reporter whose cynicism and detached view on life mirrors the actor's understated approach to comedy. Fletcher offers Chase the opportunity to adopt numerous personas, as his job requires numerous (bad) physical disguises, and much of film's humor centers on the ridiculous idea that any of these phony accents or bad hairpieces could fool anyone. These not-so-clever disguises are put to use when Fletch becomes involved in the film's smart but continually self-mocking two-part mystery. As well as trying to gather drug-smuggling evidence against the LAPD for a long-overdue newspaper story, a rich and apparently terminally ill stranger also offers Fletch a large payoff to kill him. While the film does a fairly good job juggling both of these plots, not to mention tossing in a love interest as well, it's subservient, for better or worse, to Chase's memorable one-liners and disguises. Followed by two forgettable sequels that lack both the original's wit and Chase's attention span. --"Dave McCoy"
 

Flight

Director: Robert Zemeckis
Starring: Nadine Velazquez, Denzel Washington, Carter Cabassa, Adam C. Edwards, Tamara Tunie
Genre: Drama
Studio: ImageMovers
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.3 (82,704 votes)
Release: Nov 2012
Summary: Whip Whitfield is a commuter airline pilot. While on a flight from Orlando to Atlanta something goes wrong and the plane starts to fly erratically. With little choice Whip crashes the plane. When he wakes up in the hospital, he learns some of the passengers and crew died. His friend at the airline introduces him to a lawyer who tells him there's a chance he could face criminal charges because it seems they did a blood test and he tested positive for drugs and alcohol. He denies being impaired so while an investigation is underway, he is told to keep his act together. But he continues to drink.
 

The Flowers of War

Director: Yimou Zhang
Starring: Christian Bale, Paul Schneider, Xinyi Zhang, Ni Ni, Shigeo Kobayashi
Genre: Drama, History
Studio: Beijing New Picture Film Co.
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.3 (1,164 votes)
Release: Dec 2011
Summary: In 1937 China, during the second Sino-Japanese war, a mortician, John (Christian Bale) arrives at a Catholic church in Nanjing to prepare a priest for burial. Upon arrival he finds himself the lone adult among a group of convent girl students and prostitutes from a nearby brothel. When he finds himself in the unwanted position of protector of both groups from the horrors of the invading Japanese army, he discovers the meaning of sacrifice and honor.
 

The Fly

Director: David Cronenberg
Starring: Jeff Goldblum, Geena Davis, George Chuvalo, Michael Copeman, Leslie Carlson
Genre: Drama, Horror, Romance
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.5 (74,297 votes)
Release: Oct 2005
Summary: David Cronenberg's 1986 remake of the science fiction classic about a scientist who accidentally swaps body parts with a fly is both smart and terrifying: an allegory for the awful processes of slow death and a monster movie with a tragic spin. Jeff Goldblum gives a masterful performance as a sweet, nerdy scientist whose romance with a writer (Geena Davis) makes him more fully alive. Next thing you know, a tiny oversight in an experiment causes him to transmogrify, gradually, into something more like an insect than a human. This is Cronenberg ("Scanners", "Videodrome") country, so expect "The Fly" to be a gross-out, but in the way that disease corrupts the body and can make a loved one unrecognizable on every level. This is one of Cronenberg's best films, and certainly one of the important movies of the 1980s. "--Tom Keogh"
 

Foolproof

Director: William Phillips
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Kristin Booth, Joris Jarsky, Sean Sullivan, Tara Slone
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Lions Gate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.0 (31,760 votes)
Release: Feb 2004
Summary: Twenty-something Torontonians and friends Kevin, Sam and Rob play a game they call Foolproof: they plan foolproof heists, but without the intention of actually carrying them out. They have a few rules in the game, including the three having the necessary technical and physical abilities to carry out the tasks required for the heist, the plan cannot include loaded guns, and there is no violence meaning that no one gets hurt. They try to be as meticulous if not more so than the best high stakes thieves. The fun is in knowing they could do it if they truly wanted. Their collective lives change when someone breaks into Sam's apartment and steals their latest plan for a jewelry warehouse heist. After the warehouse is hit, the culprit identifies himself to them as Leo 'The Touch' Gillette, a known but never convicted high stakes thief who will stop at nothing to get what he wants. He tells them that the break-in at Sam's apartment was not by accident... Written by Huggo
 

