Archive for the ‘Sebring movie previews and reviews’ Category

NEW MOVIES: Three More Open in Highlands, South Polk

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Shorts 01 BWISHFUL THINKING: Three boys get ready to test the Rainbow Rock’s power to deliver their wildest dreams in the action/comedy Shorts, which plays exclusively in Highlands County at the Fairmount Cinema 6.

PHOTO COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES

SEBRING, August 20, 2009 – Area residents can choose three more film to attend beginning tomorrow.

Along with recent box office champs District 9 and G.I. Joe: Rise of the Cobra, the Fairmount Cinema 6 adds Post Grad and Shorts to its lineup and offers its award-winning service and low prices to customers. PostGrad 01 B

Post Grad, a PG-13 comedy, stars Alexis Bledel as a postgraduate stymied in her job search and forced to live at home with her dysfunctional family. Yahoo! users who previewed Post Grad give it an “A”.

Shorts is a PG-rated action/comedy about human reaction to conformity and nonconformity, and the perils and preciousness of free choice. Yahoo! users give Shorts an “A+”.

InglouriousBasterds 01 B Inglourious Basterds is Quentin Tarantino’s R-rated bloody frolic through anti-Nazi sentiment set, of course, in World War II. Tarantino’s wit and creativity are undeniable, and his ability to meld comedy, smart dialog, philosophy, and sophomoric gore is unmatched, but his films have limited appeal and usually end up as DVD cult classics. Inglourious Basterds stars Brad Pitt as the commander of a squad of American soldiers exacting vengeance upon the Nazis in Europe. IB plays at the Carmike and at the Regal Eagle Ridge.

‘Transformers’ Sequel Opens After Midnight

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

SEBRING, June 23, 2009 – The sequel to Transformers opens at 12:01 Wednesday morning at the Regal Eagle Ridge 12 and at the Carmike.

Shia Lebeouf and Megan Fox reprise their roles. This time, the fallen machines seek their revenge against humanity and their machine helpers.

Parents should be advised that this teen targeted film is rated PG-13 for what the Motion Picture Association of America calls ” intense sequences of sci-fi action violence, language, some crude and sexual material, and brief drug material.”

Caveat emptor.

NEW FARE: ‘The Proposal’ Opens At Fairmount

Friday, June 19th, 2009

The Proposal 01 B

KNEEGOTIATION: Witchy book editor Margaret (Sandra Bullock) must give her assistant (Ryan Reynolds) something for his agreement to marry her and allow her to stay in the United States. It’s all in the romantic comedy The Proposal, which plays at the Fairmount Cinema 6 in Sebring.

PHOTO COURTESY OF TOUCHSTONE PICTURES

SEBRING, June 19, 2009 – Only one film opens in Highlands County this weekend. It’s the romaantic comedy The Proposal, which plays at the Fairmount Cinema 6.

The Transformers sequel opens June 23 (Tuesday) at the Regal Eagle Ridge 12 and at the Carmike.

The Proposal stars Sandra Bullock as a cutthroat book editor and Ryan Reynolds as the assistant she dominates… until she’s about to be deported because she’s Canadian! Bullock’s character orders her assistant to marry her, and the laughs begin.

Here’s a representative of what reviewers are saying about this PG-13 rated romantic comedy, which seems to average about a B-.

Knowing the standard romantic comedy setup just isn’t going to cut it anymore, director Anne Fletcher (Step Up, 27 Dresses) turns The Proposal into more of a screwball farce, letting the laughs fly without forcing them on us. …As an alternative to big summer action flicks and gross-out comedies, The Proposal is definitely the date movie du jour. – Pete Hammond, Hollywood.com

The Proposal is a serviceable and intermittently funny romance made enjoyable by the sparks between Bullock and Reynolds. – Claudia Puig, USA Today

The Proposal recycles a plot that was already old when Tracy and Hepburn were trying it out. You see it coming from a great distance away. As it draws closer, you don’t duck out of the way, because it is so cheerfully done, you don’t mind being hit by it. – Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times

Ms. Bullock, who excels at playing spunky, is as appealing as usual, but the role proves as awkward as those heels. (Mr. Reynolds is equally likable, though more decorative than anything else.) She’s always been better in fundamentally independent roles that allow her to grab the wheel (“Speed”) and take the spotlight (the “Miss Congeniality” flicks), an independence that persists all the way through the last-act coupling. She can smile as brightly at a man as well as the next leading lady, though, like all genuinely big female stars, she’s really more of a solo act. – Manohla Dargis, New York Times