For a Few Dollars More

Director: Sergio Leone
Starring: Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef, Gian Maria Volonté, Klaus Kinski, Mara Krupp, Luigi Pistilli, Joseph Egger, Panos Papadopulos, Benito Stefanelli, Tomás Blanco, Mario Brega, Aldo Sambrell, Luis Rodríguez, Roberto Camardiel, Lorenzo Robledo
Genre: Action, Western, Foreign
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.3 (85,622 votes)
Release: May 1967
Summary: For a Few Dollars More (Italian: Per qualche dollaro in più) is a 1965 Italian spaghetti western film directed by Sergio Leone and starring Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef and Gian Maria Volonté. German actor Klaus Kinski also plays a supporting role as a secondary villain. The film was released in the United States in 1967 and is the second part of what is commonly known as the Dollars Trilogy. Eastwood (as the Man with No Name) and Van Cleef (as Colonel Douglas Mortimer and the "Man in Black") portray two bounty hunters in pursuit of "El Indio" (Gian Maria Volonté), one of the most wanted fugitives in the western territories, and his gang.
 

Forgetting Sarah Marshall

Director: Nicholas Stoller
Starring: Jason Segel, Kristen Bell, Mila Kunis, Russell Brand, Bill Hader
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Sep 2008
Summary: Breaking up is hard to do--but that doesn't mean you can't have some belly laughs about it. "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" provides that rare treat: a romantic comedy about breakups, that is both romantic and funny. The laughs, especially from writer-star Jason Segel, are both heartfelt and raunchy, and the film is just unexpected enough that it keeps the viewer's attention till the end. The touches of producer Judd Apatow, who's famously retooled rom-coms to appeal to guys as much as women, are woven throughout the film, but Segel's script, reportedly based on many of his own experiences, is fresh and original. And adult. "Forgetting Sarah Marshall " features male genitalia laffs presented in unexpected and human ways (the nude breakup scene is played for giggles but also deep poignancy), and the language and sex scenes are strictly for grownups--and rightly so. Segel's script, and his performance as Peter, show that he understands the true nature of adult re! lationships, which provides the refreshing difference between this film and some of Apatow's other crude creations. The cast is sublime; Kristen Bell ("Veronica Mars") plays title character Sarah, a self-absorbed actress, and Russell Brand is her new British honey who accompanies her to--what are the chances?--the exact same Hawaiian resort as Peter, who's nursing his broken heart. Mila Kunis plays Rachel, the resort employee who gives Peter a reason to hope, and Paul Rudd is the surfing instructor who gives him his own brand of heartfelt advice ("When life gives you lemons, just say 'F--- the lemons' and bail," he says cheerily). The pacing is screwball, and the absurdities fly (a "Dracula" musical puppet show, and a surprisingly lovely Hawaiian version of "Nothing Compares 2 U"). Nothing the viewer will forget any time soon.--"A.T. Hurley"
 

Four Lions

Director: Chris Morris
Starring: Riz Ahmed, Adeel Akhtar, Alex MacQueen, Kayvan Novak, Arsher Ali
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Film4
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.3 (35,256 votes)
Release: May 2010
Summary: Four Lions tells the story of a group of British jihadists who push their abstract dreams of glory to the breaking point. As the wheels fly off, and their competing ideologies clash, what emerges is an emotionally engaging (and entirely plausible) farce. In a storm of razor-sharp verbal jousting and large-scale set pieces, Four Lions is a comic tour de force; it shows that-while terrorism is about ideology-it can also be about idiots.
 

The Fox And The Hound

Director: Art Stevens, Ted Berman, Richard Rich
Starring: Mickey Rooney, Kurt Russell, Pearl Bailey, Jack Albertson, Sandy Duncan, Jeanette Nolan, Pat Buttram, John Fiedler, John McIntire, Richard Bakalyan, Paul Winchell, Keith Coogan, Corey Feldman
Genre: Animation, Drama, Family
Studio: Walt Disney Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: G
Release: Jul 1981
Summary: The fun and adventure begin when a lonely widow adopts an orphaned fox cub named Tod. The mischievous fox soon meets up with Copper, an adorable hound puppy. As the innocent pair grow up together in the forest, they become inseparable friends. But the day soon arrives when their friendship is put to the ultimate test!
 

Frances Ha

Director: Noah Baumbach
Starring: Greta Gerwig, Mickey Sumner, Adam Driver, Michael Zegen, Charlotte d'Amboise, Josh Hamilton, Grace Gummer
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Studio: Pine District Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: May 2013
Summary: Frances Ha is about an aspiring dancer who moves to New York City and becomes caught up in a whirlwind of flighty fair-weather friends, diminishing fortunes and career setbacks.
 

Frankenweenie

Director: Tim Burton
Starring: Winona Ryder, Catherine O'Hara, Martin Short, Jeffrey Jones, Michael Keaton
Genre: Animation, Comedy, Horror
Studio: Walt Disney Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 7.0 (36,777 votes)
Release: Oct 2012
Summary: After the death of his beloved dog Sparky, young Victor harnesses the power of science to bring him back to life. Victor tries to hide his creation, but Sparky gets out and unintentionally causes havoc in the town.
 

Frat House

Director: Todd Phillips, Andrew Gurland
Genre: Documentary
Studio: Home Box Office (HBO)
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.1 (236 votes)
Release: Jan 1998
Summary: Frat House is a documentary film exploring the darker side of fraternity life. The film was directed by Todd Phillips and Andrew Gurland, and largely filmed at Allentown, Pennsylvania's Muhlenberg College; the majority of the film was shot in the house of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, which has since been banned from Muhlenberg. The opening fraternity, that drove the filmmakers out of the college and the town, is the Beta Chi fraternity on the State University of New York College at Oneonta campus in Oneonta New York. Beta Chi is an unrecognized fraternity in Oneonta, and was kicked off the Oneonta campus after reports of severe hazing. It continues to operate as a rogue, unrecognized chapter in the town to this day. Other unrecognized fraternities from SUNY Oneonta shown in the film include Sigma Alpha Mu, also known as "Sammy", and Tau Kappa Epsilon, which was recognized in the spring of 2007 but shortly thereafter lost their recognition from the campus. Frat House won two Sundance Film Festival awards in 1998, but has been attacked for containing sequences that were staged for the cameras.
 

Freddy vs. Jason

Director: Ronny Yu
Starring: Ken Kirzinger, Robert Englund, Monica Keena, Jason Ritter, Kelly Rowland
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: New Line Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 5.7 (63,455 votes)
Release: Jan 2004
Summary: After 11 years in development hell and screenplay drafts by 13 different writers, the long-awaited smackdown of "Freddy vs. Jason" finally arrives. After making their respective debuts in "Friday the 13th" (1980) and "A Nightmare on Elm Street" (1984), the hockey-masked killer Jason Voorhees (Ken Kirzinger, replacing long-time Jason performer Kane Hodder) and razor-gloved Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund) square off in a slasher-franchise combo-deal that only their most devoted fans will appreciate; turns out this is a lightweight match in which nobody wins. It's an average entry in the histories of these horror icons, comparable to half of their previous sequels, and "Bride of Chucky" director Ronny Yu satisfies purists with plenty of gushing blood and mayhem when Freddy recruits Jason to slice 'n' dice the ill-fated teens who've forgotten Freddy's once-formidable reign of terror. While it logically connects the gruesome legacies of "Nightmare"'s Elm Street and "Friday"'s Camp Crystal Lake, this horror hybrid is shockingly uninspired. It briefly peaks when Freddy gives the unconscious Jason a dream-world pummeling, but their ultimate showdown's a draw. In the immortal words of Peggy Lee, is that all there is? "--Jeff Shannon"
 

The French Connection

Director: William Friedkin
Starring: Gene Hackman, Roy Scheider, Fernando Rey, Tony Lo Bianco, Marcel Bozzuffi
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.9 (53,191 votes)
Release: Feb 2005
Summary: William Friedkin's classic "policier" was propelled to box-office glory, and a fistful of Oscars, in 1972 by its pedal-to-the-metal filmmaking and fashionably cynical attitude toward law enforcement. Gene Hackman's Popeye Doyle, a brutally pushy New York City narcotics detective, is a dauntless crime fighter and Vietnam-era "pig," a reckless vulgarian whose antics get innocent people killed. Loosely based upon an actual investigation that led to what was then the biggest heroin seizure in U.S. history, the picture traces the efforts of Doyle and his partner (Roy Scheider) to close the pipeline pumping Middle Eastern smack into the States through the French port of Marseilles. (The actual French Connection cops, Eddie Egan and Sonny Grosso, make cameo appearances.) It was widely recognized at the time that Friedkin had lifted a lot of his high-strung technique from the Costa-Gavras thrillers "The Sleeping Car Murders" and "Z"--he even imported one of Costa-Gavras's favorite thugs, Marcel Bozzuffi, to play the Euro-trash hit man plugged by Doyle in an elevated train station. There was an impressive official sequel in 1975, "French Connection II", directed by John Frankenheimer, which took Popeye to the south of France and got him hooked on horse. A couple of semi-official spinoffs followed, "The Seven-Ups", which elevated Scheider to the leading role, and "Badge 373", with Robert Duvall stepping in as the pugnacious flatfoot. "--David Chute"
 

Friday The 13th

Director: Sean S. Cunningham
Starring: Betsy Palmer, Adrienne King, Jeannine Taylor, Robbi Morgan, Kevin Bacon
Genre: Horror, Thriller, Mystery
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 5.5 (50,101 votes)
Release: Oct 1999
Summary: This splatter flick, along with John Carpenter's "Halloween", helped spawn the great horror-movie movement of the '80s, not to mention"eight" sequels, many of which had nothing to do with the films that preceded them. It also gave birth to Jason Voorhees, one of the three biggest horror-movie psychos of the modern era (the other two being "Halloween"'s Michael Myers and "A Nightmare on Elm Street"'s Freddy Krueger). Forever duplicated, the original "Friday the 13th" popularized a number of themes and techniques that today are now clichés: the increasingly gory murders, the remote forest location, the anonymous and nubile cast, the murderer as cult hero, and, of course, the moral that if you have sex, you will die, very painfully. Still, if you have to see a "Friday the 13th" movie, this is the one to check out. A group of eager (and horny) teenagers decide to reopen Camp Crystal Lake, which 20 years earlier was closed after the shocking and mysterious murders of two amorous camp counselors. You can take it from there, as the teens get picked off one by one, during a dark and stormy night; of course, their car won't start and there's no phone. The ending stole shamelessly from Brian De Palma's "Carrie", but it still provides a slight if campy shock. Look for a young Kevin Bacon as the requisite stud--you can tell that's what he is because when the cast appears in swimsuits, he's wearing a Speedo--who's the beneficiary of the film's best murder sequence, an arrowhead to the throat. Right after having sex, of course. "--Mark Englehart"
 

Friends with Kids

Director: Jennifer Westfeldt
Starring: Adam Scott, Jennifer Westfeldt, Maya Rudolph, Chris O'Dowd, Kristen Wiig
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Locomotive
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.3 (1,125 votes)
Release: Jul 2012
Summary: Two best friends decide to have a child together while keeping their relationship platonic, so they can avoid the toll kids can take on romantic relationships.
 

Fright Night

Director: Craig Gillespie
Starring: Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell, Toni Collette, David Tennant, Imogen Poots
Genre: Comedy, Horror
Studio: Albuquerque Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.7 (13,928 votes)
Release: Aug 2011
Summary: A remake of the 1985 original, teenager Charley Brewster (Yelchin) guesses that his new neighbor Jerry Dandrige (Farrell) is a vampire responsible for a string of recent deaths. When no one he knows believes him, he enlists Peter Vincent (Tennant), a self proclaimed vampire killer and Las Vegas magician, to help him take down Jerry.
 

The Frighteners

Director: Peter Jackson
Starring: Michael J. Fox, Jeffrey Combs, Jake Busey, Chi McBride, Trini Alvarado, Peter Dobson, John Astin, Jim Fyfe, Troy Evans, Julianna McCarthy, R. Lee Ermey, Elizabeth Hawthorne, Melanie Lynskey, Stuart Devenie, Leslie Wing, Dee Wallace
Genre: Horror, Comedy, Mystery
Studio: Uca
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 4
Release: Jul 1996
Summary: After a car accident in which his wife, Debra, was killed and he was injured, Frank Bannister develops psychic abilities allowing him to see, hear, and communicate with ghosts. After losing his wife, he then gave up his job as an architect, letting his unfinished "dream house" sit incomplete for years, and put these skills to use by befriending a few ghosts and getting them to haunt houses in the area to drum up work for his ghostbusting business; Then Frank proceeds to "exorcise" the houses for a fee. But when he discovers that an entity resembling the Grim Reaper is killing people, marking numbers on their forehead beforehand, Frank tries to help the people whom the Reaper is after!
 

Frisky Dingo

Director: Adam Reed, Matt Thompson
Starring: Adam Reed, Eric Sims, Neal Holman
Genre: Animation, Comedy, Sci-Fi, Television
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 5.6 (16 votes)
Release: Oct 2006
Summary: Xander Crews is a billionaire playboy whose alter ego is the superhero Awesome X. He'd much rather goof around as a superhero than tend to the everyday aspects of running a corporation. The only problem is that Awesome X has gotten rid of every super-villain in the city, and now his board head Stan wants him to retire as a hero and get down to saving the company he's been running into the ground with his superhero expenses. Coincidentally, a new super-villain named Killface appears. His goal is to destroy humanity using the Annihilatrix, a machine which upon completion will hurl the earth into the sun. The only problem is that he has no way of getting the 12 billion dollars needed to complete his doomsday device. Luckily there happens to be a billionaire playboy in town...
 

From Paris with Love

Director: Pierre Morel
Starring: John Travolta, Jonathan Rhys Meyers
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.4 (68,410 votes)
Release: Jun 2010
Summary: An uncomplicated, moderately entertaining action film, From Paris With Love offers an enthusiastic performance by John Travolta as a just-this-side-of-crazy agent and Jonathan Rhys Meyers (The Tudors) as the low-level operative newly partnered with him. Outwardly an aide to the U.S. Ambassador in France, James Reese (Rhys Meyers) is also a low-level CIA operative, tasked with generally mundane duties. Then his inside contact offers him a high-level assignment that could lead to a promotion to full agent. All Reese has to do is drive CIA agent Charlie Wax (Travolta) around Paris on an undisclosed mission. But Wax is a shoot first, don't bother with questions kinda guy, and the straitlaced Reese quickly finds himself riding shotgun to a killing-spree through Paris' underground drug sub-culture. The drugs lead the obviously opposite duo to a hidden terrorist cell, and they race to stop the suicide bombers' plot. Wax's wise-cracking, one-on-many fight scenes are adequately entertaining--especially when he flings bad guys down a curving staircase, as Reese tries to avoid getting hit by the bodies--but the action generally leaves you wanting more. An undesirable characteristic in an action movie. Based on a story by Luc Besson, (The Fifth Element and The Transporter movies), one can't help wonder if the complexity of the story and characters could have been improved if he'd written the screenplay himself. However, the simplistic story offers a few surprises and laugh-worthy one-liners. The climactic final chase scene--Agent Wax hanging out the window of a speeding Audi, armed with heavy artillery and a driver with nerves of steel, as he attempts to stop one phase of the planned attack--is as impossible as one could hope for in this kind of movie. And hearing Travolta call his burger a “royale with cheese” is almost worth the rest of the movie. --Jill Corddry
 

From Star Wars to Jedi: The Making of a Saga

Starring: Mark Hamill, George Lucas, Anthony Daniels, Harrison Ford, David Alan Barclay
Genre: Documentary
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7.2 (311 votes)
Release: Aug 1995
Summary: Filmmaker George Lucas reaches the pinnacle of cinematic entertainment with his intergalactic trilogy.This stunning documentary takes viewers from conception to reality in all aspects of the Star Wars creations-from Industrial Light & Magic, Lucasfilm's Academy Award winning special effects division wherin the fantastica space creatures and models were constructed - to the very insdie of the evil Jabba the Hutt!

This spectacular project was followed from the first storyboards to the actual worldwide filming by writer Richard Schickel.Discussions with George Lucas include the creator's emotions towards the wonderful worlds he originated, and uncover the various film themes and extensive character development of its stars.Illustrated with actual film footage, this imaginative and comprehensive chronicle will be a wonder to viewers of all ages.
 

Frontier(s)

Director: Xavier Gens
Starring: Karina Testa, Aurelien Wiik, Patrick Ligardes, David Saracino, Maud Forget
Genre: Foreign, Horror
Studio: Optimum Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8
Release: May 2008
Summary: Obviously influenced by the Hostel movies, this film sees 1 girl and 3 guys on the run from the police, they come across a motel in the middle of nowhere which has connections to an old mine where you just dont want to end up. Violent and gory, if you loved Hostel then this is for you.
 

Frost/Nixon

Director: Ron Howard
Starring: Frank Langella, Michael Sheen
Genre: Drama, History
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.7 (65,866 votes)
Release: Jan 2009
Summary: Sounds like a good match: a historical drama from the author of The Queen, but with an American subject in the generational wheelhouse of director Ron Howard. And so Peter Morgan's Tony-winning play morphs into a Hollywood movie under the wing of the Apollo 13 guy. Morgan's subject is a curious moment of post-Watergate shakeout: British TV host David Frost's long-form interviews with ex-President Richard Nixon, conducted in 1977. It was a big ratings success at the time, justifying the somewhat controversial decision to cut an enormous check for Nixon's services. The movie adds a mockumentary note to the otherwise straightforward style, having direct-to-camera addresses from various aides to Frost and Nixon (played by the likes of Oliver Platt, Sam Rockwell, and Kevin Bacon); these basically tell us things we already glean from the rest of the movie, adding unnecessary melodrama and upping the stakes. In this curious scheme, the success of Frost's career, which could bellyflop if he doesn't get something worthwhile out of the cagey, long-winded Nixon, is given somewhat more weight than the actual revelations of the interviews. Even with these questionable storytelling decisions, there's still the spectacle of two actors going at it hammer and tongs, and on that level the movie offers some heat. Michael Sheen, who played Tony Blair not only in The Queen but also in another Morgan-scripted project, The Deal, is adept at catching David Frost's blow-dried charm, as well as the determination beneath it. Frank Langella's physical performance as Nixon is superb, and he certainly can be a commanding actor, though veteran Nixon-watchers might find that he misses a certain depth of self-pity in the man. Both actors were retained from the original stage production, a rare thing in Hollywood--and probably Howard's best decision of the project. --Robert Horton
 

Frosty the Snowman

Director: Arthur Rankin Jr., Jules Bass
Starring: Jimmy Durante, Billy De Wolfe, Jackie Vernon, Paul Frees, June Foray
Genre: Animation, Holiday
Studio: Classic Media
My Rating:
Rated: G
Release: Dec 1969
Summary: Jimmy Durante narrates this Christmas story that is based on the song of the same name. To make up for the fact that her students are in school on Christmas Eve, the local schoolteacher hires the magician Professor Hinkle to entertain the kids. Unfortunately, he's not a very good magician. Frustrated in his attempt to pull a rabbit out of his hat, he throws it away in anger. Outside, the kids build a snowman (what to call it? Harold? Oatmeal? Frosty!), and when the hat blows onto it--Happy Birthday!--it comes to life. Professor Hinkle decides he wants the hat back so he can make money off of its newfound magical properties, but the kids want to save Frosty. When the temperature starts to rise, a new problem threatens Frosty's existence. Karen, the leader of the children, comes up with a plan to save him: take him on a train to the North Pole, where it's always cold. With a cameo by Santa Claus, and the promise of Frosty's return every year, this story of life, death, and holiday cheer is glazed with the sweet frosting of hope and happiness. A true holiday classic.
 

Frozen

Director: Adam Green
Starring: Shawn Ashmore, Emma Bell
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Anchor Bay Films
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.2 (33,859 votes)
Release: Sep 2010
Summary: Snow-sport enthusiasts, take note: Adam Green's unsettling thriller "Frozen" suggests that abiding by the rules and regulations of your local ski resort might not only be polite, but essential to your health. Green's hapless heroes--nice guy Dan (Kevin Zegers, "Transamerica"), his best pal Lynch (Shawn Ashmore, the "X-Men" franchise), and Dan's new girlfriend Parker (newcomer Emma Bell)--decided to cut a few corners in pursuit of more time on the slopes. Miscommunication with the staff results in the trio getting stuck on a lift some 60 feet in the air just moments before the resort closes for a three-day weekend. The hope for rescue soon dwindles, and the trio faces the decision to either endure the elements or somehow make their way to the ground without injury. All of the gruesome possibilities inherent to the situation--from frostbite and broken limbs to a pack of voracious wolves--are explored in unpleasant detail, but what sets "Frozen" apart from a simple splatterfest is the quality of the performances, especially Bell, who rises above her character's initial superficiality to present a wholly sympathetic character. Fans of Green's first film, the abysmal slasher tribute "Hatchet", might find the pacing glacial (ahem), but those who admired his sophomore effort, the psychological thriller "Spiral", will appreciate his attention to pacing and suspense, which puts "Frozen" on par with the very similar "Open Water". The DVD includes commentary by Green and his stars, along with deleted scenes and a wealth of behind-the-scenes featurettes focusing on conception of the project, as well as the crew's struggles with the genuinely contentious weather at the Utah filming location. "--Paul Gaita"
 

Frozen (screener)

Director: Chris Buck, Jennifer Lee
Starring: Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff, Josh Gad, Alan Tudyk, Eva Bella, Livvy Stubenrauch, Santino Fontana, Christopher Williams, Patricia Lentz, Ciarán Hinds, Robert Pine, Maurice LaMarche, Stephen J. Anderson
Genre: Adventure, Animation, Musical, Family
Studio: Walt Disney Animation Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Release: Nov 2013
Summary: In "Frozen," fearless optimist Anna (voice of 'Kristen Bell' ) teams up with rugged mountain man Kristoff (voice of 'Jonathan Groff' ) and his loyal reindeer Sven in an epic journey, encountering Everest-like conditions, mystical trolls and a hilarious snowman named Olaf in a race to find Anna's sister Elsa (voice of Idina Menzel), whose icy powers have trapped the kingdom of Arendelle in eternal winter. Encountering Everest-like conditions, mystical trolls and a hilarious snowman named Olaf, Anna and Kristoff battle the elements in a race to save the kingdom.
 

Funny Games

Director: Michael Haneke
Starring: Susanne Lothar, Ulrich Mühe, Arno Frisch, Frank Giering, Stefan Clapczynski
Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller
Studio: Fox Lorber
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7.6 (27,169 votes)
Release: Mar 1998
Summary: Two seemingly well-educated young men, who call each other Paul and Peter among other names, approach a family on vacation. They are, apparently, friends of the neighbors, and, at the beginning, their true intentions are not known. But soon, the family is imprisoned and tortured in its own house violently, which the viewers are forced mostly to imagine and to share a certain complicity with the criminals. It might be some kind of game with the lives of husband, wife, son, and dog, but why are they doing it?
 

Funny Games (USA)

Director: Michael Haneke
Starring: Naomi Watts, Tim Roth, Michael Pitt, Brady Corbet, Devon Gearhart, Boyd Gaines, Robert LuPone, Susanne C. Hanke, Linda Moran, Siobhan Fallon
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.4 (46,654 votes)
Release: Oct 2007
Summary: In this provocative and brutal thriller remake from director Michael Haneke, a vacationing family gets an unexpected visit from two deeply disturbed young men. Their idyllic holiday turns nightmarish as they are subjected to unimaginable terrors and struggle to stay alive.